My 81-year old mother-in-law resides with myself, my wife (her daughter) and our three young sons (ages 7 and 5 year old twins). She has Parkinsons Disease which has progressively affected her mobility. Her health has declined to the point where she either wants, or needs, almost around-the-clock care. She is a serious fall risk, has incontinence issues, sleeps most of the time, and only really walks to come to the table for meals. She uses a walker but should probably be in a wheelchair, which she has refused. She does not interact with our family, does not speak to any of us at meals, and treats us like we are her staff. She refuses to do anything for herself and makes us feel like we are mean if we tell her to get her own drink. She pays a caregiver during the day when we are not at home but will not consider hiring overnight or weekend care, even though she has the resources to do so. We have begun discussing the fact that she needs more care than we are capable, or qualified, to provide. I work full time with odd hours, my wife works three part-time jobs, and the boys are becoming more and more socially active with school, soccer, baseball, cub scouts, etc. We feel like we have become trapped in our own house and are denying our kids the things we've always wanted to do with them. My mother-in-law has always played the guilt card on my wife and is doing it again. Now my wife feels like we (she) did not do enough and should do more so she does not have to go to a SNF or assisted living facility. It is beginning to have a negative impact on us as a couple and as a family. My wife does have a brother who is local but other than a cordial visit now and then he has washed his hands of it. Any suggestions how we get my mother-in-law to stop driving a wedge in our family and realize that moving to a facility is the best thing for her, as well as us.
I know first hand how difficult it can be to change how you respond to a parent's demands. I have been on that emotional roller coaster for decades. I can relate to your wife because I had grown accustomed to putting my mom's needs/wants before anyone else.
I have been able to make some changes by approaching the situation from perspective of love. For example: My mother no longer lives in our home because we found her a place to meet her physical challenges. She didn't want to go and rebelled but in the end she admitted it was for the best.
I shared that because I loved her I only wanted the best care for her and home could never meet the high standards she deserved. I also let her know how much I missed our times of just being together. You see being a caregiver took so much time just being her daughter fell by the wayside.
It's also because of my love for my family that my mom had to move out. We too were prisoners in our home. There was plenty of guilt when she left but spending more time with my husband and children has been a blessing.
Whatever you choose, counseling, more caregivers, or a living facility, your mil will be unhappy. Make your decision for your family and your mil from a place of love, and you will have done your best.
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Since your time might be limited, know that if you simply pick up a phone and call a local assisted living facility who can care for someone with your MIL's diagnoses, they can come and pick her up, take her to their facility and show her around. You can accompany her, or you can take her yourself. She can be given a choice. She can either hire someone to stay 24/7 with her in your home (if you want) on specific days or occasions, or she can move to a facility. Just as you give your children choices, she should not be any different. Your MIL can come home on holidays or weekends as you choose. She can still be very much a part of the family. There should be no guilt in trying to give your family your time and attention. They are only young once. When they get to be teenagers, they will not be around so much, and may not want to do activities with you. You do not want them to remember that their parents had no time, with grandma in the middle of everything, and both parents working. You have a window of opportunity here to get some breathing space. As it is, no one is benefiting from your situation. And if the facility you choose is local, your wife can spend as much time there as she chooses. She can go for meals with her mother, and take her out for lunch, or to go shopping. Once your MIL is out of the home, then your wife may find she has the energy to give her mother more fun time. Right now, it seems no one is having much fun, and the point comes to where you must ask yourself how much longer you want to maintain a malfunctioning situation. If you looked back on this ten years from now, what would you tell yourself? Guilt is part of living, but if guilt is going to cause damage to the family for years to come, why accommodate the guilt? There is no benefit to anyone. There are some fantastic assisted living facilities around, and if your MIL is a surviving spouse of a veteran, call the VA's Veteran's Benefits Office to see if she qualifies for financial assistance for assisted living.
Possibly by going to therapy together seeking a third party, objective opinion for dealing with this with help open her eyes to what is going on. That will be much better than telling her that she is the person needing therapy. I don't think she really sees how trapped she is by someone with what sounds like a narcissistic or possibly borderline personality who are pros at using emotional blackmail on people to get what they want. Since, you say that your MIL has always played the guilt card on your wife makes me think this as been an ongoing trait of their relationship since childhood and that is why it is so ingrained in her and blinds her so.
If your wife, will not go with you for support from a therapist, I would suggest go to one for yourself for you deserve it and will need it as long as she remains blinded by the F.O.G. I wish you and your marriage the best in this difficult situation.
There are professional "facilitators" you can hire to come in and counsel her about making a move to an ALF. I haven't used one yet, but there are people I know who rave about them, and say they work magic. They act like a counsellor; they listen to the person's story and concerns, and then they explain how and why a change is needed and how much better it will be for everyone. The magic, I'm told, is in their ability to do this and have the senior feel like it is THEIR idea. I'm discovering that one of my mom's biggest fears in moving is she feels like I'm making her do it and she wants to be in charge (she really can't be incharge of anything any more).
A good idea is a good idea. but just like when we are kids, and everything sounds smarter and better when someone besides our parents say it, now, to a senior, everything sounds smarter and better when someone besides the kids say it. Ultimately, I think 99% of moms will do what is best for their kids, but they don't like their kids being the one to tell them what that is. I'd say get some support from outside the family on this one.
Again, all of this is about feelings - their feelings, our feelings, our spouses and children's feelings. And most of the time everything is hanging more and more by a fragile thread.
I was in the business world for a long time, I have been divorced from an abusive manipulator and I was raised by a narcissitic mother with a father who tried to make sense out of crazy. I also raised three kids (29, 33, 35) through the sleepless nights of babyhood, the terrible twos and up through teenage (sometimes) hell. The common denominator in all of these life experiences was negotiating my path through some very self serving (at least at times) folks who just wanted what they wanted. I had to learn that first, I examine my motives, pray about doing God's will in the situation I found myself in and then have a steely mindset about doing what in my heart I knew was right and had to be done. It is absolutely necessary to find your center and trust yourself. Also, the more opinions you ask for the more confused you become. Opinions come from those other folks' life experiences, built in guilt, on and on, but very often not from places that are appropriately evolved.
What I am trying to tell you is that, even though this is hard, place your priorities appropriately, realize you are just one person and you can't do everything to everyone's satisfaction or approval, and then execute a plan once you devise it, knowing you are not running a popularity contest. Try not to take everything personally and if you must, limit exposure to those who have only criticism with no viable help or solution to offer.
Your family - children and spouse - have to come first. And put that list the other way around, because a family functions best if a marriage is strong. Take care of parents, meaning get them a safe and decent place to live where assistance is available and then monitor their care and visit them often.
Way too often families end up almost torn apart due to this kind of stress. Life is inevitably going to end in death for all of us. Make sure the last years of your parents' life is lived with dignity and care, set an example for your children for how YOU want to be treated when they need to take care of you and make decisions for you, and be good to yourself. Your children, your life together with you spouse have a lot of years ahead. Don't wear those things out while trying to please someone who is probably unappeasable unless you do exactly what they want. She will adjust and it is best for her.
1) google "daughtersrsofnarcissisticmothers" and find the website of that name. I and others have found it very helpful. Show it to your wife.There are other sites, obviously, but that one is a good place to start. I think you will see some familiar things. I am not in complete agreement with the author's method (EFT) of healing from being the child of a narcissist so my second recommendation is
2) go for counselling - together preferably - your wife can be helped to understand how her mother manipulates her, and how to deal with that and the guilt etc, to set limits, and how it negatively affects your family unit, which should be her priority. Hopefully an alternate plan for your mil's care can be developed. She (mil) does not have to agree to it. Nice if she would but, that may be difficult to achieve. You are NOT obliged to look after your mil in your home.
3) start researching facilities in your area. Has your mil had an evaluation as to what level of care she requires? Your local agency on aging may be able to point you to resources. Social services may be a ble to help. A social nworker could come to your home and talk to your mil about a move to a facility.
4) Draw some boundaries - set some limits. You need your weekends, and evenings together as a family. Your boys need to be involved in sports and other activities. I have 4 children, and know well the time that is needed for that. Your children are only young once, and you, as parents, have a duty to them, which comes before waiting on the mil. You also do not want to deny yourself the enjoyment that comes with this time of their lives. I am going to suggest that you draw up a list of caregivers that could be hired to come in weekends and evenings and present them to your mil, stating that you will be taking more time away from the home, and that she will need to hire more help. Make phone calls for her if that works. She will not be happy about this, but don't let that and any sharp words or guilt games from her stop you. As I said - a counsellor can help your wife to set healthy boundaries.
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5) encourage your wife to come to this website and read about others in similar situations and how they are coping.
I wish you the best of luck. You and your family are on a slippery slope which is all down hill, and major change is needed. It amazes me, when I read it again and again, to the extent to which adults allow their lives to be run by their aging parents, who are often not mentally healthy.Yet, I know I have battled that in my life too.
You and your wife have to stop the wedge. Your mil probably can't. It is how she is wired. By becoming informed, getting healthier, and setting boundaries, you can stop the wedge. You may not convince your mil that a facility is best for her -after all she has two adults waiting on her hand and foot, she has what she wants - BUT - I repeat and emphasize - you are NOT obligated to care for her, not are you "bad people" if you decide you cannot do it any more.
Let us know how it goes.
Joan