My Mother needs 24/7 care. I myself take care of her on the weekends. I have a daughter that has a disability and have to care for her. My siblings do not want give up there weekends so they think they can force me by saying if something happens to mom its your fault.
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Carol
So you have called this meeting to look at some options
PLAN A
WE share weekend care ....Say these are the weekends I WILL do and these are the weekends YOU will need to share between you. If you can't come and care and I understand your reluctance to give up your freedom then we need to look at PLAN B
PLAN B
Mum pays for a sitter/carer (depending on needs) to give us the break we need and I MUST HAVE (note: MUST HAVE this stops it being optional). If you meet a brick wall there and again you probably will then PLAN C comes into play
PLAN C
We have no option then but to place mum in care since her needs come before ours and her needs MUST be met. Once she is in care then I will visit her on these weekends and I expect you to visit her on these weekends - then even if they don't go you will know she is safe from harm
Good luck hun experience tells me they will try to lay the guilt trip on you BUT STAY STRONG. There is a format for this: decide on what you want to say - perhaps
I intend to have some quality time with my daughter and therefore I will not do the care for Mum every weekend
Now every time they try to wriggle you into being compromised repeat the exact same words staring with NO
so NO I intend to have some quality time with my daughter and therefore I will not do the care for Mum every weekend
It doesn't matter what way they try to turn you just keep repeating it. NEVER use the word Sorry - for that gives them an in stay determined and use this 'cracked record' approach - it is very successful.
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Patrice, I had to laugh at your sibling saying they just wanted to come visit, and not help. What makes them exempt? I have a sister like that too. She has been to Mom's twice in the last few months, a brief visit on Mother's day and again on Mom's birthday. And she lives only a few blocks away. Meanwhile I am here every week cleaning, doing errands, taking Mom shopping and to the doctor. And I live 90 miles away. My mother does not need visitors. She needs someone to take the stack of newspapers to the recycling bin. She needs someone to replace the light bulb under the range hood. She needs someone to pick up her mail. Etc. etc. I don't get how some siblings can think others are just naturally the family drudge and they themselves or off the hook. Where does that come from?
If mother cannot be alone over the weekend, and all of you leave her alone, then the responsibility if something happens to her when she is alone is on all of your heads. They cannot insist that you and only you are responsible for weekends. (Well, they can insist, but it has no force in ethics or in law.)
They are saying "I can't take care of Mom over the weekends." And you are saying that, too. All of you are entitled to say that. But, assuming you all love your mother, you should be working together to come up with a plan that meets Mom's needs.
How many siblings do you have? What if you rotated weekends so each only had to do it every third or fourth (or whatever) weekend. Might that be doable?
Who takes care of Mom the other five days a week?
A person who needs 24/7 care needs it as much on Saturday as she does on Tuesday. Leaving Mom alone is Not an Option. Your siblings seem to have the attitude that it is you or no one. That is absurd, and is a bullying tactic. The facts are 1) Mom needs weekend care and 2) you are not going to provide that care every weekend (or any weekend, if that is your situation).
All of you need to acknowledge these two FACTS and then focus your energy and finding other solutions.
While Mom was still living alone in an apartment we had Social Services do a needs assessment. Mother claimed not to need any help at all. Can you keep your apartment clean? Well, no, but my daughters do that. How about laundry? My daughters do that. One sister piped up, Ma when we come to visit you we want to play cards or scrabble or take you to lunch! We don't come to scrub your toilet and have no time for you! (Mom did get housekeeping services and a visiting nurse. Family came as often and stayed as long, but had more time to actually interact with Mom.)
The ideal situation is for much of the routine household chores to be handled by a paid helper, and family freed to do what only family can do best. You can't hire someone to reminisce about the treats Mom made for school birthdays or to remember with Dad the very funny fishing trip. But you can easily hire someone to do the laundry, vacuum, see that all bulbs are working, etc. You can order Meals on Wheels, and occasionally take Mom someplace she loves to eat.
I really don't blame family that just wants to "visit" -- ideally that would be possible for ALL family. But we are seldom in an ideal situation. Everyone needs to face the reality of the situation they are in.
I would suggest they look for weekend care to come in and do what you have been doing. I would give them a deadline to find alternate care. I wouldn't just stop without providing them sufficient time to make other arrangements.
This might be a time to discuss placing your mom somewhere that she might get round the clock care. Depending on her condition, maybe they could arrange for her to stay at a facility on the weekends. For some seniors, sick or dementia patients, that moving back and forth might be too disruptive. Still, you have to do what you have to do to keep her safe.
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