I don't want to be free of caring for my 94-year-old mother. I love doing for her what she cannot do any longer. But when I hear that my older sister or brother talk about how wonderful their travel experiences or dining-out experiences are, I get resentful and jealous. Now I never want to talk to them or see them ever again. They both live out of state. Am I being a selfish brat? I feel like I am so evil. I know it is jealousy, but I feel it more and more when I learn they are having fun. My life is consumed with taking care of my mother, and neither of them have ever offered to help in any way. I cannot get over hating them more and more each day.
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As Geaton suggests, maybe you aren't as happy as you think you are caring for your mom if you are resentful of their carefree life? We don't vacation and run off willy-nilly. We provide backup care for them to travel. But the amount of care is never going to be equal.
Have you actually ASKED your siblings for help? Often we assume people will offer, we assume they should just KNOW that we need help. But in this busy world we live in, people aren't just going to throw out offers of help, we have to ask for what we need. If you seem to have it under control and love doing it, they may assume you don't want or need help.
Don't sit on hate. Don't resent them for choices that you have made. If you don't like the way your life is going, you have to make changes. If they don't want to be involved, there are other options. But you don't have to be unhappy in your life and angry at them because they are happy in theirs. You have options and you have choices to make.
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It is difficult to understand when going through this.
We become confused and have all sorts of emotional upheaval going on in our heads.
The truth is they don’t have a clue as to how it feels to be a caregiver. Did any of us before we did it? I know that I didn’t.
Honestly, we can’t choose their lives for them and we must accept that.
This doesn’t mean that we have to agree on everything. No two people think alike on all matters.
I didn’t see any positive changes in my life until I started focusing on myself more than my siblings.
I hope things improve for you soon.
Take care.
was you a while back. I did it all! My brother criticized. I said, “Fine, then take over!” I was burning out.
At some point in time if we can’t do it anymore, it’s okay to admit it and resume our lives.
The situation is more about yourself rather than siblings.
We can honor our feelings but then move forward.
Speak to a social worker to help you plan for placement. You can visit and be her advocate.
I took care of my mom for 15 years. My brother and sister in law did it for 14 months.
Mom required round the clock care. It became too much. She’s dying and now receiving round the clock care in a hospice house.
Wishing you all the best.
Maybe it's time to rethink your role as an in-home caregiver to your 94 year old mother. It's not the 'only' option out there. What about Assisted Living? My 94 y/o mother has been in AL since 2014 b/c living with me (the only child) was never an option. I'm not interested in being a caregiver b/c I'm not cut out to do it; there are dozens of reasons why, and traveling is one of them. So I made it clear from the get-go that no elders would be moving in with me.
I don't feel 'guilty' for making that decision b/c my mother gets great care where she's at, something that would not happen in my home. She's wheelchair bound with dementia and her mobility problems alone are prohibitive to in home care; she's fallen 71x so far. Plus, she has socialization with other elders (she's in Memory Care now) and activities, etc. She has a life and I have a life, even though I manage her entire life from 4 miles away.
If you don't want to consider AL, consider sending her to AL for respite care every so often so you can travel or have a vacation of your own. Allow that resentment you have for your siblings to fade away a bit as you take back some of your OWN life which you have a right to do.
Wishing you the very best of luck figuring out how to be happy again; you deserve it!
I felt like I was getting very little help and support from them and over the last year I started feeling so much resentment, I stopped speaking to them. It was really starting to turn into feelings of hate. I posted about my feelings of hate for them on this forum. Multiple times. My feelings were valid and so are yours.
Then several weeks ago I got word that my brother (who is in his early 50's) had stage 5 cancer and it was seriously looking like bucket list time. My sister called me sobbing how she she was so afraid of losing "us" and recalling how we all went through a terrible cancer journey with my dad when my dad was in his 50's. Something about that news and the prospect of my brother dying, my sister sobbing, and so many sibling memories came crashing down. The ones I had before our narc mother got dementia, and before the caregiving and resentment started. Suddenly it all just disappeared. We were clinging to each other now. It made me realize I never did "hate" them. I was just SO, so drained with my mother.
Now, my brother will be undergoing surgery and treatment, and thankfully his outcome is looking much better. We have vowed to start being there for each other more, and I now feel that I will be able to count on them.
It took a death scare to change my sibling situation. I obviously don't want any of your siblings to get health issues, I just want to give you some hope that there may still be a salvageable relationship there. Only you can decide, but it might be worth considering reaching out to them and letting them know that you could really use some support.
1. Neither of your siblings have ever offered to help in any way. Have you asked? If you have, and they've refused, let it go. "A grudge will soon rot the pocket you carry it in."
2. If listening to them talk about how wonderful their travel and dining-out experiences are makes you resentful, you can always say, "Sounds like you had a marvelous time! But taking care of our mom makes it impossible for me to do those things any more, and as much as I'm happy for you, I'd prefer that you not mention them again."
I'm not making these suggestions flippantly or callously. It's just that sometimes we overlook the simplest solutions.
I've been in your position, though the circumstances were a bit different - I was my mother's sole caregiver, and my sister lives over 800 miles away. Sis has been in poor health for years (including a bout with breast cancer, chronic incontinence and pernicious anemia that almost killed her) and there was no way that she could assist me, except with the advice she would give me as a retired RN. But for a long time I resented her, mainly because she didn't experience what I did as a caregiver - Mama's irritability and irrational behavior, the daily drudgery of toileting assistance, the sleepless nights, the picky eating... the list goes on. And Sis tried to tell me that she did indeed understand because of her own infirmities, but wouldn't accept that taking care of yourself and taking care of someone else are two completely different things. She even maintained that she was just as frustrated as I was with not being able to go anywhere or do anything. (Guess again, Sis.)
I even held onto that resentment when Mama died, simply because Sis wasn't there. I was completely alone. My husband was out of town with his job, the pandemic was still rolling along, and I had not one shoulder to cry on, not one person to give me a hug. I think at that point, I hated everyone and everything, and continued to do so for the next three months. It was terribly self-destructive.
One day, I finally woke up and realized that if I didn't change my outlook, I would die a premature death as a bitter old woman. I made a conscious effort to see only the positive side of things. I asked God to forgive me for my hatred and resentment, and to show me the path toward a happy life - and He did. I'm now immersed in moving our household to another town, and starting a new chapter in life with my husband (who, though he never really complained, suffered just as much as I did through the difficult years of caregiving).
It's easy to let yourself get dragged down - sometimes literally - when you're the sole caregiver. As the journey continues, do everything you can to make it a positive one (I hope you've found the respite care; it'll help), and concentrate as much on your well-being as you do your mother's. If your siblings irritate you, limit your contact with them and restrict it to updates on your mother's condition, and by all means, avoid conversations that may reawaken hard feelings.
Sorry to have written a sermon here, but once I get started, I can't stop. Best wishes, and I hope you can find calmness and peace. I finally did.
If you don’t like the situation you are in then only you can change it. If you want to be free to come and go as you please and take a vacation then you will have to place your mom into a facility. You can’t have it both ways. It’s one or the other. You can’t be a caregiver to an aging parent snd be free to come and go as you please and travel. It’s one or the other. Not both. Just stating the facts and the truth. Siblings have nothing to do with YOUR situation.