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3 years ago my older sister and her husband suddenly moved away from my 87 year old mom and her brother who my mom lived with. They didn’t even discuss the move with me or my mom despite the fact my mom had supported them financially for 30 years. My sister and her husband both weigh 500 pounds and have been unemployable. I was so angry that they abandoned my mom after all she’d done for them and I let them know it. I immediately moved my mom and uncle 3 hours away to my town so I could care for them. My sister doesn’t return my mom’s calls. They’ve come to visit twice in three years. My sister can’t fit her wheelchair through the door of my home and she’s been such a hateful person to me and my mom all her life —I no longer feel like she’s welcome at my house. For three years I’ve take my care of all my mom and uncles needs, taken off work for doctors/hospital visits, arranged hospice and assisted living for my uncle, grocery shopped, advocated for them financially, entertained them. I have a freshman in college and my husband has stage 4 heart failure. My mom is very controlling and manipulative and now that my uncle is in assisted living (he has two kinds of cancer) she’s lonely at her independent living cottages and starting to guilt me more and more for everything (I spent two evenings with her this week and she’s cries and says she feels abandoned. And now at the holidays she’s acting like I’m responsible for getting our family together for the holidays. I told her I would take her to see my sister if that’s what she wants but reminded her that they never call her or invite us to come. In fact no one in our family calls my mom because she drives people away with her negative toxic personality. My dad died when I was 14 and she’s all I had so I learned to overlook a lot to have a relationship with her. But I can’t be her only friend and I can’t deal with the blame and the constant guilt trips. This is starting to cause me to develop high blood pressure. I’m just 52…I have a great job and have to keep it because my husband may soon be unable to work and I have my own family’s needs to consider too—any advice?? My mom is 90 now and totally against assisted living.

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"Oh well Mom. I cannot be there for you all the time. I have to work because DHs heart may prevent him from working eventually so I will be the sole breadwinner and a Caregiver for DH."

Doesn't her independent place have transportation and activities. Has she seen the AL ur Uncle is in? That would be a tighter community. She needs to understand that sorry, she is not your first priority. Your husband and family are. That you have taken over overseeing Uncles and her care. You are spread thin. 10hrs a day are put aside for work. That leaves u with maybe 6 hrs that needs to be spread out to be there for everyone. You do need to sleep. Most of that six hours should go to ur family.

Guilt is self imposed. You have nothing to feel guilty about. You have enough on your plate. DO NOT move her in with you. Its not your fault that her personality has pushed people away. Or her friends have left this world. She has to take advantage of what the independent living has available. If they provide transportation, she has to take advantage of it giving u a break. Boundries, you need to set boundries for you. What u can and can't do.

Sitting here thinking she doesn't think you visiting 2 days a week is enough, if that was my DH he would tell her OK, then I'll come once a week.😊
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Isthisrealyreal Nov 2021
I agree JoAnn, if what I am doing now isn't good enough let's see how you like me taking care of me and not seeing you as often.

I know for a fact the more we cave to the pressure and manipulation, the more they see it as a viable solution to get what they want.
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Lyssa, you have to set boundaries and make it clear to her that she only has so many choices and you being her step and fetch and sit and beg, scratching post are not part of those choices.

She can stay where she is, alone and lonely. With you being able to visit 1 x weekly, biweekly, whatever works for you.

Or

She can go to a nice AL, where she will meet some very nice people and have activities.

Please put those boundaries in place and reinforce them every single time she bumps into them or you will become a statistic and then she won't have an advocate.

You need to stay healthy and the best way to do that, IMO, is not take responsibility for the consequences of her choices. Don't be her doormat and don't let her make you think for one second that you did this to her life. You didn't, her lifetime of choices has put her right where she is.
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“But I can’t be her only friend and I can’t deal with the blame and the constant guilt trips” There’s your answer. Stop even attempting to be her friend, don’t listen to the blame and don’t accept guilt. You’ve done an amazing job looking out for your mom and uncle. It’s not on you that she doesn’t see that. Don’t discuss your sister again with mom, let their relationship or lack of one be between them. Spend exactly enough time with mom to see that her needs are met, leave or get off the phone when the griping begins, “I’ll talk to you when you’re feeling more positive” Whatever “happy” is to your mom may very well be over, you can’t fix or change that and protecting your own health is never wrong. I wish you peace
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LyssaM Nov 2021
Thank you so much for taking the time to reply to me. I’ll never have a good relationship with my sister unfortunately. She and her family lived in a separate house from my mom, but over the course of 30 years they took hundreds of thousands of dollars, but she and my mom never got along and my sister treated her terribly. I was tired of always being in the middle of their fights so I graduated high school and moved three hours away. Over these many years me and my family have visited mom frequently, we’ve been there for surgeries, birthdays, holidays—helping paint her house etc. and we’ve travelled together. When my mom and uncle moved here i told my sister and her adult children that the money train stops. They are no longer moms responsibility and that the kids need to take care of their mom financially. I said our mom may need that money for longterm care soon. Otherwise I’ll be paying for nursing home care for her. That’s when everyone stopped calling. I’m sorry but a Christian would not take money for 30 years and give nothing in return. But again it is so nice to hear different perspectives and I really value the time you spent to write me with good advice!
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Lyssa, I am perhaps overstepping here, but I want to ask you a question that I hope you'll think about: is your anger with your sister less about her cutting contact with mom after "all she's done for them" (even though you yourself describe mom as controlling, manipulative and a person who has driven everyone else away from her) and more about your sister abandoning YOU to have to deal with mom alone?

Listen, I get it - I have 2 sisters. One is awesome, and one, well, isn't. While I haven't cut ties with that one, I find myself less willing to tread on eggshells around her since my mom has now passed - which I did for many years because my sister was certainly capable of calling up mom and complaining to her how rotten I treat her. So I get having a sibling with whom you have a less than, shall we say, cordial relationship.

But that's not to say that your sister and her family didn't leave and cut contact with mom for very valid reasons on their part. Maybe they couldn't take your toxic mom anymore. Did you sister ever express those feeling to you either before or since she moved? It seems to me like mom and uncle lived with sister and you were three hours away, so you were somewhat removed from the situation, correct?

If you're going to have done with your sister, that's ok: it's completely your choice. But if you ever had/want to have a sisterly relationship with her, it might not be a bad thing to call her and tell her how hard it's been for you, how you feel like they "abandoned" mom and left you holding the bag; but you might be surprised at her response.

If your mom is as manipulative and toxic as you say, I don't think it's going to get better the older she gets, especially when your focus and attentions shift away from her and towards your very ill husband. Mom's feelings shouldn't be the only consideration here. And when mom complains to you about your sister not calling her - either subtlety or overtly blaming you for this lack of communication - tell her the phone works 2 ways, both incoming calls AND outgoing calls, and she is free to call her daughter any time she cares to.

Good luck.
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