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There are many responsibilities to owning a home. As we age it gets harder to do the things that are needed not to mention handling household emergencies. My mother is 97 and until now I have been her solo support. She has refused to pay for things because “she wants to leave her money to me” or repairs cost too much”. Everything from cleaning, repairs and emergencies have been on me. It’s been 20 plus years of this. Now I’m getting older myself. I live over an hour away and my grandchildren live in other states. I never get to visit because an emergency may come up. My mother refuses to move unless I take her in. I have repeatedly told her that is not an option. Now she just waits for a crisis and calls me to save her. Recently I have said no but what can I do when her basement is flooded and she needs someone to help her. There is no one else but me. I’m so tired of all this. I feel so manipulated. Boundaries, right? She always finds a way to wriggle out of them. I’ve tried talking to her but it’s useless. Tried hiring help. She fires them. Tried showing her assisted living-nope nope nope. I’ve come here so many times just to vent. I’m sorry in advance for the rant but I’m at my wits end. Her endless needs are too much for me to handle. But she refuses to believe it and just dismisses me when I tell her that. I’ve talked to her dr and social workers. They just tell me as long as she is mentally competent there is nothing I can do.

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Why would she want to go to assisted living when she’s got you to be her personal slave and cater to her every whim?
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Reply to ZippyZee
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ChicagoJ Jul 9, 2024
You said it so simply.
I saw myself becoming a slave a long time ago.
Still, I did and did knowing I was not looking out for me.
I let her guilt me and trample me under foot. I’d yell and scream only to get up the next day and slave away!

shame on me for sure.

How is it..some of us see a train coming and get out of the way…others see the train and get frozen in place?
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I’m sorry for your obvious exhaustion in this. Clearly the manipulation has gone on far too long. There’s a big misunderstanding of the boundaries concept as they aren’t for your mother at all. Any boundaries you set are for you, they are yours alone, acting as a fence around your life to keep out things that aren’t good for you. That fence has a gate in it to let in the good things. Just as you set the boundaries, you also enforce them for yourself and don’t allow others to violate them. Mom can’t “wriggle out” of what you don’t allow. Please go live your life, enjoy those grandchildren who won’t be around forever, travel while your health still allows it, do what you enjoy, and leave your mother of sound mind to figure out her own solutions. Stop justifying your choices and trying to provide alternatives that she doesn’t want, you’ve done well by her, now do well for yourself and your family. I truly wish you courage and peace
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Isthisrealyreal Jul 9, 2024
Well said!
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As Beatty.always says, there will be no other solution as long as you ARE the solution.

Go visit your grand children and let the crisis occur, she'll have no choice but to accept a different solution then you.
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"Boundaries...She always finds a way to wriggle out of them."

No, you cave in. You allow her to trample your boundaries because you have no intention of defending them because it makes you feel uncomfortable. You're a People Pleaser.

Tell her a therapeutic fib: "I'll help you move in." (she'll actually be moving into AL, not your house).

Condition #1: she assigns you as her Durable PoA (meaning it is in effect right away). Make sure she assigns you all possible authorities. Make sure it gets finalized legally, in front of the attorney. Don't move a muscle until she actually completes this step with you and a lawyer.

Then, she gets moved directly into a temporary "apartment" in an AL while you "get your house ready" -- there was a "glitch" and the power (or water, etc) isn't connected yet. Don't take her to your house for any reason. Do not even drive past it. Make sure the AL staff knows what the "narrative" is -- they will be happy to play along.

If your Mom is an anxious, agitated or paranoid person, make sure to discuss this with her primary doc who can prescribe meds for this. Do it via video call if your Mom won't go. Her cooperation is part of the condition of you helping her move.

Sell her house to pay for her care.

I wish you much clarity, strength, courage, wisdom and peace in your heart as you work on getting her into appropriate care.
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Reply to Geaton777
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As long as you continue to be at her beck and call and her end all be all, she will never see that in fact she needs more help than she ever realized.
So just stop already!!! What you're doing is ridiculous!
You have brought all of this on yourself, all because you've never learned to say the word no. And of course your mom is taking advantage of that and using and abusing you, and the sad thing is...you're allowing it.
So...as I say on here often...it's time to put your big girl panties on and start using the very simple and short word NO.
NO mom I'm sorry that I can't clean your house anymore, because it's all I can do to clean my own. And NO mom, I can't pay for that repair because I need my money for my own homes repairs. And NO mom, I can't come over to help you with that chore as I'm going to spend a few weeks with my children and grandchildren, so you'll have to hire some help.
You get the picture. As long as you keep enabling your mom and propping up her false sense of independence, she will NEVER admit that she can't live on her own.
Oh and I forgot one more no. NO mom you cannot and will not ever live with me. Period. End of sentence.
Your mom has you right where she wants you, and you just go right along with it. Why? I have no earthly idea.
Perhaps a good therapist could help you better understand why you feel that you have to be someone's doormat just because that person is your mom.
There are definitely some strong underlying issues there for sure.
So STOP the nonsense today(20 years is long enough!!!), and start using that two letter word NO, and for God sake go visit your grandchildren.
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Reply to funkygrandma59
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YaYa79 Jul 16, 2024
AMEN!!! Well said.
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Hi Momsgoto.
i feel Your anguish.
it resonates like a burning fire!
someone mentioned boundaries are for us to protect ourselves. I agree and I’m learning this lesson. Boundaries have never been respected by Ma. She’s not demented. She’s selfish.
guess what: I greatly contributed to drawing out and or exacerbating her weaknesses so she could use them against me! 🤔
caregiving sucks the life out of Us before We stand back and realize how much time and personal vitality we have given/lost as main caregiver to a parent.
trying to sit down with a parent after years of being a door mat to them always taking calls, skipping trips, self care etc…….its like clapping with one hand: useless. They become conditioned by our care and service whether demented or not to ramp up the demands until something goes wrong. Then, they blame anyone but the mirror they look into! They blame me or you
I’m caught in the caregiving toilet bowl with you swirling away!

take a vacation. Take two.
go do your thing.

i have blown years of my life trying to be the good son and do, do, do….

i hope anyone reading this just getting sucked into family caregiving steps back and insulated themselves yesterday!

its not to late for all of us who have been consumed in family care because we chose to serve.
some of us forgot ourselves in the midst of the mayhem.
easier said than done!
Good luck.
do something nice for yourself
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One of the best pieces of advice I have received here is this -

"As long as YOU are the solution, they are never going to even bother to LOOK for another one".

Another good piece of advice -

"What you are feeling is not guilt. It is grief. Guilt is for when you have done something wrong. Grief - is when you are handling the loss of something."

You can grieve a lot of things - in this case - the fact that your mother is no longer able to take care of herself and needs more help than you should/can reasonably provide.

The hardest part of being an adult child with a parent who can no longer take care of themselves, is that sometimes we have to do what is best for them, in spite of them.
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Anxietynacy Jul 16, 2024
Blue, that is so true!!
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Look at it this way. What would your mother do if her basement flooded and you did not exist? Or you were in the hospital or lived in another country? Stop helping. Stop feeling sorry for her, she is counting on that. She is allowed to make her own decisions, but she must live with the consequences of those decisions. If you keep fixing things due to her stubborn behavior how you ever expect her to change?
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waytomisery Jul 16, 2024
Exactly ,

Many of us were groomed to rescue them . It didn’t even occur to me to let them flounder on their own , until the social worker told me to stop helping .
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My husband and I had my 93 year old in-laws move in with us over 2 years ago. It has been extremely difficult for me. They have taken over our lives. My husband has finally realized this and a he just came out and told them that they can’t live here anymore. We found an assisted living facility very close to our home. He told them they will move in there. They were both upset at first. His mother has accepted it. His father sounds like your mother. Every day he makes a point to make one of us feel guilty about this. Moving day is next week. We are worried he will refuse to go. Praying all goes smoothly.
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MargaretMcKen Jul 16, 2024
Susansa, you AREN'T 'guilty' of anything. If he tries to 'make you feel' anything at all, my advice would be to say Eff Off. Very loudly. If he 'refuses to go', walk away from him and stay away. No food is a good start. Action is better than prayer.
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Definition of irony - she wants her kids to pay all of her bills so that she can give her kids a larger inheritance.
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waytomisery Jul 16, 2024
My mother didn’t want to prepay for her funeral . She wanted her kids to pay for her funeral when she died . 🙄
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