+100!! Benefits and close relationships all around! |
Do not feel one ounce of guilt. It sounds like a good set-up. You will still have plenty to do! |
| When I met my husband, his mother lived with him because she was unable to walk, and he did not want to put her in a nursing home. I married him knowing that I would be responsible for helping with her care. I loved her very much, and was heartbroken when she passed away three years later. I've never regretted the time I got to spend with her, and for my husband, it proved to him that I love him unconditionally. |
Yes, but back in Mayberry, mothers didn't work outside of the home- making 24/7 care of an elderly person feasible. |
I would rather a trained and qualified professional do it. caring for dementia patients is very difficult and complicated, and it's easy to hurt them if you don't have the right ways of doing things. also, my parents have no money. there is no way I could earn enough to support them in addition to my own kids, while also providing 24-7 care myself. nobody could do that. |
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no way. I am the only child of divorced and remarried parents, so that is four adults to deal with, plus my in-laws. dh and I are not taking in 6 people. my dad'said wife is the one he cheated on my mom with, so I really can't expect my mom to live with her.
also my FIL has dementia and is an ass-grabber. it's not his fault, but he can't live with us, we have daughters 10 and 12. no way. think these things throuh before you judge. not everyone has a happy intact family with no major medical problems. back in the day, people just died younger and these situations didn't come up. |
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Hell no is my first thought. But if it were short term, ie terminal, yes I probably would.
I wouldn't move them in with the idea they might live there for years and possibly decades. |
My grandmother lived with us when she got dementia and it was awful on everyone. She became a huge danger to herself and everyone else (leaving oven on, walking out of th house and wandering around, screaming at us that we were trying to kill her, pooping all over the house, etc.). It was so emotionally draining on us kids and my parents marriage. But my parents couldn't afford a nice nursing home and were afraid of the ones she could get into. I admired my parents very much to do everything they could to take care of her. But unless you've actually lived with someone like this as a caregiver, you have no clue, none, how awful it can be. |
| Fuck no |
This. |
Why doesn't your husband do it? |
He has had a very difficult relationship with her. She's always been kind to me prior to the dementia. I was the one who pressed the issue to move her here and do it all as if I did not she was going to be dumbed at the first nursing home cross country and who knows what would happen. I want to set a good example for our kids that you care for those who need it. He will only do what I ask him to do for her. I do not mind but it is far more work than most realize between fighting with the nursing home, paperwork, shopping and more. |
Which assisted living institution are you going to? |
KARMA ?kärm? noun (in Hinduism and Buddhism) the sum of a person's actions in this and previous states of existence, viewed as deciding their fate in future existences. |
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I've been thinking about this a lot lately and my current stance is no, I wouldn't. This is mainly due to our circumstances though. I could see how people who had a close and loving relationship with their parents would gladly repay the favor. It just doesn't work for us.
My family has always been on the more dysfunctional side. While my parents always kept us kids clothed and fed, our emotional needs were never really taken care of. Over the years, my relationship to my parents has only deteriorated. Especially my mother is a very demanding, judgmental and toxic person. Taking her in would put a huge strain on me, which I'm not equipped to deal with. My father would probably be less stressful to deal with, but we're so distant, I feel no more than a financial obligation to him either. I feel guilty about sounding so callous, but I keep reminding myself that our relationship is what it is and they're not going to change. My FIL is a different topic. He's very pleasant to be around and we've actually had him live with us for a few months when I was pregnant, while he was still looking for a new appartment. However, he is fully self-sufficient. If he was in need of special or round-the-clock care, I'm not sure I'd take it on for a longer period of time either. Part of that is due to having an infant at home, part of it is just me not having a caretaker personality at all. I'd rather leave their care to a knowledgeable professional who will definitely be better at it than I could be. Growing up, my mother took on most of the elderly care load for her parents. They used to live close to where we did and not a day went by when she didn't take care of them. She always prioritized being a daughter over being a mother and made it clear that her parents came before her kids. This fostered some resentment in me and my siblings. I never saw it as a "great lesson of humanity" as much as a burden I didn't sign up for. I guess it has shaped me into putting being a good mother over being a good daughter. Taking care of my daughter comes first and while I'll gladly go by my parents for social visits now and then and take over some of the slack from my sister, I will not put my life on hold to provide for them 24/7. |