Anonymous wrote:My mom is like this. She’s got a myriad of physical issues coupled with dementia and she’s turned into an awful person. In her case she’s terrified all the time and her anxiety is off the charts (she’s medicated but it doesn’t seem to be helping). She doesn’t sleep well because she’s so worried about everything all the time, and this leads to her taking out her fear and anger on the closest person to her which is me.
Looking back she’s always been incredibly codependent and my dad just took care of her. The second he died she looked to me and unfortunately I filled that role. Even before the dementia she didn’t care that I’d have to drive an hour each way several times a month to help her with something (I’ve since moved her closer) and she has never respected my time or my efforts. Years ago I mentioned how my work was suffering due to all the time I had to spend taking care of her and she told me I should quit my job. I’m a single mom with a single income. Zero empathy. Never had it, still doesn’t have it.
Selfish people are going to be selfish. The last eight years of my life have been spent managing my mom’s life, even when she was fully capable of managing her own affairs. The last two years she’s been more than a full time job. It’s a million times harder than raising kids and way less rewarding. My life is on hold. Her needs are being met while mine aren’t a consideration.
Since this is an anonymous forum I can admit that sometimes I find myself so envious of my friends whose parents turned into sweet old people, or those whose parents died suddenly or after a short illness.
OP here. Exactly this, and I’m so sorry. What I see in you is a kind, thoughtful person who is being taken advantage of. As you said, your mother was like this prior. It is people like us, who the selfish come to to try and take advantage of. Setting boundaries is hard but necessary. Are you in a state that has elder laws that will hold you accountable for setting boundaries? If so, get a social worker on board who specialize in elders so you will not get yourself into trouble by setting those boundaries. I cannot begin to tell you how my (now deceased) father destroyed things for my mother by refusing to leave the home and downsize when it was appropriate. Even when he was so weak he could not get out of bed, he would demand my mother pull him up - my mother is disabled. My sister ended up moving in to help (they live hours by plane from me) and that enabled him more. When he passed, they were forced to sell at a cheap price because his poor decisions left my mother financially devastated. My mother is now in assisted living and almost completely wheelchair-bound. My sister, with my encouragement, has learned to say “Mom, you pay for that kind of help - please do not demand that I do it instead”.
I beg you to be meaner, to be more selfish, to keep your child sheltered from this. It can and will destroy your own life.