Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t want your practical solutions. She wants you to hug you physically if possible. She’s realizing he’s dying and she’s overwhelmed with living alone and elder care.
It’s not about painting the hallway. It’s fear of being alone. She needs you to make her a cup of tea/coffee, take a walk, talk about something other than the topic of Dad to feel that everything will be OK.
She needs you present. Are you able to get to her?
I do visit once a week. Funny, we actually DO have coffee and walk, each time! And we talk about other things too, just random anecdotes from the day. But it always comes back to the griping, and I just fail each time. I don’t know what to say. I know she wants something from me, but I don’t have the words.
Then just have the ear. Let the words stay in. Try it. That is what she is asking for.
Just a lot of “I understand’s” and “Mmmhmm’s”?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t want your practical solutions. She wants you to hug you physically if possible. She’s realizing he’s dying and she’s overwhelmed with living alone and elder care.
It’s not about painting the hallway. It’s fear of being alone. She needs you to make her a cup of tea/coffee, take a walk, talk about something other than the topic of Dad to feel that everything will be OK.
She needs you present. Are you able to get to her?
I do visit once a week. Funny, we actually DO have coffee and walk, each time! And we talk about other things too, just random anecdotes from the day. But it always comes back to the griping, and I just fail each time. I don’t know what to say. I know she wants something from me, but I don’t have the words.
Then just have the ear. Let the words stay in. Try it. That is what she is asking for.
Anonymous wrote:A former PP here and just want to add that all the responses thus far are really valuable points to consider, and I think absolutely applicable. It could be a huge range of factors all coming together and shaping this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t want your practical solutions. She wants you to hug you physically if possible. She’s realizing he’s dying and she’s overwhelmed with living alone and elder care.
It’s not about painting the hallway. It’s fear of being alone. She needs you to make her a cup of tea/coffee, take a walk, talk about something other than the topic of Dad to feel that everything will be OK.
She needs you present. Are you able to get to her?
I do visit once a week. Funny, we actually DO have coffee and walk, each time! And we talk about other things too, just random anecdotes from the day. But it always comes back to the griping, and I just fail each time. I don’t know what to say. I know she wants something from me, but I don’t have the words.
Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t want your practical solutions. She wants you to hug you physically if possible. She’s realizing he’s dying and she’s overwhelmed with living alone and elder care.
It’s not about painting the hallway. It’s fear of being alone. She needs you to make her a cup of tea/coffee, take a walk, talk about something other than the topic of Dad to feel that everything will be OK.
She needs you present. Are you able to get to her?
Anonymous wrote:
I'm sorry OP, it's so hard to help selfish, cantankerous people.
Even though your mother is suffering, I believe you are entitled to a little push-back. "Mom, what do you want me to do or say? Do you just need me to listen and not say a word? Because these days you pick a fight with me whatever I do."
Does your father need a lot of help, and is your mother the daily caregiver? Does she get breaks from that?
I worry that I may be in your shoes one day, OP. My mother is selfish and expects my father to do everything, but he hasn't been well, and she always manages to make it all about herself and what she's getting or not getting out of a situation. It's very sad to see, after all these years where my father took care of her.