Anonymous wrote:This is not normal behavior. Yes, there are anxieties about aging, which we can be empathetic about. When anxiety manifests in this way, there is something much more significant and disordered going on. No one should be crossing boundaries with other people like this.
Anonymous wrote:And also normal. DH and I just commented that we have to pay attention not to become like his dad and my mom. She is right now next to me telling me that she doesn't know how to take photos with her phone. Which she did know last year, and saying how do I see what I want to take a picture off, while holding the phone down at her feet. Patience is your best friend.
Anonymous wrote:This is not normal behavior. Yes, there are anxieties about aging, which we can be empathetic about. When anxiety manifests in this way, there is something much more significant and disordered going on. No one should be crossing boundaries with other people like this.
Anonymous wrote:My therapist sees a lot of older clients. In order to help me understand my aging parents better, she tells me how her clients behave. They cannot change their appointments, even if someone who actually has a job needs to move theirs. If she asks why, they say "I can't come at 11:30. That's when I eat my sandwich" or "I can't come at 1:30, that's when I cut my toenails" (she was joking there, but to make a point).