Anonymous wrote:You need to accept that these are her decisions to make and the situation is has a thousand nuances, not all of which you’re privy to since you’re not there day to day. She’s probably estranging herself from you and others because she’s feeling judged. The best thing you can do to support her is lend and ear and just listen and commiserate without giving advice. Seems clear she doesn’t find advice helpful; if you’re able to, please try to stop giving advice and your relationship may improve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. I have gotten great advice on this forum regarding how to view situations like this. The elderly parent has their own agency, and it is their choice how they leave this world. If they want to take risks or refuse help, that is their choice. It may kill or cripple them in the process but that is their choice. All you can do is be what support you can be but also protect your own mental health in the process and keep your distance in what you can.
+1,000,000 OP I could have written your post about 5 years ago. Instead of a priest, we got a case worker involved who gave the same response because mom held it together for the case worker and went bananas with me over dealing with dad. I tried to explain how she in our case vacillated between crying and rage dealing with dad, but what they saw was someone worn out, but holding it together well and I was the bad guy for butting in. You have to step back and let me tell it didn't go well. He declined more and she waited way too long to get the proper help. She never recovered from the ordeal and has remained a rage filled, spiteful person beyond burnout who refuses to stay in therapy or stay on medication. Nobody believed how she lashed out at me once he was gone except for my children and husband who witnessed it. It's all very sad. I have needed to let the professionals deal and step back which means she is now declining and not in the right setting. I can endure rage fit after rage fit to somehow miraculously get her all the right help.
It is so frustrating when people like priests make you feel like you are crazy and the parent is doing just fine in a difficult situation. It can feel like all your efforts to help get shot down, so you have to step back. Have your boundaries. Take care of yourself and do what you handle without losing your mind. She may lose hers, but if she is cognitively capable, it's her choice. I wish I could have saved my mom from basically going insane from the stress, but I could not because she fought me tooth and nail. I suspect she is now at a pre-dementia stage where she still appears fine to the professionals, but is declining, but I cannot do myself in trying to convince people she has lost it and needs more help.
Anonymous wrote:Are there things not related to caring for your dad that you can take over for your mom? Anything you can hire done or pay for from a distance? Yardwork, grocery delivery, housecleaning, etc.? If she won't take help related to him, maybe she'll accept help on other things (perhaps framed as "to allow you to be able to focus on helping Dad)?
Anonymous wrote:PP again. I have gotten great advice on this forum regarding how to view situations like this. The elderly parent has their own agency, and it is their choice how they leave this world. If they want to take risks or refuse help, that is their choice. It may kill or cripple them in the process but that is their choice. All you can do is be what support you can be but also protect your own mental health in the process and keep your distance in what you can.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
The doctors and her priest are aware. In fact, the geriatrician was the one who was there when my dad got enraged when the doctor told him it was time to turn over his bank accounts to someone else and he stormed out of the office onto a busy street. That doctor and my mom went chasing after him, and he told her she needed to take Dad to the ER for a psychiatric eval.
Out of desperation I wrote to her priest figuring she would listen to him. His response (verbatim):
“From what I know, your mother does not seem to be in denial. Rather, as a committed spouse she appears to be doing everything she can to help your dad retain some sense of routine while recognizing the challenges that are significant. Your mother and I speak frequently. We here are doing what we can to be of support to both of them.”
We’ve suggested an AirTag and she refuses to get an iPhone. On the occasion he takes his phone with him, I can track him. The problem is that he’s lucid enough to realize he has issues and has always been scared of dementia. His mother lived with it till she was 102. There are questions whether a facility would take him with his aggression issues.
Literally every suggestion we’ve made has been met with an excuse or reason not to. There’s a dementia advocate whom one of her friends used and we’ve urged her to meet with this woman. She absolutely refuses and said she feels repulsed by the suggestion. Why, I don’t know.
Anonymous wrote:PP again. I have gotten great advice on this forum regarding how to view situations like this. The elderly parent has their own agency, and it is their choice how they leave this world. If they want to take risks or refuse help, that is their choice. It may kill or cripple them in the process but that is their choice. All you can do is be what support you can be but also protect your own mental health in the process and keep your distance in what you can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
The doctors and her priest are aware. In fact, the geriatrician was the one who was there when my dad got enraged when the doctor told him it was time to turn over his bank accounts to someone else and he stormed out of the office onto a busy street. That doctor and my mom went chasing after him, and he told her she needed to take Dad to the ER for a psychiatric eval.
Out of desperation I wrote to her priest figuring she would listen to him. His response (verbatim):
“From what I know, your mother does not seem to be in denial. Rather, as a committed spouse she appears to be doing everything she can to help your dad retain some sense of routine while recognizing the challenges that are significant. Your mother and I speak frequently. We here are doing what we can to be of support to both of them.”
We’ve suggested an AirTag and she refuses to get an iPhone. On the occasion he takes his phone with him, I can track him. The problem is that he’s lucid enough to realize he has issues and has always been scared of dementia. His mother lived with it till she was 102. There are questions whether a facility would take him with his aggression issues.
Literally every suggestion we’ve made has been met with an excuse or reason not to. There’s a dementia advocate whom one of her friends used and we’ve urged her to meet with this woman. She absolutely refuses and said she feels repulsed by the suggestion. Why, I don’t know.
PP again. I have gotten great advice on this forum regarding how to view situations like this. The elderly parent has their own agency, and it is their choice how they leave this world. If they want to take risks or refuse help, that is their choice. It may kill or cripple them in the process but that is their choice. All you can do is be what support you can be but also protect your own mental health in the process and keep your distance in what you can.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
The doctors and her priest are aware. In fact, the geriatrician was the one who was there when my dad got enraged when the doctor told him it was time to turn over his bank accounts to someone else and he stormed out of the office onto a busy street. That doctor and my mom went chasing after him, and he told her she needed to take Dad to the ER for a psychiatric eval.
Out of desperation I wrote to her priest figuring she would listen to him. His response (verbatim):
“From what I know, your mother does not seem to be in denial. Rather, as a committed spouse she appears to be doing everything she can to help your dad retain some sense of routine while recognizing the challenges that are significant. Your mother and I speak frequently. We here are doing what we can to be of support to both of them.”
We’ve suggested an AirTag and she refuses to get an iPhone. On the occasion he takes his phone with him, I can track him. The problem is that he’s lucid enough to realize he has issues and has always been scared of dementia. His mother lived with it till she was 102. There are questions whether a facility would take him with his aggression issues.
Literally every suggestion we’ve made has been met with an excuse or reason not to. There’s a dementia advocate whom one of her friends used and we’ve urged her to meet with this woman. She absolutely refuses and said she feels repulsed by the suggestion. Why, I don’t know.