Anonymous wrote:I totally regret spending too much time with my mother who has dementia instead of spending that time with my husband and kids. It can little by little become all encompassing. It’s like death by 1,000 cuts or a frog in a pot of water where the temperature slowly get turned up.
I was so run down and went to my doctor who said it is absolutely not sustainable and I was ruining my health. He says he sees so many women in their late 40’s/early 50’s who start taking on helping their parents out and say it is just until things get more settled and then lo and behold it’s five years later and they have given up way too much of themselves, their health has been affected, have had stressful relationships with spouses, missed out on their kids, etc. He said you need to stop.
So I did. I stopped trying to save them money by doing everything. I stepped back and they had to use their money to hire help, I stopped taking them to dr. Appts, stopped cleaning for them, set up automatic deposits, automatic pill delivery, stopped going over daily to once a week. That forced them to move to assisted living.
Anonymous wrote:To start, you should expect more from your spouse. Only shopping and cooking is not enough here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was the kid in this scenario and my mom was the sandwich. Luckily she knew it was developmentally appropriate for the kids to have no empathy for her.
It was hard for everyone but she didn’t make it worse by expecting us to be anything other than normal kids who did not appreciate what she was doing to try to take care of everyone.
Yes, teens do not have a ton of empathy for parental struggles. That doesn't mean that OP should say yes to everything. OP is perfectly entitled to set boundaries and it is "developmentally appropriate" for teens to learn to accept them and accept that they can't have and do everything that they want.
There's something about the tone of the quoted message that suggests that mothers should be martyrs, that her own mother understood that it was her duty to suffer for her kids' sake. That's a really unhealthy mentality. OP has every right to take care of herself and say no, and for the majority of history, children understood that everyone in the family has rules and responsibilities and family life doesn't revolve around their extracurriculars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most trig students are sophomores, juniors, or seniors - if your teen falls into this age group, you need to start pulling back so they can develop the independence they’ll need for college. Helping with a tough assignment here & there is part of parenting, but if you are pulling HW support duty on a weekly basis for a high schooler, you need to pull back so they can grow. If DC is struggling & needs personalized support, hire a tutor - and so that may take precedence over the new activity they want to do. If DC is not truly struggling but has just gotten reliant on you correcting their HW, it is time to gently remove yourself & assure them that they have the skills & abilities to handle this on their own.
This will be good for you & them, truly.
I don’t know how old your kids are, but I sense that you are a great mother who has done a lot for them - now is the time to let them try out handling more on their own. Definitely with the HW, they need to develop those skills to make it in college. They are not goi g to do this by themselves, you need to push them to be resilient.
And do t feel bad about the play dates for younger - 1 is great.
Bad advice. Always help your kids with homework.
Anonymous wrote:Most trig students are sophomores, juniors, or seniors - if your teen falls into this age group, you need to start pulling back so they can develop the independence they’ll need for college. Helping with a tough assignment here & there is part of parenting, but if you are pulling HW support duty on a weekly basis for a high schooler, you need to pull back so they can grow. If DC is struggling & needs personalized support, hire a tutor - and so that may take precedence over the new activity they want to do. If DC is not truly struggling but has just gotten reliant on you correcting their HW, it is time to gently remove yourself & assure them that they have the skills & abilities to handle this on their own.
This will be good for you & them, truly.
I don’t know how old your kids are, but I sense that you are a great mother who has done a lot for them - now is the time to let them try out handling more on their own. Definitely with the HW, they need to develop those skills to make it in college. They are not goi g to do this by themselves, you need to push them to be resilient.
And do t feel bad about the play dates for younger - 1 is great.