Anonymous wrote:My parents weren’t perfect by any means but my sister and I would never ever have considered throwing them to the wolves in old age. We took turns showing grace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all reap what you sow.
All of you disrespecting your elderly parents, not helping or caring for them, your children are watching and learning. Good luck
I agree. I have never been around so many people who have dysfunctional relationships with their family.
My parents were wonderful parents and I’m sure I was plenty annoying to them over the years. So if some of their elder issues are irritating or annoying (and some days they are) so be it. I try to take deep breaths and exercise patience and remember to be grateful for everything they sacrificed for us growing up.
PP and again, dysfunctional relationships continue for generations. Try being the innocent child born to a narcissist and an abusive drunk who stayed married for a lifetime.
I am quite literally attempting to undo generation trauma and addiction through
therapy and medication and specific, intentional lifestyle choices.
Anonymous wrote:Wild how you can step out to google and determine the vast majority of people have tolerable to excellent parents, yet virtually every DCUM poster has some terrible “narc” or whatever is the diagnosis du jour.
The idea that inflicting harm and taking vengeance is mentally healthy and ends generational trauma is its own kind of sick. Your children will imitate you.
Anonymous wrote:You all reap what you sow.
All of you disrespecting your elderly parents, not helping or caring for them, your children are watching and learning. Good luck
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all reap what you sow.
All of you disrespecting your elderly parents, not helping or caring for them, your children are watching and learning. Good luck
I agree. I have never been around so many people who have dysfunctional relationships with their family.
My parents were wonderful parents and I’m sure I was plenty annoying to them over the years. So if some of their elder issues are irritating or annoying (and some days they are) so be it. I try to take deep breaths and exercise patience and remember to be grateful for everything they sacrificed for us growing up.
Anonymous wrote:You all reap what you sow.
All of you disrespecting your elderly parents, not helping or caring for them, your children are watching and learning. Good luck
Anonymous wrote:Totally annoying was managing my narcissistic mom’s increasing demands in the midst of cognitive decline (which she vehemently argued against) and managing her expectations and delusions. She was in denial about aging and her own declining health and constantly chasing a second opinion, more medicines, another diagnosis, a surgical intervention.
She’d routinely call for an ambulance convinced she was critically ill. Or demand that someone get her to an ER for an immediate work up and she’d hope, admission. Then the histrionics would begin anew; demands for everyone she could think of to come visit, anger if you were unable or unwilling to sit vigil. She loved being fawned over and tended to yet would call repeatedly saying she couldn’t wait to get discharged. This went on for far too long. Continued even after she was moved to assisted living.
I promise I’m not a cold hearted nasty person but I’d suffered from a lifetime of her narc abuse and when she died I was profoundly relieved.
Anonymous wrote:I wish more people thought of this. I'm a doctor with lots of elderly parents and I am shocked at how uninvolved most adult children are with their parents. It is difficult to age: appointments, insurance, finances, health care decisions, are more complicated now. Elderly are so often targeted for financial scams, it is awful. Please have the difficult conversation with your elderly parents about: health care and financial power of attorney, where they keep essential information (especially since they will invariably forget every password ever created), who their doctor is, what their expectations are for the future. They will resist this conversation, as most are in denial about the loss of independence, and they need a gentle push to just get over it (I would suggest a trust attorney to help navigate this if it's possible). They are definitely annoying, but so are most people in different ways. They don't want to stop driving, don't want to downsize to an apartment, don't want to move closer to you even though you need to stay where you are for your job, but maybe they should. They should know how to use an Uber app, order groceries online, put a freeze on their credit accounts, etc.