Anonymous wrote:OP here. So this is what happens if I set boundaries - they get ignored or I get abused. What happens if I ignore what H does? Well, he brought 3 dogs into the house and he does not clean up after them. If I don't do it, I live in filth, that's bad for my health. DH's tea;th is more robust and he doesn't care. If I stop working and stop supporting our family (because he has a horrible work history), we will be homeless and have no health insurance. I could just ignore my demented mother, she would start to vegetate away in her home and god knows what would happen. I could just ignore everything and everyone and start living by myself. It would even be great for myself, but it would be awful for DCs and my mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they're used to the old you. Ingrained dynamics between people are really hard to break. That's what happens when adult siblings return to the family home for the Holidays, and ancient rivalries and hierarchies resurface like no time has passed at all.
You will actually have to enact severe consequences for them to believe the new you, OP.
Everyone is used to me giving in, taking responsibility, taking on the work. I can't do it anymore. How do I get people to step up? Mostly the issue is H, when I tried to set boundaries, he started becoming aggressive and absuive (verbally, but still). I am thinking divorce is the only solution. It's been a year.
^also, I can't just let my mom with dementia go without care. No one else is helping though. Not financially, not logistically, not with actual care work. No one even wants to meet with her anymore, forget about taking care. Not my sister, not her own brother, no one. My dad died years ago.
Can you put her in memory care? This is not her brother's issue. It's for you and your sister to figure out. If she was such a bad mom or can't remember you anymore then put in her memory care and walk away. There is only so much one person can do.
She was a great mom and I love her. She was also my best friend, we went on vacation together, took care of my DCs together when H was non-functional, etc. She went on our first ski trip with the kids, helped me braid their hair in the morning and helped my carry their skis. She brought me cappuccino in the morning when there wasn't any coffee in the hotel. She was utterly amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you the OP of the thread where the husband left for a different city but doesn't want you rehoming the 3 dogs he left with you and the kids?
You need to realize your husband has a mental health disorder who will never get better. You need to divorce.
That's your boundary right there.
Yes, and now he's back and it's not great. My therapist thinks he has a personality disorder. Also some paranoid traits. I signed the retainer agreement and need to pay the lawyer a hefty sum so he'll start working. I mean there is no way around it, but it hurts me a bit to spend that much. retainer is also non[refundable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they're used to the old you. Ingrained dynamics between people are really hard to break. That's what happens when adult siblings return to the family home for the Holidays, and ancient rivalries and hierarchies resurface like no time has passed at all.
You will actually have to enact severe consequences for them to believe the new you, OP.
Everyone is used to me giving in, taking responsibility, taking on the work. I can't do it anymore. How do I get people to step up? Mostly the issue is H, when I tried to set boundaries, he started becoming aggressive and absuive (verbally, but still). I am thinking divorce is the only solution. It's been a year.
^also, I can't just let my mom with dementia go without care. No one else is helping though. Not financially, not logistically, not with actual care work. No one even wants to meet with her anymore, forget about taking care. Not my sister, not her own brother, no one. My dad died years ago.
Can you put her in memory care? This is not her brother's issue. It's for you and your sister to figure out. If she was such a bad mom or can't remember you anymore then put in her memory care and walk away. There is only so much one person can do.
She was a great mom and I love her. She was also my best friend, we went on vacation together, took care of my DCs together when H was non-functional, etc. She went on our first ski trip with the kids, helped me braid their hair in the morning and helped my carry their skis. She brought me cappuccino in the morning when there wasn't any coffee in the hotel. She was utterly amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they're used to the old you. Ingrained dynamics between people are really hard to break. That's what happens when adult siblings return to the family home for the Holidays, and ancient rivalries and hierarchies resurface like no time has passed at all.
You will actually have to enact severe consequences for them to believe the new you, OP.
Everyone is used to me giving in, taking responsibility, taking on the work. I can't do it anymore. How do I get people to step up? Mostly the issue is H, when I tried to set boundaries, he started becoming aggressive and absuive (verbally, but still). I am thinking divorce is the only solution. It's been a year.
^also, I can't just let my mom with dementia go without care. No one else is helping though. Not financially, not logistically, not with actual care work. No one even wants to meet with her anymore, forget about taking care. Not my sister, not her own brother, no one. My dad died years ago.
Can you put her in memory care? This is not her brother's issue. It's for you and your sister to figure out. If she was such a bad mom or can't remember you anymore then put in her memory care and walk away. There is only so much one person can do.
Anonymous wrote:Are you the OP of the thread where the husband left for a different city but doesn't want you rehoming the 3 dogs he left with you and the kids?
You need to realize your husband has a mental health disorder who will never get better. You need to divorce.
That's your boundary right there.