Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Is your MIL my mom??? We must be related LOL
Nearly-80 yo mom acts about like this! They won't even replace her knee because she isn't likely to be compliant with PT. It's really frustrating. She's pretty happy to just trundle from her room to the kitchen to the couch (I live with her so I see this daily).
She's making her choices, I guess...
But then what happens when she falls and declines? Are you expected to provide 24/7 care for her?
Yep! I do my best to keep the house safe-removed throw rugs (despite her protest) and arranged furniture more safely. I do get her out with me-we shop together and go places-so she's not totally sedentary. But I'm at work all day and she tends to not move much during that time.
I'll take care of her-she helped me so much with my kids and I live here and the house is in trust to me. I just want her quality of life to be the best it can be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Is your MIL my mom??? We must be related LOL
Nearly-80 yo mom acts about like this! They won't even replace her knee because she isn't likely to be compliant with PT. It's really frustrating. She's pretty happy to just trundle from her room to the kitchen to the couch (I live with her so I see this daily).
She's making her choices, I guess...
But then what happens when she falls and declines? Are you expected to provide 24/7 care for her?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you worrying about her? This woman is not your mother nor are you responsible for caring for her.
OP: Are you serious? I've been married for 33 years and she is grandmother to my kids. What happens to her impacts the family.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like if they want to give up at 80, let them. I mean that's pretty old. If your mom made it this far, good for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you worrying about her? This woman is not your mother nor are you responsible for caring for her.
OP: Are you serious? I've been married for 33 years and she is grandmother to my kids. What happens to her impacts the family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother-in-law, who is 80, has decided to just lean in to her sedentariness. If we're all together for a few days and DH and mention we're heading to the gym, she'll say, "I will NOT be going to the gym" with a big smile. Ditto for going on even short walks around her neighborhood.
She refuses to do even small amounts of exercise. She had a knee replaced last year and did no PT afterward. Now she says she's unsteady on her feet and needs a cane to walk more than short distances. When I asked her why she didn't work with a trainer who could help with balance, she made a big show of shrugging and saying, "It's easier this way." Even her daughter, the apple of her eye, can't convince her to move a little bit.
Is she actually enjoying her infirmity and likely deterioration? She lives alone and I worry a fall is in her future. At our last gathering at her house, we went in to hug each other and her foot caught the edge of her throw rug and she lurched into me. But when I suggested getting rid of the throw rugs, she said it was fine, that she knows how to pick up her feet.
Sensing disaster sooner or later.
No one enjoys infirmity and the prospect of deterioration. What is wrong with you?
Anonymous wrote:My mother-in-law, who is 80, has decided to just lean in to her sedentariness. If we're all together for a few days and DH and mention we're heading to the gym, she'll say, "I will NOT be going to the gym" with a big smile. Ditto for going on even short walks around her neighborhood.
She refuses to do even small amounts of exercise. She had a knee replaced last year and did no PT afterward. Now she says she's unsteady on her feet and needs a cane to walk more than short distances. When I asked her why she didn't work with a trainer who could help with balance, she made a big show of shrugging and saying, "It's easier this way." Even her daughter, the apple of her eye, can't convince her to move a little bit.
Is she actually enjoying her infirmity and likely deterioration? She lives alone and I worry a fall is in her future. At our last gathering at her house, we went in to hug each other and her foot caught the edge of her throw rug and she lurched into me. But when I suggested getting rid of the throw rugs, she said it was fine, that she knows how to pick up her feet.
Sensing disaster sooner or later.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you worrying about her? This woman is not your mother nor are you responsible for caring for her.
Anonymous wrote:When I’m 80, GTFO with expecting me to go to the gym. I’m decades younger and already have arthritis. OP is obnoxious.