Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. What did you say, OP? Any opinion must take this into consideration.
OP. In the group chat my SIL asked (suggested) that MIL could come stay with us for as long as there is a pandemic. MIL and SILs live in a large town, we live rural. They thought MIL would catch Covid quicker in a large town and die. I said no.
MIL is 90+ years old and she has dementia. She needs help with bathing, grooming, personal care and other things. DH was WFH full time during the pandemic and he locked himself away in his home office all day long, so the responsibility of taking care of MIL would have landed on my shoulders.
Our house is not suited to a fragile, elderly person with dementia. I don't feel I'm equipped to deal with this. Frankly I didn't want anyone living with us, neither from his family nor mine.
MIL lives in a comfortable town house and has several aides and helpers. My opinion was that she should stay in her own familiar surroundings and with a routine she was used to.
This, in a nutshell, is why my inlaws got mad at me.
So they were entirely right that a rotating cast of aides and helpers put your fragile MIL at a dramatically increased risk of death. It was selfish of them to try to strong arm you into playing caregiver (realistically they could have done it in their large town with proper precautions) and it was selfish of you to leave her at risk (you really got lucky given that dynamic with caregivers).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. What did you say, OP? Any opinion must take this into consideration.
OP. In the group chat my SIL asked (suggested) that MIL could come stay with us for as long as there is a pandemic. MIL and SILs live in a large town, we live rural. They thought MIL would catch Covid quicker in a large town and die. I said no.
MIL is 90+ years old and she has dementia. She needs help with bathing, grooming, personal care and other things. DH was WFH full time during the pandemic and he locked himself away in his home office all day long, so the responsibility of taking care of MIL would have landed on my shoulders.
Our house is not suited to a fragile, elderly person with dementia. I don't feel I'm equipped to deal with this. Frankly I didn't want anyone living with us, neither from his family nor mine.
MIL lives in a comfortable town house and has several aides and helpers. My opinion was that she should stay in her own familiar surroundings and with a routine she was used to.
This, in a nutshell, is why my inlaws got mad at me.
So they were entirely right that a rotating cast of aides and helpers put your fragile MIL at a dramatically increased risk of death. It was selfish of them to try to strong arm you into playing caregiver (realistically they could have done it in their large town with proper precautions) and it was selfish of you to leave her at risk (you really got lucky given that dynamic with caregivers).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. What did you say, OP? Any opinion must take this into consideration.
OP. In the group chat my SIL asked (suggested) that MIL could come stay with us for as long as there is a pandemic. MIL and SILs live in a large town, we live rural. They thought MIL would catch Covid quicker in a large town and die. I said no.
MIL is 90+ years old and she has dementia. She needs help with bathing, grooming, personal care and other things. DH was WFH full time during the pandemic and he locked himself away in his home office all day long, so the responsibility of taking care of MIL would have landed on my shoulders.
Our house is not suited to a fragile, elderly person with dementia. I don't feel I'm equipped to deal with this. Frankly I didn't want anyone living with us, neither from his family nor mine.
MIL lives in a comfortable town house and has several aides and helpers. My opinion was that she should stay in her own familiar surroundings and with a routine she was used to.
This, in a nutshell, is why my inlaws got mad at me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like they thought you were treating their mother unfairly/unkindly/cruelly. If that wasn’t your intention you should raise the issue now *to apologize* and let the water go under the bridge. Your defensiveness (“they decided I am an awful family member!”) without taking any responsibility for your role in creating the conflict will not serve you well.
MIL and I get along just fine. I like her and she likes me.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. What did you say, OP? Any opinion must take this into consideration.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like they thought you were treating their mother unfairly/unkindly/cruelly. If that wasn’t your intention you should raise the issue now *to apologize* and let the water go under the bridge. Your defensiveness (“they decided I am an awful family member!”) without taking any responsibility for your role in creating the conflict will not serve you well.
Anonymous wrote:My SIL and I have a big blowup a few years ago where she just started berating me over nothing. (It followed on a couple of years where she’d been sort of nasty to me, for reasons I never understood.) aWe are now in a space where we are cordial, do things like family parties in the same space, etc. I will never trust her and I will never like her again. But it’s best for everyone involved, including my parents, my siblings, my kids and their cousins, that we just outwardly pretend it never happened. I don’t forget though. And I have some lingering resentment that my own siblings didn’t stand up for me more but I need to let that go. We aren’t a confrontational group, as a family, and I’m sure they didn’t want to put my brother in a bad situation where he ended up estranged. But it drives me nuts that everyone acts like she’s a great person when she’s really a nasty bully.