Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, two things here
First: Absolutely do NOT depend on your Mother for anything. You are going to have to have different childcare, always.
Quit trying to figure her out. You can not be putting your energy into figuring her out.
Second: Once you get your life together -- address her health. Know her finances. Know if she will qualify for medicaid. She is likely headed, at come point, to a dementia care facility.
It’s actually more likely that she won’t
Occurrence of dementia by age group:
65–69: ~3%
71–79: ~5%
75–84: ~13%
80–89: ~24%
90+: ~35%–40%
There are always more people without dementia than with it. Not everyone with dementia requires a care facility. Less than 5% of elders live in SNF/Memory Care
Let OP deal with her child care situation without adding to her burden. Right now there is nothing to suggest that her mom has MCI or dementia. She’s a poor communicator who has always used lying. If OP sees additional signs she can deal with it then.
Anonymous wrote:You need to get another plan for childcare, immediately. I’d eliminate her from that role completely. Garage the car and tell her it’s not drivable.
You need support, not headaches. Be easy on yourself! Surround yourself with those who will cheer you on and be reliable.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I get it. I just wish she would’ve been honest with me.
Anonymous wrote:I do think that a lot of this could be a result of aging. Lots of our older family members were healthy and independent until mid 70s, and then they started having issues. At least in our case we weren't relying on them for support like you've needed to. But I think you're squarely in the sandwich generation now, where you have kids AND parents to care for.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I get it. I just wish she would’ve been honest with me.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know why they do this, but my mom has gone from kind of understandable little lies that I could attribute to misremembering things or not wanting to get caught doing something wrong, to essentially pathologically lying every time she answers a question. It drives me insane but also makes me wonder if this is an early symptom of dementia?
Example (she lives with us, and watches TV at night in the room where I work all day):
Me: Do you know what happened to the remote?
Her: I don't know what you're talking about.
Me: Oh it didn't work this morning, but it was working yesterday.
Her: I didn't notice anything.
Me: Oh. I thought it looked like you might have tried to switch the batteries out to get it to work.
Her: Yes, I did.
Me: And did it work after that?
Her: No.
Me: . . . then why did you just say you didn't know what I was talking about?
Her: I don't know!
Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat the heck. And it's stuff like this: low-stakes, but continuous, and feels like a mix between being gaslit and being lied to by a teenager trying to get away with something. It's baffling and I get pretty pissed off because it seems so deeply unnecessary, but it's constant.
Anonymous wrote:My husband died a year and a half ago and I’m raising two late elementary kids alone. I’m also an only child. My mother is 77 and was very helpful in the beginning, but lately her behavior has gotten really weird and honestly upsetting.
She has always told little pointless lies here and there, but it has definitely escalated. I had a very important work trip recently. I do not travel much, so when I do, I really need solid childcare/pet help. This trip had been planned for two months, and I am obviously the sole income earner for my household, so it was not something casual I could just blow off. She bailed the day before. I had to scramble and get a neighbor/friend to help with my kids and cat. We made it work, but it was stressful as hell. Honestly, her bailing felt almost like sabotage, especially because she knew how important the trip was. When I confronted her, she claimed she was very sick and said she had been at the hospital. I track her location and know she was not at the hospital and did not even leave her apartment while I was gone.
Then after spring break she told me the older car I’ve been letting her use “filled with smoke” and was basically undrivable. I originally believed her, but the details started sounding off. I went and started the car myself and drove it around the neighborhood, and there were no issues. That made me even more suspicious, and now I really think she made up or exaggerated the whole thing because she wants me to replace the car. After my husband died, I let her use it because she was helping with school pickups/dropoffs. She barely even does that anymore. I did say once last year that I might eventually replace it because it is almost 20 years old, but obviously that has not exactly been my focus.
So… has anyone dealt with this with a parent? Is this just manipulation and lying? Some kind of mental health issue? Early cognitive decline? It does not really seem like dementia to me, but something feels off. I’m mostly just stunned that she would pile on more stress and apparently try to manipulate me into buying her a car when I am already doing a lot on my own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is manipulative lying. Both lies were either out and out lies or exaggerations meant to get you to stop questioning her or challenging her, and to get what she wanted.
They weren’t random, they were designed to get her way.
This is the most uncharitable view of what's going on.
It is, nevertheless, exactly what is going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is manipulative lying. Both lies were either out and out lies or exaggerations meant to get you to stop questioning her or challenging her, and to get what she wanted.
They weren’t random, they were designed to get her way.
This is the most uncharitable view of what's going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they can't remember so they make something up (lie).
A lie is an intentional deception. Things like this are just people having cognitive issues, filling in the gaps however they can, and deciding their theories are reality.
It doesn't help anyone to call it lying.