Anonymous wrote:PP, that's nuts. I'm disgusted for you. Question: how did you transition from a "normal" relationship with your mom and visits, etc, to the current one you describe? I want and need to reduce contact but my mom is widowed and out of state and I don't know how I'd get away with it. Did your mom notice? Comment on it? Complain? How did you manage her if she questioned the reduced frequency of your interactions?
Anonymous wrote:
My mother was afraid she had Swine Flu, so she couldn't come to the hospital to see her newborn grandson. I never let her live it down and would mention it in front of people. She denied it, but it taught her the lesson. She never tried that shit again. She shared with me that she'd gotten dehydrated once, during a difficult time in my parents' marriage, and it stopped the tension. My dad was loving and caring. She used this ploy over and over, since she'd experienced the reward. I took the reward away. So, the behavior stopped.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, what is up with this generation of women pretending to be sick all the time?? My mother does the same thing. She commits to it so heavily that she'll actually check herself into the hospital and have them call us to come get her (because of course nothing is wrong). Then she'll end up staying with us "recovering" for a day or two, asking to be waited on hand and foot. I've stopped sugar coating it and told her many times how disgusting her behavior is but several family members still give in to it.
You think this is new? Who do you think were Freud's patients?
It's always been around and it's always been women past the pretty stage of life. For obvious reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, what is up with this generation of women pretending to be sick all the time?? My mother does the same thing. She commits to it so heavily that she'll actually check herself into the hospital and have them call us to come get her (because of course nothing is wrong). Then she'll end up staying with us "recovering" for a day or two, asking to be waited on hand and foot. I've stopped sugar coating it and told her many times how disgusting her behavior is but several family members still give in to it.
You think this is new? Who do you think were Freud's patients?
Anonymous wrote:Wow, what is up with this generation of women pretending to be sick all the time?? My mother does the same thing. She commits to it so heavily that she'll actually check herself into the hospital and have them call us to come get her (because of course nothing is wrong). Then she'll end up staying with us "recovering" for a day or two, asking to be waited on hand and foot. I've stopped sugar coating it and told her many times how disgusting her behavior is but several family members still give in to it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought about saying something and frankly can't risk the fit (based on past tantrums, or whatever the adult word for a tantrum is) while home alone with my son. When I lightly suggested earlier in the week that she needed to take care of herself while I managed my son and apologized that I couldn't help her more, she lost it and told me how heartless I was and moaned about how she should just die so she wouldn't be a burden.
Good god, as I type this and see it in print and think about the other things she did this week I realize this is so, so not normal.
When DH returns I think there will be a dramatic recovery and display of helpfulness/reluctance to put him out. Should be fun.
I'm 18:14. I think PP may have it right, and your mother has untreated anxiety. This is what my mother has, and it routinely makes her grow very verbally abusive and non-functional. My friend's spouse has anxiety and it makes him have rage tantrums, in public and private. Anxiety is a terrible thing.
My solution has been to limit contact, honestly. My mother has a horror of doctors, and would deny to her dying day that she has anything of a diagnosable nature.
Anonymous wrote:My mother does this.
People who fake or play up illness do it in order to get "secondary gains." Secondary gains are attention and extras and not having to work or do chores.
Eliminate the secondary gains. Completely.
When your mom falls ill, she cannot watch TV, because that would be bad for her extremely delicate ill condition. She cannot have soda -- that would upset her stomach. She has to be driven RIGHT AWAY to the ER, by you, or an ambulance called RIGHT NOW. You will need to warn her that the closest ER or minute clinic has a wait time of at least three hours, but that's okay, because her illness is extremely grave and important. She doesn't want to go? Well, let's get her into bed right away then, with the lights out. No TV or books or snacks for someone as sick as she obviously is.
What, she's feeling better? Wonderful! What a miraculous recovery. You have a list of chores for her now that she's well. You'd like her to run to the grocery store since she's able to tolerate snacks. No? Well, then back to bed or immediately to the clinic.
Perhaps she'd be better off at home? You could understand that, her own doctor should really be attending to her.