exactly this. When you are seething and venting, no one suffers but you. Sometimes it is more brave to make changes and help yourself. Striving for what you think is the perfect solution that depends on others is unsustainable. Just do what you can without putting yourself over the edge!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you do what you are willing to do independent of what you expect others to do. If what you do, brings outcomes that you do not like it is up to you to change course.Anonymous wrote:Anyone experiencing this? I am the good daughter who takes care of her mom with dementia. She spends 6 months in my house, I spend 3 months at hers. My sister would have to take care for only 3 months but doesn’t care. Anyway, I do so much but my mom constantly guilt trips me. My sister who does nothing is left alone and only gets her good side.
Thanks Sis!!![]()
Not the person you are responding to, but I have been there and this is good advice.You can only control you. You do the amount you can handle without resentment. If you are burned out it's time to change the situation and put mom in a more appropriate setting. It's not worth wasting time seething and venting. I was so much happier when I stepped back more and eventually mom stopped the dysfunctional dynamics with me because i was not around her so much. She spread out the guilt trips and manipulations so others got to see that side.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you do what you are willing to do independent of what you expect others to do. If what you do, brings outcomes that you do not like it is up to you to change course.Anonymous wrote:Anyone experiencing this? I am the good daughter who takes care of her mom with dementia. She spends 6 months in my house, I spend 3 months at hers. My sister would have to take care for only 3 months but doesn’t care. Anyway, I do so much but my mom constantly guilt trips me. My sister who does nothing is left alone and only gets her good side.
Thanks Sis!!![]()
Anonymous wrote:I think you do what you are willing to do independent of what you expect others to do. If what you do, brings outcomes that you do not like it is up to you to change course.Anonymous wrote:Anyone experiencing this? I am the good daughter who takes care of her mom with dementia. She spends 6 months in my house, I spend 3 months at hers. My sister would have to take care for only 3 months but doesn’t care. Anyway, I do so much but my mom constantly guilt trips me. My sister who does nothing is left alone and only gets her good side.
I think you do what you are willing to do independent of what you expect others to do. If what you do, brings outcomes that you do not like it is up to you to change course.Anonymous wrote:Anyone experiencing this? I am the good daughter who takes care of her mom with dementia. She spends 6 months in my house, I spend 3 months at hers. My sister would have to take care for only 3 months but doesn’t care. Anyway, I do so much but my mom constantly guilt trips me. My sister who does nothing is left alone and only gets her good side.
Anonymous wrote:OP, this is a super common dynamic in elder care. The social worker at my parents' doctors' office told me this. I slaved away and my mom was irritable at me and then my siblings would swoop in for a day or two and she would rally and be nice. The theory is that it is hard for the old person to have someone doing something for them and with the out of town sibling they could be more like the old parent.