Anonymous wrote:OP, I posted previously - my father has Alzheimers and I found your original post almost unbelievable. In your followup posts you have offered more detail but what comes through is an incredible lack of sympathy for your mother. Before you criticize her, you have to understand what she is dealing with on a daily basis. Alzheimers is a horrific disease - it robs patients of their lucidity and their dignity and eventually their basic skills of self care.
I speak with my father multiple times a day; I am an adult who appreciates the disease (my grandmother had it also, and lived with us when I was a kid) but it still breaks my heart every time. Your mother is living this. She is seeing the most important person in her life reverted to an infantile state, and she is responsible for his daily care. Can you not understand why she might want a little help with taking out the trash?
I'm guessing from your post you are relatively young. And since your father is only 64, I should mention, my mother died at 63 of cancer. No one should suffer and die at this age. It's awful, and you are probably grieving yourself over what is to come. But please, find a more healthy way to process your grief than heaping blame on your mother. Invest yourself in trying to find high-quality care for your father, either as a respite or in a nursing facility. And recognize that what your mother has done is heroic; try to support her instead of criticizing her for being negative during your visit.
Anonymous wrote:Why in the world would you push your mom to host this dinner? She is clearly not up to it. Do it at someone else's. And yes, family members who are "guests" should volunteer to take out the trash for elderly people.
Anonymous wrote:
Op has a lot on her plate right now with a very sick dad, a depressed/stressed mom and her own children who need their mom. It's tough to be everything to everyone. In fact, you can't be everything to everyone. Op doesn't need this heap of guilt right now.
Anonymous wrote:I sort of know the type of person your mom is because she sounds like my mom. I think you are a bit insensitive. Care taking is very hard work, and she sounds burnt out, stressed out, and depressed. Of course she would never put her husband in a nursing home because she loves him too much to do that. She needs more help and is already exhausted and angry that no one thinks to take out the garbage (probably among other things that needed to be done). Why should she have to do everything (and why can't anyone else recognize what needs to be done) when she is old and already burnt out from care taking? She probably has a hard time asking for help in a nice way because of her exhaustion and age. Stay home if you are not willing to help out your aging parents. Visitors create more work and she is already overloaded. Many hands make little work, but it sounds like she was left with the cleanup. Plus you keep acting like she needs the right medication. Maybe she needs more help and empathy and a break. Your parents are not going to live forever. Are you going to feel good about your attitude when they are gone? You sound self absorbed (and I hate to say it, but bratty) and I'm getting irritated just thinking of this situation. You're complaining you didn't have a nicer holiday. If anyone has a right to complain, it's your mother for everything she has been through and I feel sorry for her that she doesn't have more understanding children. No wonder she is depressed.
Anonymous wrote:All the PPs criticizing the OP, I think you sound like a bunch of cold scolds. The OP's mom's situation is terrible and I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy. But the OP's feelings are still valid. She had a crappy holiday for a lot of reasons. She gets to be sad that she had a crappy holiday. Her mom doesn't get a blanket pass to be a jerk because she is dealing with this awful care situation.
Yeah, she gets to be sad about her holiday. I'm the PP whose father has Alzheimers and I'm sad about mine, and sad that my mother died too young as well. But I'm mature enough to appreciate that my sadness over missing out on a wonderful holiday with my extended family is trivial compared to the emotional burden of someone who is a FT caregiver for a loved one with end-stage Alzheimers. I can't imagine how anyone above the age of 5yo could be so selfish to complain about someone in that position. OP and PP, why don't you switch roles with your mother for a week or two and see how cheery you will feel about a house full of visiting family who need to be specifically instructed to pitch in with minor chores like taking out the trash.
All the PPs criticizing the OP, I think you sound like a bunch of cold scolds. The OP's mom's situation is terrible and I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy. But the OP's feelings are still valid. She had a crappy holiday for a lot of reasons. She gets to be sad that she had a crappy holiday. Her mom doesn't get a blanket pass to be a jerk because she is dealing with this awful care situation.
Anonymous wrote:All the PPs criticizing the OP, I think you sound like a bunch of cold scolds. The OP's mom's situation is terrible and I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy. But the OP's feelings are still valid. She had a crappy holiday for a lot of reasons. She gets to be sad that she had a crappy holiday. Her mom doesn't get a blanket pass to be a jerk because she is dealing with this awful care situation. Her attitude is understandable, but it's also understandably frustrating for someone who genuinely sounds like she wants to help and is having a hard time doing that. I don't see what more the OP could do. It doesn't sound like she was awful to her mom, just that she had a bad holiday season, for a lot of understandable reasons, and she is allowed to be sad about that.
We had a similar situation with my grandparents when dealing with cancer. Total refusal to accept help followed by extreme annoyance when people didn't magically divine what needed to be done - including the trash issue, OP. I was falling over myself trying to be helpful and take care of things and was told repeatedly not to worry about it, and then taken to task later for "not noticing" when the trash needed to go out. My grandfather's exact words were "If you wanted to help so badly, why didn't you do that?"
Anonymous wrote:All PP's criticizing OP's attitude, did you actually read the MULTIPLE times she has said that the mom has refused to consider a nursing home, and has therefore CHOSEN to be the primary caregiver? The mom is playing the martyr, plain and simple. Sorry, but I lack sympathy for anyone who has the opportunity to make their life a little less stressful and refuses to take it. Team OP.