Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Let me get this straight... If she had a disease with a shorter duration, you would help? But because she has a disease that has a long duration, you won't help? That's even sicker than the first time I responded to you. I am sooooooooo blessed that I don't know you. I feel very sorry for your SIL on many levels.
I would help if a person really needed help. If you ask me to be an Uber you’re wasting my time and resources.
It’s stupid to ask people to drive from another state to take someone to a procedure. Stupid and wasteful.
Wait. "Procedure"? She means chemo. You want someone who just had chemo to get into an Uber to get home? That is pretty cold. Jeez you suck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, just say no. They can’t force you to help (although they’ll be entitled to their own feelings about it).
Realistically, even if your MIL went there to help, she’d need other people to give her a break once in a while because caregiver fatigue is very real. So even if she moved there, there would still be a schedule for others to help out too.
Why does she need a break?
SIL is OK. She’s not on her death bed.
She just needs rides to the hospital and back and gets tired after procedures. Between that she still works and does stuff.
If your SIL doesn't need that much care, then she doesn't need anyone staying with her for weeks at a time. She can uber back and forth to the hospital and order in food when she's tired.
Exactly.
OP here. The situation is bizarre.
SIL with cancer us still working full time out of home. She lives with her 16 year old DD. He ex also lives with them, so he could have driven her.
The whole thing was orchestrated by another SIL who decided that everyone should show up to show support. So she sent out a sign up “which day do you want to come?”
DH drove 4 hours there, drove his sister for a procedure, sat in the hospital for several hours trying to work and do meetings and then drove her back home and drove 4 hours home. All while she could have driven herself or taken an Uber or have her ex drive her.
Is it not odd?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is MIL? It may be expecting too much to dump all the care on her, especially as she is likely fearful she may lose her daughter. The family taking turns is reasonable - you are indeed failing to step up to help your husband with plans to take turns. You all are part of the family, you should make it a priority to show up to help when there is a need. Could be you or your husband next turn. Sounds Ike you just want an elderly mom to have to handle everything so you are not disturbed.
SIL is a grown woman who is not bed ridden.
She works full time and does activities with her teenage daughter.
It looks like she doesn’t really need help. It was all orchestrated by another SIL to show support. Which is still stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Let me get this straight... If she had a disease with a shorter duration, you would help? But because she has a disease that has a long duration, you won't help? That's even sicker than the first time I responded to you. I am sooooooooo blessed that I don't know you. I feel very sorry for your SIL on many levels.
I would help if a person really needed help. If you ask me to be an Uber you’re wasting my time and resources.
It’s stupid to ask people to drive from another state to take someone to a procedure. Stupid and wasteful.
Anonymous wrote:How old is MIL? It may be expecting too much to dump all the care on her, especially as she is likely fearful she may lose her daughter. The family taking turns is reasonable - you are indeed failing to step up to help your husband with plans to take turns. You all are part of the family, you should make it a priority to show up to help when there is a need. Could be you or your husband next turn. Sounds Ike you just want an elderly mom to have to handle everything so you are not disturbed.
Anonymous wrote:How old is MIL? It may be expecting too much to dump all the care on her, especially as she is likely fearful she may lose her daughter. The family taking turns is reasonable - you are indeed failing to step up to help your husband with plans to take turns. You all are part of the family, you should make it a priority to show up to help when there is a need. Could be you or your husband next turn. Sounds Ike you just want an elderly mom to have to handle everything so you are not disturbed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your issue is with your other SIL demanding care, not your MIL. You don't think your SIL with cancer needs that much hand-holding, which sounds accurate. So I don't understand why you're upset with your MIL. Maybe MIL helped out for a week and realized her daughter didn't need that much help. Sounds like MIL is drawing boundaries.
You are right. It’s the other SIL that’s pushing boundaries. Maybe MIL already figured help is not needed just like we figured it after the visit.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, and I have 7 children, and we have 3 elderly family members living with us. I guess some of us are just more capable than others.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now you're making stuff up. Where did I say "quit my job"??? But taking one day every week or every two weeks to drive four hours and help out a sick inlaw? That is something I would do easily and without any concern or regret for months or years. Jeez, some of you really sound depraved that you think this is such an imposition.
4 hours one way on your workdays. You would do it every week, really?
Absolutely.
Do you work?
Anonymous wrote:
Your issue is with your other SIL demanding care, not your MIL. You don't think your SIL with cancer needs that much hand-holding, which sounds accurate. So I don't understand why you're upset with your MIL. Maybe MIL helped out for a week and realized her daughter didn't need that much help. Sounds like MIL is drawing boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:
Yes, and I have 7 children, and we have 3 elderly family members living with us. I guess some of us are just more capable than others.