Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine a worst place to post this type of complaint.
a "worst" place? WTH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look I am going to be blunt.
You are lucky she likes you enough to visit as much as she does.
Don't push it.
Some daughters actively dislike their mothers and never see them. Count your blessings.
Your cup is full. According to you only 3/4 full. That's better than many get.
Answer the questions: what do you do when she visits? Are you homebound?
This is cruel.
Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine a worst place to post this type of complaint.
Anonymous wrote:OP her response was to you asking for more visits.
She visits you a lot! 4 weeks a year!!!!!!
Yeah you may die between visits. So cherish each one.
Anonymous wrote:OP, offer to take her on a cruise or to a an all inclusive resort and pay for it. Nobody wants to spend 4 weeks a year in some god forsaken place USA.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 77 and my body is starting to really decline. I have osteopenia and a heart condition and have to take a lot more medications now. I’ve been mostly healthy all my life and this year the various ailments and things going wrong have really started to ramp up. I was telling my daughter yesterday that she should visit more (we usually see each other for a week or so during the summer, another week during her birthday, a week during Thanksgiving, and then a week during Christmas and then a long time until our next visit in the spring). I just don’t like going 5-6 months without a visit at my age. She says instead that I should get out of this mindset and “just walk more and eat healthier” and I’ll live longer. It’s true, I never really exercised much in the last 30 years, but that’s not going to change anything in my late 70s. I don’t think she grasps how few years I may have left. I feel much more tired than I did even a few years ago and I can’t handle more than one activity in a day. I’m grateful to have made it this far in good health but I just feel I don’t have too much left in me. When you get to this age, you understand. I don’t think she understands, “just be healthier and live longer” doesn’t work that way.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a single parent of one child in my late 50s. I already realize that later in life I’m going to need to move near where my child ends up, or if that’s not possible move into some kind of community where there are others around and can provide assistance. The fact that OP is complaining about four weeks a year from a long-distance child shows that OP is out of touch.
Anonymous wrote:If 4 weeks out of the year is not enough, you should be asking yourself why you haven’t moved closer to her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm sure she's reacting to you trying to guilt her into more visits. It's manipulative.
And you really do need to keep moving. Walking is one of the best things you can do for osteopenia. I live near several 87+ year olds and they walk every day, weather permitting.
I know it's hard to not feel sad. But just sitting there watching the clock tick on your health makes it worse. Be proactive and help yourself.
Telling a family member the situation and asking for a visit is not manipulative.
The way OP wrote it, it sounds manipulative. I probably won't be here much longer and I want to see you more while I'm still here. That is basically what she is saying. That is manipulative.
Yeah, telling a family member that you're probably going to die soon and need more visits because of that at 77 is manipulative all right. Especially when nothing dramatic has happened health-wise, like a terminal cancer diagnosis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to go for a walk every day. If you had a dog, you would have to go for a walk at least twice a day. And the dog would be entertaining enough that you wouldn't be sitting around feeling bad and missing your daughter, who visits far more often than most people get.
A dog is not a person.
DP. But a dog can help. I have several elderly neighbors. The ones who have them walk them. A 95 year old just lost her dog, that she walked 2x/day, is suddenly struggling. She said it's hard to make herself walk when she doesn't have to for her dog.
I'm not saying a dog is for everyone. It just can help some people who live alone.