Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SIL sending a Xmas list is ridiculous if she understood the seriousness of the situation, but if they live a long distance away and all work themselves, I am not 100% sure what exactly they could do for you in terms of helping you with childcare, etc.
Well, in my family, when one of the siblings had a stroke, the other two siblings + mother dropped everything, flew across the world, and as a team of three rotated between caring for the niece & nephew - getting them to school and trying to keep their routine normal, caring for the home & pets, and being at the hospital day in & day out to care for the fallen brother + spouse. They stayed for three weeks in total. That's what I would consider as normal. If my brother has a stroke, it'd take something like cancer to keep me from flying out to help.
I don't know how I could just drop everything and leave my own kids/jobs/pets to fly across the country to take care of someone else's kids/pets/house (and them) for 3 solid weeks.
It is wonderful that you were all able to do that but honestly that just isn't possible for most people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SIL sending a Xmas list is ridiculous if she understood the seriousness of the situation, but if they live a long distance away and all work themselves, I am not 100% sure what exactly they could do for you in terms of helping you with childcare, etc.
Well, in my family, when one of the siblings had a stroke, the other two siblings + mother dropped everything, flew across the world, and as a team of three rotated between caring for the niece & nephew - getting them to school and trying to keep their routine normal, caring for the home & pets, and being at the hospital day in & day out to care for the fallen brother + spouse. They stayed for three weeks in total. That's what I would consider as normal. If my brother has a stroke, it'd take something like cancer to keep me from flying out to help.
Anonymous wrote:The SIL sending a Xmas list is ridiculous if she understood the seriousness of the situation, but if they live a long distance away and all work themselves, I am not 100% sure what exactly they could do for you in terms of helping you with childcare, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SIL sending a Xmas list is ridiculous if she understood the seriousness of the situation, but if they live a long distance away and all work themselves, I am not 100% sure what exactly they could do for you in terms of helping you with childcare, etc.
Well, at a minimum, they could check in every once in a while to see how OP's wife is doing. They could ask if there are items they could have shipped as a care package for the wife or family. They could volunteer to pay for meal delivery once a week. Even if they can't drop everything, they could act like they care about their sister/daughter.
Anonymous wrote:The SIL sending a Xmas list is ridiculous if she understood the seriousness of the situation, but if they live a long distance away and all work themselves, I am not 100% sure what exactly they could do for you in terms of helping you with childcare, etc.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm so sorry. No advice, just wanted to commiserate.
One year into our marriage, my DH underwent emergency brain surgery, a second brain surgery, and chemo and radiation to treat a brain tumor. His parents and sister were totally absent. His dad and mom showed up once in the ICU after the emergency surgery and proceeded to fight with each other so loudly that the nurse had to ask them to leave (they subsequently divorced). His dad came to visit once and made hurtful jokes about DH's weight gain (caused by massive doses of steroids to prevent brain swelling). And they all basically left me alone to deal with every chemo and radiation appointment. His sister was totally MIA and didn't even contact him. I had to quit my job to take care of him. After his second surgery, he almost died, and at one point he was incapable of speaking or forming a coherent sentence. I was 30 years old and faced with the prospect of a husband who would either die or end up in a nursing home, and only my mom was there with me. To this day, not one of them has the faintest idea or curiosity about what happened or the continuing medical issues he has (fortunately treatable with medication). Everyone pretends like it never happened. We also lost some of our closest friends, who just disappeared and never contacted us again. I realize that we are extremely luck that my DH survived and is doing well, but my faith in other people is forever shaken. It's not something therapy can repair.
I'm so sorry you are going through this. I wish you and your family the best -- stay strong, it will get better as time goes on.