Sorry for the rhetorical question, but I truly need to vent!
I call my mother twice a day, every day. (I know!! Please no criticism! I'm trying my best to be comforting during quarantine!)
This morning as usual, my Mom was complaining about everything.
I suggested she get in her scooter and take a spin around her building.
Somehow she twisted that into a lecture! I explained it was a suggestion and it might do her good to get out of her room. She hung up on me.
I bit the bullet and called her this evening.
I told her we needed to talk. I tried to explain my frustration that she isn't willing to do anything to help herself. I brought up the fact that she is unwilling to take antidepressants or seek counseling. I told her that while I try to listen to every complaint, I am only human and have a lot of my own issues that I am dealing with. I told her that I am not her therapist. I am her daughter!!
I told her that I don't know what to talk to her about, because how are you, meals, weather, what are you up to, the facility are all off limits.
Her response was that I am "b**chy" and "then don't call me "!
While I understand that the quarantine has been so hard on her, I can't wrap my head around how a Mother could be so cruel to her daughter that has been dealing with cancer and had major spine surgery 2 weeks ago. Which is just the tip of the iceberg.
I doubt it will sink in that right now she needs me more than I need her, but I will not call her!
The old adage "You can't help someone that won't help themselves " is totally true!
It breaks my heart to feel it will be a relief when she passes.
Before you judge me for my statement, she has been miserable for as long as I can remember. And despite my best efforts, I have never been able to make her happy or contented!
I am human and I am over it!
God bless all of us that are giving all, and getting garbage in return!!
Our rewards will come later!!
We can divorce spouses, parents, in laws, siblings and so on!
Life can become so peaceful after a divorce.
I was fortunate to have a fantastic MIL but I divorced my brothers!
My mom had an Amazon parrot for 25+ years, so I am well aware of the work involved with these birds. This is not something she can do on her own now, at all, no matter how much she wants it. I told her I didn't think it was a good idea, and she instantly got very angry. She started saying that my sister and my brother think it's a GREAT idea, and what is wrong with me?
I quickly changed the subject to what time she was coming over and got off the phone. By then my mood is tanking fast so I decided to text her to let her know that I would not be talking about her getting a parrot when she came over, and if that makes her mad maybe we should have dinner on a different day?
Her response was that her getting a parrot was none of my business, and NO she wasn't coming over. I haven't talked to her since.
Meanwhile my DH emailed our property manager and come to find out only dogs and cats are allowed here.
I'm so tired of always being the bad guy. WTH are my siblings thinking to tell her getting a large parrot is a GREAT idea??
Can you ask your siblings to deliver the news.
She will chew you out when you tell her. Grrrrr
Would she react the same with them? My mom treats my brothers differently.
Let them deliver the news that the building doesn’t allow birds.
I sent my mom a simple straight forward text that the building manager told us only dogs and cats are allowed. That was about an hour ago.
She might call the property manager herself, but that's okay, she will get the same info.
I don't want to talk to my siblings at all. Not only do they not offer any support, but they make things worse for me when they validate bad decisions on her end. It feeds her anger at me. It's like they don't even consider that she has dementia. She can barely take care of herself let alone a high maintenance large bird. I guess they figured I would just do the work.
Or is that what MOM is telling you they told her?
The truth might lie somewhere in between.
I suggest you email your siblings in a neutral tone and ask what they actually said to mom.
"Yes, getting a pet is a great idea, Mom. Maybe you should talk to EP about that" is what comes to mind. Or maybe "hmmmm" (meaning that they weren't really listening to what she was saying.
On the bright side, if she brings in the bird and can't care for it, she might get evicted!
My mom responded to my text. She was angry that I "got involved" and asked the property manager if birds were allowed. She said she figured that was a rule and if she got caught she would deal with it. So she was planning to sneak a bird in. Figures.
I told her she can't live here and have a bird. End of story. Look for a dog if she wants a pet. Left it at that. This drama is so draining.
I understand. You know best as to how to deal with your siblings.
I have issues with my siblings too. It’s a shame but we can’t control or change their actions.
I am all for helping someone out but I definitely don’t want to be my siblings teacher or mother! If they don’t know how to act by now, they never will!
I have done the same as you. I prefer not to have contact with them. I speak to my mom directly also.
If we had a ‘normal’ relationship with our siblings then there could be healthy communication.
Not a chance of that in my family!
My siblings wanted to remain mom’s favorite sons so they NEVER hesitated to kick me to the curb!
Your mother calls or emails you with something she is going to do.
You react with "no, you can't/shouldn't do that". (Reasonable if you were "in charge" of her. But you're not).
How about taking a page out of siblings' book: neutral responses. She bears the consequences of her actions and other folks start to notice that she is failing.
YOU do not care for the bird. "Sorry mom, the bird is YOUR responsiblity".
It might be worth a try.
Geeeeeeeez!
I'm not responding anymore. Nope, done. I will not be lifting a finger to help her get a bird, and if she does manage to bring one in here she will be the one to deal with the fall out.
My mom's willingness to break the rules is disturbing.
I say this often, but I think it bears repeating. If your loved one insists on their "independence", doing almost ANYTHING for them supports that charade.
Just be unavailable.
Write yourself a note on your fridge and on the door you use to exit your home. UNAVAILABLE in large, friendly letters.
My cousin in New Jersey had a cockatoo.
They cost a lot of money and live a very long time! Like any pet, they require and deserve attention.
When my cousin and his wife divorced, he got the bird. LOL, 🤣 that didn’t come out right but you know what I mean. He got custody of his bird!
My cousin moved into an apartment that didn’t allow pets so he moved the bird into my uncle’s basement.
Mind you, my uncle was elderly and nearly deaf!
My uncle was in a busy area in the city so there were always sirens sounding off from police cars, fire trucks and ambulances that the bird would mimic!
Three of my cousins looked after my uncle.
My other cousin, one of my uncle’s daughters went to check in on her dad and did not know that her brother had dropped off his bird at their dad’s house to live.
She kept hearing sirens. She freaked out!
Then she heard the bird making a telephone ringing sound.
She told her dad to answer his phone.
Well, he doesn’t hear his phone. He’s just about deaf! He had it set on vibrate. It wasn’t vibrating so he tells his daughter, “Honey, my phone isn’t ringing. The sounds must be coming from your brother’s bird in the basement!”
So my cousin went down to her dad’s basement and the bird was being very vocal! He also got bored. He tore up my uncle’s basement, the window sills, etc.
When my uncle’s Parkinson’s disease became progressively worse he had to go into a nursing home.
My cousin had to sell his bird. He wasn’t allowed to keep him in his apartment.
My uncle couldn’t move him into the nursing home!
You are right. Birds are a lot of work. All animals are. They are a responsibility and if we can’t care for them it isn’t fair to the animal to acquire one.
I personally hope that your mom will not get a bird. Do you think she would do well with a dog or cat? Cats are fairly independent.
Honestly, it sounds like your mom is strong willed. It’s exhausting!
I used to try and stop everything or should I say prevent everything that I felt like I should regarding mom’s behavior.
My husband, on the other hand did not react the way I did.
He used to tell me that it wasn’t my problem. I often said to him, “Don’t you see that I am trying to prevent this or that?”
He would say to me, “I see my wife driving herself crazy. Your mom is going to get upset no matter what you say or do, so stay out of it. Let her figure it out.”
It took me awhile before I could comprehend what he was saying.
My mom had grown accustomed to my fussing over every little thing. I didn’t realize that I was overly involved. Maybe mom didn’t realize it either. I guess I kind of filled the void of my deceased father.
My behavior became irrational because it went against the grain of who I am.
I didn’t raise my children this way. I taught them that they were responsible for their behavior.
It’s really interesting how caregiving can totally change the dynamics of a family. In my case, not for the better!
A freaking parrot. For a demented elder to take care of aka for YOU to take care of. What a joke. And what a filthy mess and a RACKET! Thank GOD the management said no! What makes you so sure your siblings think it's such a great idea? Bc your mother said so? Two things NMs love to do....break the rules by defying authority and LIE LIKE RUGS! 😅
Your siblings sound like one of my younger brothers!!
There's a name for their compliant behavior, they're are "Flying Monkeys "!! Lol
Bundleofjoy,
Thank you so much for your kind words!
I'm feeling pretty good!! Fingers crossed that 2021 is gonna be a much better year for all of us!!
(((Hugs)))
Went over there last night and found out the "decluttering" she said she's been doing for months consists thus far of giving some things of mine worth at least $1000 to the Goodwill without asking or telling me, while everything of hers remained untouched. I mentioned she could have called me to come get them, and got the lies and gaslighting with which I'm sure you all are familiar.
I am so angry. I am so tired of listening to her complain about problem that HER actions created. I didn't make her fail to work or save or accumulate so much stuff that now this is going to be a major project, or wait years beyond what she should have (since her health is now bad) to divest of stuff and move. I know from my own experience the clutter is probably ADHD related, it's an inherited condition and I know I got it from her, but there's no way she'll ever take it seriously or get any help for it.
My only sibling, a half brother also has a personality disorder and will be no help. I'm really cracking up. Time to start thinking about what *I* need, which is the UNAVAILABLE sign someone posted above!!
I suppose folk get bored, like to dream up wishes...
My relative once thought a little dog may be nice, a little company. The flying monkeys were sent out... 🙈 How could she get one? Where from? She would need YOU to buy it for her & pick it up.
Me: could she actually look after a dog? Feed, walk, wash, take it for regular shots?
🙈 Oh, she would need YOU to take it to the vets, maybe for YOU to come walk it a bit... groom it...& I suppose she could feed it... but maybe YOU would need to buy the dog food.
I struggled to comprehend the sheer lack of common sense, the complete lack of concern for the animal or the demands on my time/effort.
I re-phrased it back "So you want me to get a dog, be completely responsible for it but let it live with her?
(This was before I found the wisdom of the good folk here at the forum).
Now I see it as a flying monkey trying to bring what she wished for.
Just crazy 🤯 Like letting a 4yr old buy your weekly groceries: Chips! Icecream! 🍟🍧 Cookieeees 🍪🍪🍪🍪
So your mom threw your stuff out, see that just amazes me. I can't wrap my head around this type of behavior. I still have the Christmas ornament I got for my son's first Christmas and he is 36! Seriously I can't imagine having to unload my cluttered house and throwing away his things without asking, FIRST no less!
Narc mother's are truly damaged people who seriously hurt their own kids with zero remorse.
I'm sorry you are dealing with this, but now that your stuff is gone, if I were you I wouldn't lift a finger to help my mom declutter and get rid of her own stuff. She doesn't have dementia, so tell her to start packing or hire someone.
Yes it's not only okay, but healthy for you to be unavailable.
By the way, did you ask her WHY she threw your stuff away, and if so what was her response?
And good for you for leaving the supplies you took to your mom at the door. I fully understand the conditioning to please them that we've carried around all of our lives, but you are really breaking free and I am happy for you.
I'm glad to hear I'm not the only person who's dealing with an elder and her "stuff." Like a lot of people I have a lot of tangled up feelings so I'll try to get this in some kind of order.
For starters I know full blown actual narcisstic personality disorder is somewhat rare but I'll be damned if Mom doesn't have what I've read are some of the clinical symptoms. The ones that really seem to affect me are feeling that I am extension of her with no rights/feelings of my own, and manipulating to get her way. She's also extremely susceptible to praise and flattery to what I feel is an unhealthy degree and will go to great lengths to get it, such as doing an unpaid project that lasts months, etc. (despite her professional degree) which is one reason she hasn't saved any money for retirement.
I admit I'm using her having disposed of my things to take some time off. My spouse was laid off due to covid last summer and has had a difficult time finding another job. Our area is one of the highest most affected places for covid so none of us can easily go anywhere, spouse and I don't even go to the grocery store but opt to have things delivered. But Mom expects to call me EVERY day so she can vent for an hour about how difficult her own life is since she hasn't saved money and is going to have get to rid of a lot of things and move to a smaller place. Rarely are there questions about spouse or myself, just more that I'm expected to call and "hold her hand" since she's living alone. (She's 82 which scares me b/c she really is healthy as a horse for her age and I don't know what we're going to do if she lives well into her 90s but I just can't think about that right now. She does have trouble with a bad knee and has trouble walking but neither the hoarded home nor her financial trouble is new, and something should have been done about this a long time ago before it all became a crisis. But that's my mother for you.)
Honestly there's more, a lot more, but I think I'm dealing with a clinical situation and I really probably should get some professional help. Long story short I'm just really working on boundaries. Piper, you're right that any suggestion I might come over there and help her go through stuff pretty well went out the window when I realized she had gotten rid of so much of MY stuff (which I was storing over there because we were having sidewalk sales in her neighborhood for a while, but she knew I expected to come get it and sell it on eBay - some of the items were designer purses, bags, shoes, that kind of thing.) Meanwhile her own things appear nearly untouched and we're a year into the pandemic during which time she's been telling me she's been "decluttering."
I hadn't been over there for a long while b/c she had a water leak and was telling me things were in real disarray so I figured best not to visit - she came to stay with me for a couple of weeks in December so I could play nursemaid and help pay (!) while she had some eye surgery. Of course now that is all being twisted into something it isn't.
She actually claimed, when I said I'd have been glad to come get my stuff if I'd known it would be given away, that I "wouldn't have come because I hadn't been over there for so long." There's more, but my mother is much more manipulative than most people and her words sound almost unbelievable which again is why I do think I need to get some professional help. It does help to post here though when she does things such as try to get me to call her, send me messages, tell other people to get me to call her, that kind of thing. Like many narcissists who seek validation other people who know us both would never believe some things I could say about mom - she's so careful to always put up a false front to get the praise and flattery.
Chris I'm so sorry to hear you believe your mom would expose your family to covid. It's so hard to deal with feeling like there's someone in your life who is so utterly self absorbed that nothing else seems to matter. At least we on this sub know we're not alone. <3
I've been told that our most dominant traits get exaggerated when we get older.
God bless all of that are caring for narcissistic parents!!
I'm so sorry that your Mom gave your things away!!
That's not ok!!
As soon as I found out she'd removed my things I called spouse with our BIG pickup and got 98% of the rest of my stuff out of there. I'm going one day this week to make sure there's nothing else there I don't want given away. I don't *think* she'd give away artwork I did over the years but honestly I have no idea since I really don't know why my own things were the first and only items (so far that I've been able to determine) to be given away. She has *piles* of hoarded stuff that hadn't been touched.
But I need to not let this drive me crazy. As I was standing there taking in the loss I just started thinking over and over, "This is not normal." My only sibling, a half brother, has a cluster B personality disorder also (borderline) and I suspect that runs in families. My dad died 20 years ago and I miss him terribly since he was often the only person I had in my corner when mom/brother would do something horrible. At least my paternal uncle is still around, I think I'll call him tomorrow.
I was already depressed over this long before covid honestly (another factor: Mom has an elderly sister who's easily just as manipulative if not more so than Mom herself, both of them expect me to sit for hours and listen to their problems.) Now that we're going on months with spouse out of a job and no end in sight for economic improvement or even being able to go out to the movies, I'm getting a little worried about myself mentally. I should have called to find a therapist today but I sort of don't know where to start to find a counselor who can help with something like this. Maybe my local council on aging could help. (Sounds like you may be in the UK, here in the US a council on aging just means a local group which is funded by government and charity which helps the public find resources for older people.)
>>You’re getting stressed about it as you’ve been conditioned to solve all of her
>>problems. You don’t have to live amongst that mess but if she wants to, fine. If
>>not, she can hire someone to clear it for her.
You're so right. Part of the issue is she keeps pleading poverty and telling me how poor she is - probably so I'll pay for the people to clean it out and/or come over there to clean it out myself. But it simply is not my fault that she retired at 52, failed to save money or make any plans at all other than counting on me to work at her care full time. Luckily I figured out how manipulative Mom can be a long time ago so I'm probably not as susceptible to it as some people might be, but it isn't what I'd call enjoyable.
The hardest thing, overall is probably pushback from other people who don't see her manipulativeness and want to give me a hard time for being the unreasonable bad daughter after Mom calls to whine to *them.* I have yet to think of a good 'comeback' line for that - have any good suggestions?