My husband is the caregiver for his sister with Dementia. He does an extremely great job handling and taking care of sis. I help with everything to include giving medication, cooking, cleaning her room, doctor appointments etc.
Prior to sis coming to live with us we were going to be empty nesters and was looking forward to traveling and doing what married couples do. I do not want to sound selfish, but I am starting to feel resentment towards the rest of the family members and my husband. Sis has two sons and another brother with a wife. They always say how we are doing a great job but that does not change how I feel. My husband feels obligated because he feels that he should pay it forward because sis helped take care of him as a child. I do not get to spend time with my husband, all his attention is directed towards his sister. I understand that she is sick but am I wrong to feel neglected and alone. I feel I have sacrificed a lot, but I don’t know how to tell my husband we may need to start thinking about other options for sis. Every conversation I have had with him concerning did has led to a fight and he accuses me of not being supportive. He becomes so defensive. Please I would like to get some advice from other spouses or family members who are in similar situations. Thanks.
Taking care of someone 24/7, in any condition, puts an enormous amount of stress of the caretakers and their families. And if not everyone is on board, then that stress will create resentment and simmering anger, neither which are healthy for an individual nor a relationship.
Imo, since your husband doesn't want to change, and is not listening or hearing you (and instead turning things back on you by saying you are not being supportive), then you have to take charge of your own life. I know that some say to go on a mini vacation by yourself - unfortunately, you will have to return to all of this unchanged. The only person you can change is yourself.
Since you didn't agree to this arrangement (no one asked you or consulted you) give yourself the permission to live your life. Stay married if you want but Start growing your own life by doing outside activities that you enjoy - learn new ones where you will meet new people or pick up ones you used to do but haven't in a while. Join a bookclub, or two, or three. Take exercise classes or find a walking buddy and start doing miles. Find a new hobby. Volunteer for a cause that means a lot to you. Maybe even find a part time job. Anything and everything that will get you out of the house. Your husband is the one who decided to do this all - so it was his decision and his choice (forget the guilt) and it is a decision he will have to endure and work with.
I know this may sound cold hearted, but, if you continue to be in the current environment without anything changing, it will greatly affect your health and mental well being. This type of stress can cause heart attacks or strokes, and if something happens to you, the question I ask is, with your husband taking care of his sister, how will he take care of you at the same time? Or if he gets a major health issue, who will take care of his sister then?
SIL has been living with BIL and his wife for ten years now. BIL’s wife does not want her living with them any more. They have been pressuring us to take her.
I gave my DH a choice, her or me. He chose me for now. He had to tell his brother I would divorce him. I would not allow her to come live with us. I don’t have the bandwidth to take this on, on top of everything else. Plus I don’t want to sacrifice the remainder of my life to her care.
I don’t feel guilty about forcing him to make that choice. I was totally prepared to move on if I had to. But I really don’t know how it all will finally end. My husband has a lot of guilt about doing this. He was raised in a tight knit Italian family and this is hard for him.
Is it possible that is what is going on at your in laws and that’s why they are pressuring you to take SIL? Do you think BIL’s wife is giving an ultimatum ?
I also totally understand not having “ the bandwidth “ to take on another caregiving scenario . I say that exact phrase all the time . Just being honest . I truly am tapped out after my parents , to deal with DH parents . They aren’t even living with us , but they are so difficult . We are in it though , trying to manage their care , and it is causing a strain . In laws are divorced FIL is in AL , mother in law refuses all and any sensible things , like grab bars , a walker , stairlift , assisted living . Her walking is terrible , falls often . Has not drawn up POA etc. And is a B***ch (female dog ) on top of it . Has been the 40 years I’ve known her .
I think I would have the bandwidth to visit with them more, if they were pleasant and cooperative .
Practice good self care !
If you are ok vacationing without him, may I suggest a cruise? There is no sense in you having to suffer and not live your life because your husband did this.
Your SIL can go back and forth between y'all. At 69 years old, she can live for years. (I've been caring for my mother since 2006 - she's now 96 years old and still going. I don't have anyone else to help - they're all dead now.)
And I'd recruit her two sons to help out as well in whatever way they can.
As long as your husband is willing to provide 100% of the care for the Sis, then everyone is going to let him do it.
It's up to him to make the changes.
Your husband has a responsibility to YOU and your marriage. So if he refuses to divvy up the care among the available family members, I agree 100% with the others here - minimize or eliminate your part in the care and go pursue your own interests.
Peace
The son is POA , it’s his responsibility to make sure Mom is cared for , this could easily be put on his plate .
The problem in this equation is OP’s husband not willing to make any changes .
Does mother have money for you to put her in respite care while you go away? Assisted living facilities will provide paid respite care. Your Mom would stay there while you are away .
Perhaps placing your mother in assisted living or memory care and not having her live with you at all ?
If she does not have money for assisted living or memory care , Medicaid would pay for that in some states .
If your mother does not have money , Medicaid will pay for skilled nursing facility when she gets to that level of care . Have you looked into your county area of agency to see if they have some help with some home care for seniors with no money ?
I’m sorry you are in this situation . If you post your own questions and give more information you would get more responses and help from people here . Siblings are often not helpful . Unfortunately , it is all on your lap especially since mother is living with you .
Please place Mom in assisted living/ with a step down to memory care if at all possible . Dementia gets too difficult to deal with in the home .
Wouldn't you feel slighted? Wouldn't you feel neglected? When does this end? What is the plan or have you just decided on your own that this is what the rest of our lives will be? I thought we made life changing decisions together as husband and wife...when did this end?
Without POA, I had no say in what was spent for caregiving or things needed by the patient or help around the house. Never again.
Who works outside the home?
Your profile says your sister in law is 42. I hope that is an error. Thats sad if she has dementia that early. It also means she could live another 20 or more years.
I took care of my nephew when he was young. I am like another mother to him. I hope he doesn't feel he has to take care of me. I never even thought of that. Besides my nephew has his hands full with his own mother ( my sister who is very ill) I also don't want my own kids to take me in their homes either.
Does your sister in law have any money to hire care to come in at least part time, so you and hubby can have a break and spend time together, get lunch, go to a movie or for a walk? Is there an adult daycare by you that sis could go to? Who has POA? That is who is responsible for her.
How much care does she need? Perhaps assisted living or memory care will be needed soon. Does sis have her own money for a facility? When relatives praise about what a good job he's doing, that's because they want him to keep doing it without their help.
I'm sorry you are in this situation . Would hubby consider going to marriage counseling with you? Maybe they can talk sense into him .
I have told hubby he was a child and he can help in other ways but he thinks that’s the best way.
Did Sis expect it when she helped to take care of him as a child? Are the other family members ‘paying it back’ for what they received – from Sis or for anyone else? How do they ‘pay it back’ to you and to DH by showing gratitude, in practical terms, not just words? How does DH show gratitude to you for what you have done for him in the past?
It might help if you stop what you do for Sis, and say what you want from DH. How many hours a week being a husband to you? What outings for both of you? It should be at least as much as he devotes to Sis.
Husband is quite comfortable standing up to you and even fighting with you over this. Yet he apparently won't insist that other family members pitch in to help. Why does he have a spine when it comes to you, but it disappears when he prefers not to stand up to sis's sons and sibling and his wife?
You have sacrificed, but how long will it go on? Will you be expected to sacrifice when it comes to his brother also? How many demons are you expected to carry on your back?
Feeling neglected and alone in your marriage is one of the saddest things that could ever happen to you. I'm so sorry you have to live this way. You could seek marriage counseling either alone or with husband. But I don't feel that it would really help.
Perhaps you could travel alone or with friends. There are wonderful tours where a single person can feel comfortable and enjoy good company. Start a Lunch on Tuesday group for friends who enjoy getting out. Find a way to leave the house often, even if it's just to go for a drive. I'd want to be as far away from this household as often as possible as much as possible. Go to movies by yourself if you have to. Make it clear that you're not going to let his devotion to sis bring you down. Stop helping with appointments, meds, cleaning her room. Let husband get a taste of full hands-on care for sis. You don't owe her anything.
Anyway, why can't she go live in a memory care facility? Does that ever come up?
Good luck.
In 6 weeks, I was bedridden from the stress.
I went away for a week by myself.
When I was away, he researched Memory Care Assisted Living.
It was either that, or I would have been off to the looney bin. Not kidding.
Be strong. Insist on taking back your marriage and your home. Caregiving has to work for ALL INVOLVED.
We will cheer you on!
But, you did. So, your choice is to make your husband mad, or be a resentful, put-upon slave. Advice to others: DO NOT GET INVOLVED in the first place!
My own brother got a diagnosis of Lewy's Dementia. There was a single moment when I said to myself "This is the best person you every knew and ever WILL know. If you were worth the powder to blow you to Hades you would move from Northern CA here to Southern CA and take care of your brother until he dies".
As I said, for one single moment.
It wasn't what he wanted or expected.
I would have been leaving my dear partner of 36 years, himself in advanced age.
And no, we would not have taken my brother in to live with us as I spent my loved career as an RN and I knew good and well I could NEVER do it 24/7, and would have absolutely NO RIGHT to put it on my partner.
We all make choices. To me your husband made a difficult choice and to me it seems poor decision making that may sacrifice the last solid and good years of your life on the funeral pyre of his sister. It would KILL me to think my daughter might do this to her marriage. She is nearing retirement and her hubby already retired. It would be--and she knows this--to my mind, obscene to do this.
I assume you discuss this with your husband. We cannot make decisions for you or for your marriage. That's in your hands. I think this, however, is an utter shame, and very sad. My heart goes out to you.
My DH actually retired earlier than he wanted to b/c his sister had taken the care of his mother on 100% and was burned out.
Instead of stepping up and saying "Ok, we can't do this, mom needs to be moved to a SNF or the like"--he said "I'll retire and help out as much as necessary."
Didn't talk to me, didn't even put me in the equation! I was NOT on board, not then, not now. It has been horrible.
Family meetings are the 3 of them, DH, SIL and OB. Oh, and SIL's hubby. I have no voice, no say and no appreciation shown to me for holding down the fort for the past 10 months while I watch my DH get angrier and more snappish by the day. DH is showing signs of mental breakdown himself. Luckily he does get out and golfs a lot, but as far as spending time with me? Forget about it.
MIL is a PITA to care for. He complains incessantly about her, but does nothing to change the dynamic. He actually has POA and could legally have her moved to a NH. He never, ever would.
He, also, feels that he owes this to his YS, even though he doesn't think having MIL at home is a good plan.
I am also constantly told I am not supportive or helpful. But I also am not allowed to be either. Just shut up and go with the flow.
I recently toyed with the idea of leaving him--not to divorce, but just to get away from this dynamic that hangs like a cloud over us. Decided against it, as our home is large enough I can literally go all day long and not see or talk to him.
I no longer even ask him how his mom is, or what's going on. Maybe that's what you need to do, too. I've never influenced my DH to do anything positive concerning his parents. He does not 'hear' me.
You have every right to be as angry as you feel you need to be. At some point, you'll either accept it and figure out some way to live with it, or you'll leave, physically or mentally. I am leaving 'mentally'.
Hang in there...that's all I can say. Feeling hurt and betrayed and ignored--all normal feelings. I'm so sorry for what you're going through. You sure aren't alone.
I have found that the 'silent' treatment is very helpful. I'm not mad, I'm simply quiet. That drives DH NUTS...but I can remain silent for hours on end and he can't be mad because I'm NOT doing anything to irritate him.
(I took care of 3 of my siblings, basically raised them from the ages of 4 to 17--I most assuredly don't feel like they owe me ANYTHING. Live good lives, be good people...that's all I wanted from them. Your DH has some misplaced sense of need to care for his sister. It's admirable, but untenable. It may come at the cost of his marriage. My DH would choose his mother's care over me, so the 'threat' of a divorce would just make things worse. I don't understand it. I'm sure you don't either.)
I can only wish you the best as you navigate this. His sister is likely to still have many years ahead of her. At least I think my MIL cannot last another year.
((Hugs)) you need them!!