All because she won't leave her house? Her husband died of cancer this past July. She has lived in this small town(2 hours from our home) all her life and doesn't want to leave, but she is so frail that she never leaves the house on her own. She won't let people from church help. She won't let ME help because I am not a cleaning nazi like her. My husband has one brother but due to health issues he ius unable to help at all. I know as Christians we are to care for our parents, but shouldn't they give a little? It is all about her. She feels she provided care for others when she was younger, and now it is her turn. OK, but those people lived with her. Why can't she see she should move in with us?
Whether from a dementia, or a personality disorder, your mom actually views you, her own daughter as an extension of herself, and must really believe she does these things independently.
This is a classic behavior, but I don't know why anyone would treat their own foot so poorly.
"I feel ya!"
If you are suffering from something (key word, suffering) that is yet undiagnosed, please ask your doctor's advice. It may bother you more trying to research it all out on your own, wondering, and identifying with so many symptoms mentioned on the various threads here, that you work yourself up, worry that you might have something you don't have. When in your situation with your daughter, just the stress could be causing your symptoms. imo.
Disclaimer: I disclaim having any real expert opinions.
Please consult your doctor.
I will PM you to clarify.
Now, should I open mouth, insert other foot, or which foot exactly should I ?????
Lol, just joking, using cliches inappropriately. O dear jude!
Lol. Just following up.
Better?
Same?
Worse?
We care!
M88
As so often happens, your post has been hijacked, so just ignore them, imo.
My Dad would use his walker but my Mom wouldn't, she would wobble along with her cane, good heavens anyone would think she was elderly [she was in her mid-90's]... but I was a senior myself and it would take 10 minutes to get my parents into the car and me climbing in back to buckle them up... whew, and here we hadn't left the garage.
Eventually I would ask for a shopping list and my parents stayed at home... I honestly think they were relieved not going. That 2 hour shopping trip was cut down to a half hour for me :)
I was in therapy and my therapist gave me some things to say. "I'm sorry you feel that way." "You could be right, I'll have to think about it." "I did the best I knew how at the time". or "I don't need this". These sentences are geared to stop conversation. How can they respond to them? Feel free to use them as appropriate.
She does not want to be happy, and you can't make her happy. The only one you can control is yourself. Don't listen to her SH**. Walk away. Hang up. When she complained about the chair, say something like. "I am sorry you feel that way". Then leave, or change the subject. I used to have to run outside and change the water. Even if the water wasn't on, it didn't matter, got me out of the house.
She says it to hurt, remember just because someone throws a ball at you doesn't mean you have to catch it. Just jump aside and say, "Oh, My, someone just threw a ball (or hurtful comment). Don't catch that ball (or hurtful comment), that is what they want you do to. Just let it pass.
Many Hugs to you.
How hurtful when someone who is supposed to love you, doesn't. The old saying "Nothing like a Mother's Love" can be a farce. At least my mother came right out and said she never cared for me. Made a lot of sense.
With my mother, they were all right under my nose. Rigid thinking. Unable to switch focus. Fixated on the "right way" to do this or that, but could not execute and went ape-sh*t if someone else stepped in. Lost interest in what few things ever interested her. Paranoid. Control freak. Anti-social. Deliberately made her world astonishingly small.
I kept thinking that it couldn't be dementia. She always knew the day, the president, current events. Still a math whiz.
She was always a low-grade control freak. I figured she was just becoming "more herself" with age.
Fast forward. Autopsy revealed 2 different forms of dementia. I almost fell out of my chair. Why autopsy? Refused to see a doctor for any of her escalating issues. (Control freak, remember?)
Whatever is going on with your mom, it sounds like she will wear it like a badge of honor. While you increasingly feel like you are one step from the nuthouse.
These years will wear you down. If mom has food, clothing and shelter -- and refuses to entertain other options for herself and your father -- take a step back. And commit to being present for your husband, adult children and grandchidren.
I can also relate to the "too much information" syndrome. A lot of that negativity came my way the past 5 years. My parents became fond of "dropping bombs" (hello -- I'm your daughter, not your shrink).....neighbors/relatives would unburden themselves.....the things I discovered when I cleaned out their house. Upsetting and demoralizing. To say the least.
Again, make every effort to rise above. Easy to say, difficult to do. When our relationship with elderly parents becomes transactional, it creates a deep sadness. The best antidote is to stay fully engaged with those who also give -- and don't just take. (((big hugs)))