She says I am selfish and I should want to do things for her. Through many years of therapy I have learned to set boundaries and even hold the boundaries I set. The difficult part is that my mom gets very angry and "hurt" that I would not want to do things for her and spend every minute I could with her. She says she understands that I have a life too but when it comes right down to it, she makes me feel very guilty that she is alone and old. She has the financial means to live in a nice IL or AL facility. She lives 1.5 hours away from me. I call every day and visit her once a week. I work full time and have other responsibilities in addition to her. (MIL, hubby, adult children, pets, home of my own) She does nothing to cooperate with me, she won't move closer. Her new thing is shopping for hours and then asking me to return the same items the next week. I just told her I would not do this anymore and her reply was that I am very selfish and ungrateful. UGH. I'm done.
Mom once was very nasty when I got there & started throwing her weight around then said 'if you can't do that then leave' so I did but I also said as I was leaving 'Oh good now I have time to so my groceries before dark' or some such thing - she thought she would have me jumping through hoops to please her but it backfired - she only pulled that a few times before she realized she was cutting off her nose to spite her face
You say your mom says her feeling are hurt - however I bet you never tell her when yours are - so tell her what she says is unacceptable & maybe skip a weekly visit when she is 'bad' -
I bet you go about same time each weekend so start switching it up so 1 week is Sat a.m. & next is Sun p.m. etc. so that she becomes aware that you have a life & sometimes that means rescheduling the time with her - if she complains just say it was reschedule or cancel -
My mom is easier when my husband is with me so can your hubby come occationally? - rather than taking her shopping take her out for dinner/lunch as your time together
I always bring something small with me like a Tim Horton's coffee & a cookie so now she greets me with a big smile because like Pavlov's dog she associates me with pleasure - you train your kids to act reasonably so to you must do some training for your needful elders -
My mom is well past making problems now but she still recognizes me & smiles - I still bring something every time but that changes from week to week - she gets as much pleasure from a helium balloon as a pot of tulips as a cookie as it is not WHAT you bring but rather THAT you bring something which is thoughtful = CARING = LOVE
You know your mother the best but try some suggestions we all have found while 'in the trenches' - also if she moves closer think about how close in case she wants to start visiting your home
I too have one, and I also had a very unhappy childhood, made much more difficult by a mother who threatened to kill herself at every turn. I grew up terrified and in constant fear that she would, in fact, do that and I'd be held to blame and would go to jail.
It's only taken 60 years for me to stand up to her. I kind of blew up 2 weeks ago when she pulled this stunt again. All I said was "Do as you please, mom, we'll all be fine." This set off a pout-fest and one of those "you kids were so hard to raise! My Dr always said you'd be the death of me!" (she's 87, and nobody has done her in yet.)
When Mother gets this way, I have the power to WALK AWAY. And I do. And I FINALLY have the power to do so without any guilt, whatsoever.
I will now set boundaries and if she crosses them..I warn her. She usually respects them. If she doesn't, I will say "Ok, then I am in timeout and I will see you in 2 weeks". Whether or not she cares is her problem. I doubt she even notices.
In your case--can you move your mom closer to you (NOT in with you) to cut back on the long drive..or are you OK with it chewing up an entire day? This would pretty much end a relationship with my mom, she's within 20 minutes of all her kids.
I can say without question, unless she has a serious cognitive decline, this behavior is going to go on as long as YOU let it. You're the one in charge here and now. Set some boundaries and stick with them. Sounds like she's not going to be happy no matter what you do, so set things to please yourself! And good luck with it!! :)
For me,
When my inner walls came down - when I started really looking into myself and having intense, therapeutic feedback - I realized that, no, I did not really have a happy childhood. There were happy times, but tons of manipulation, super-high stress, control, fear, and drama - oh yes, abuse. Emotional in particular, plus neglect. Recently, I realized that one "belief" I told myself as a child, is that "I don't matter." Another: Being quiet about my feelings, and being "good," protects me and also helps Mom to feel "better." Also to always be grateful, because our lives are so much better than hers as a poor child of the Depression era, with an alcoholic father, etc., etc.
My mother just went through a phase that I feel, showed me the future. And it's so frightening, so very mean. But you know what? I can choose peace. I can choose to not engage or participate. Keep things light and leave before things get dark. Pray for more light for myself.
When we realize the pain we've been carrying inside, we become stronger, more motivated to actually implement boundaries. Until then, we say we've created boundaries but... they don't always work, and in fact, just make Mom craftier.
The solution for me is spirituality, in whatever forms feel "right" to me. The messages that feel most "right" are the ones that hit me in the gut with the truth. Then I can cry - or laugh! - and feel alright for a while. On and on it goes, and I get stronger and stronger. I go out for a ride in nature on my power chair, listening to music... and I feel good. I feel whole, and loved.
My inner serenity comes first, and so must yours. I need to be Real so I can heal my own "automatic behaviors" and so I can stop the co-dependency I've re-created with my own daughter. Oh, yes... I know how to be just like Mom. That's a hit in the gut! But it also was a major turning point for healing.
Bless you and your husband. I've never had a normal love relationship, I have MS and finally moved from my parents' home into IL, which saved my life! I now know how to be happy and quiet; and when I'm not, I know it won't last too long. I still wish I could attract someone to love and be loved by, someone who isn't out to abuse me or trigger self-abuse. A lot of healing coming through, and I thank God for that! (Or as Sufi, Yoga, etc. say: Wahe Guru!)
Nurture yourself and your marriage. Maybe you can even lessen some things you perceive as "normal stress." Inside, I mean.
Mother Nature is the best. Get out there with your man. Breathe in the Love that is always real, always perfect.
Blessed be.
If you truly think you are guilty of doing wrong, then try changing what you're doing:
You set your limits where you and your husband want them--and be more generous toward him, because I expect (from my own experience) that he is willing to agree to let you do more for Mom than he really thinks you should.
Tell Mom you're sorry if she thought she was going to move in with you and have you unselfishly cater to her every whim, but she must have slipped up somewhere in her child-rearing technique because that ain't gonna happen. Now, she needs to make other plans while she is still competent to do so, and you will help her examine her options at your convenience.
Since she has financial means to live in a community, suggest that she would be happier there than whining and wishing you'd do more than you are going to do for her. Basically, tell her to grow up and get on with her life; and you can spend 3 hours a week (or whatever limit YOU set) helping her find a new good place to live before it's too late for her to have any choice in it.
From my observation, people who move into a senior community nearly always say they should have done it sooner; so IMO, this would be a wonderful thing for you to do for her.
At any rate, you're not abusing her; your primary obligations are to your own household, so no guilt for setting your limits.
That's too bad for your mom that she has not figured out how to live without someone at her beck and call. Maybe you should start retraining her now so she has a better rest of her life! Perhaps a call OR a visit a week. You also set a timer on your phone or kitchen clock to limit the time you have with her. When it rings, time's up and you have to go to your next appointment. That appt could be taking out the garbage - its importance does not matter, what matters is that you obey YOUR schedule, not mom's. Distance yourself from her so she can have the joy of being an independent woman!
1st bit of advice: if your mom is in any stage of dementia, beware of 'sundowning' - i read about it in this newsletter just about the time mom was calling multiple times each night with repetitive demands [for banking autonomy, where are my things from our house, accusing people of stealing...]
she is always fine when i take her to drs, dentist, then lunch together...then next day [night!] she continues the irrational phone behavior demands, crying, calling the police...
when i try to change the subject, she won't have it - tho her mind is going, she is surprisingly stubborn in remembering what she wants in these episodes.
it took me a long time to try NOT to explain the illogic of her complaints. this is what causes me the 'fear' - why can't i be more creative with getting her to hang up satisfied - with some calming lie? she with a weak and failing mind is 'stronger' than my logical and reasonable one...so confounding!
soooo - i've learned to not answer the phone after dusk. she's fine the next day.
i only comment on yours feeling compelled to by the hearing issue, being DENIAL by my mom, 90 also. my belief is that, would she wear a hearing aid, she would be aware of / engage in the myriad activities available at her uniquely lovely IL facility, a huge factor in preventing losing one's mind, almost proven by the way she is losing hers by not doing so.
diagnosed with dementia, but can fool anyone, except family and staff at the facility.
latest habit/decline of past 2 weeks: multiple nightly calls to us sisters - after 'sundown' - demanding bank card and accusing people of stealing things.....as there is no getting thru, no logic...dr appt made for meds to calm her down / anti-depressant...
do all of you reflect on the fact that it is unlikely that our moms did not have to care for their aging parents as we are in this age of life-lengthening meds. they live longer - but is it dignified or happy or productive or thankful...?...
My mother thinks I need to be involved in her day-to-day snafus (didn't bring all the info to the tax preparer, is now stressing out about how to start mail order meds, etc.). At a doctor's visit I told her to please be quiet, the doctor was trying to speak and she hissed at me, "Don't tell me what to do!" Any time she has to call a company/dr/whatever on the phone, there is usually a mixup and of course the other person is "stupid!"
I am supposed to agree with her. I usually don't. But I don't say that, because that upsets her greatly. She is not ready to hear that she is becoming incapable of doing many of these things (one reason is her hearing loss, which she refuses to get hearing aids for), so she continues to stumble through things and get herself quite irritated.
She is 90 years old. I see cognitive slippage. Doctors don't care. They see that I go to medical appointments with her, and so aren't concerned. (They probably assume she lives with me, which she doesn't and never will.)
Selfish and ungrateful?
Selfish and ungrateful! I love it!!!
Momsgoto, there is something about glorious, blazing, triumphant illogicality that just tickles me for some reason.
"I went to the shops and bought these items, having learned nothing from many previous similar experiences. My daughter says she is fed up with returning items I have bought and don't want, and is not going to play this game any more. How selfish and ungrateful of her!"
I can only recommend that you carry on being as selfish and ungrateful as your sanity, your sense of reality and your marriage require; and allow your mother to enjoy her grievances.
I'm suspicious that there is some cognitive decline but every doctor says she is fine. She keeps her house clean and is pretty sharp with her finances. So it's the interpersonal deficits that are obvious but only to those who know her. In my experience, doctors really don't care that much about these issues. Unless your loved one is licking the walls or disoriented as to time and place they don't address it.
The part about returning things had me nodding my head. Mine will buy something, then decide she doesn't like it or thinks it cost too much. She wants me to return it. I won't do that anymore, since it seemed to be turning into a game with her. When I stopped returning, my mother didn't try it anymore. I don't understand why she was doing this, but it was very irritating. It was more like she couldn't find anything that pleased her, not even if she bought it herself.
I know you are just venting, momsgoto. Vent away. Many of us know what you're saying.
One other thing that I would suggest is to consider if she is having any cognitive decline. My LO became unusually difficult and demanding and I thought she was very rude and unreasonable. I didn't know then that it was early dementia. Later, it was clear. The reason she called and wanted me there so much, is that her brain was changing and it scared her. She needed me there for comfort, but, was scared to tell me why. I'd check out her house and make sure things are okay and that she's functionally normally, just to make sure. All those purchases would peek my curiosity.