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Hi everyone I'm new to this site. I have a 84 year old mother. I personally have fought cancer myself and survived . I now valued how important it is to live each day. I keep trying to ask my mum if she wants to come out go for a meal etc but keep being met with a no. I asked why and her answer is I can't see very well anymore or I'm not feeling great. Yet she is always going off on her own . She constantly only wants to talk about illness. I want her to say yes to enjoying some things in life while she can and constantly try to involve her but I'm being meet with a negative wall and finding I'm becoming angry and frustrated. I personally fought so hard to live and say yes to life, I don't understand how to handle her and have her enjoy what time she has left. She has never been a positive type of person by the way.

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"I want her to..."

This is called projecting. You want her to be a certain way, act a certain way, think a certain way. Except the only person you can change is yourself.

"She has never been a positive type of person..."

And now you want her to be someone she never was.

I'm so happy that you won your fight against cancer! I totally understand why you'd now be frustrated by your Mom's dismaying attitude towards her life. Please remember that you aren't responsible for her happiness. We all make our own choices and then live with them.

Also, at 84 I would take her in for an exam and have her cognitively tested (and for memory as well). At this appointment maybe meds for depression can be discussed as an option. That's as much as you can do, plus have no expectations for how she is now and into the future. You need to minimize negativity. My Mom is 95 and was always a glass-half-empty person/victim mentality. When she goes off on a negative jag, has paranoia, talks only about herself, I make an attempt to distract her or change the subject. If all else fails I walk away and tell her I'll return when she's in a better mood.

May you receive good health in your future and peace in your heart about your Mom.
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Reply to Geaton777
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You are trying to change a person that has been like this for 84 years. Not going to go well for you.
You can't change her.
Maybe if you tried getting her to help you do a few things like...
"Mom, I have to get new table cloth and napkins for the holiday dinner would you help me pick something out?" A trip to the store and a bit of lunch after. The lunch and outing are not the primary goal if you put it this way, it is a task that she can help you with.
"Mom, I have to pick out a new outfit for a lunch can you help me, you always have had good taste in picking out colors"

If these don't work then just accept that your mom is who she is and that is not going to change.
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Reply to Grandma1954
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Hi Scarlett, and welcome to the Forum. As a two time cancer survivor I am glad you have, as I have, come to treasure those times in life that are precious to you.

But you need to know that your own personal epiphany is not your mother's.
It sounds to me as though you are attempting to micromanager her life. That may seem like infantilizing her own choices.
I am 82. I more and more stay on my own, go at my own pace, do my own thing, and that's how I like it. I find I am a bit more slowly, take more rests; I hesitate to put that on others, and choose not to have to WORRY about them and their pace. I don't like a lot of chatter. I am much more a contemplative.
I would highly resent my daughter's meddling in my own choices, even were she well- meaning. You two are not the same people. What works for you--and I know you know this--may not be the answer for her, and for everyone else.

Do let your mother do it her own way, won't you?
Let her know you would love to have lunch with her, go to a park and sit and chat, or whatever, and if she would enjoy that to let you know.
I can recall being quite worried for an elder aunt many years ago, who sat often staring out her window. But when I asked she told me she did life review in that way, could walk any home she had had, and time in her life, and she was quite content in those memories.

I am quite happy with my own garden, walks, trips to the library or out junking, sitting in bed with the foster dog reading and etc. This is MY way to happiness.

I invite you to stay here and read. You aren't alone in trying to find the "answer" but see to it that you don't become the "parent" of your "parent". Let her do her life her way while she is still able. There will be time enough to the ALF and its games of Bingo and dominos and it's van trips here and there. But this now is her own time with her own choices.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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Let you mother live her life the way she chooses to and you get on with living and enjoying your life the way you see fit to.
At least your mother is "going off on her own" so she may just be one that rather do things by herself and that's ok. Respect that, and respect that she'll never be the person that you want her to be. She is her own person as are you.
And sadly talking about illnesses is very common with the elderly, as sometimes that's all they have to talk about. If you don't want to listen just change the subject to something more positive.
You can only control yourself, so quit fretting over trying to control your mother.
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Reply to funkygrandma59
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Hi there,
I am a full time caregiver for my dad (84) and I had the exact situation
I knew we didn’t have much time left before he was immobile and I wanted to take him to all his favorite places and see all his favorite people because that’s what I thought he wanted, but he didnt
I asked him “ what do you want to do with the time you have left? Travel? Friends? Gatherings? “
All he said was “I am doing what I want “
So all he does is sit in front of the tv in his comfy chair and I have to respect that because he had a very busy life and this is his journey, not mine
Dont feel bad about your mom, she may be doing exactly what makes her happiest right now
Good luck
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Reply to Trishbennie
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MikeinTexas 18 hours ago
Thank you.
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As this isn’t new behavior I’d encourage you to limit your exposure to the negativity. You’re correct to make the most of your days and enjoy life. If mom is determined to be grumpy, and you don’t think new depression is happening, leave her to it
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Reply to Daughterof1930
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Two things:
1. Older people find so much of life is simply wearing. The brain loses its ability to sort out incoming info - from the eyes, ears, skin, and feels so confused. It takes a lot of energy to deal with things that are different from normal, too loud, too much, overwhelming…If she does not want to go, leave her alone and accept she knows what she wants. Going on her own does not require dealing with another person when she has had enough.
2. She is not you. Allow her the independence to make her own decisions, do what she wants. This is not about you. Her negativity might be because she has pain she is unaware of, or because her body is just not working well.
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Reply to RetiredBrain
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A Debbie Downer is always a Debbie Downer. If she didn't do it before why expect her to do it now. Yes, get her a full physical with labs. Maybe Moms likes the way her life is. At 75 I am happy spending my days in my little den.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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Mom doesn’t need to “ be handled “.

You are choosing to live your life your way .

Mom has the right to live her life her way .

That being said , if her attitude bothers you so much , try to change the subject , look over photo albums , ask her about when she was a child , watch a movie together , bring a meal to eat with her.
You can always cut short any particularly bad visit with an excuse to leave .

She’s 84 , you aren’t going to change her negativity, that isn’t new . She also may really not feel well , be tired . Old people frequently talk about illness .

You are trying to make her adopt your outlook . Maybe you pushing her to live life to the fullest is annoying and that’s why she refuses to go with you , yet “ goes off on her own “ and does her own thing , her way . Mom may very well be doing the best she can , and if so , you pushing her is probably frustrating for her.
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Reply to waytomisery
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CaliTexasGirl 18 hours ago
☆It's difficult learning how to Back Off.. and, letting them live it how they want. My words to my mom at times when she starts her stuff: Negativity, complaining or it begins to merge into arguing, I tell her, Do it how you Do it!
That means, I am done!
We think, we know what's best for them... & we're trying to take care of them, they're declining & we want to protect & try to do things with them in these last days we have with them & it's reallllly difficult when they fight you on all of this and/or, don't want to do anything.
It's hard to understand but, I had to learn to LET GO!
Suggest, try, ask... if it's met with No, I'm over it & I go on about my business.

I've learned, you can't make someone do things or change them & at the end of the day, it's their life & they have to live it how they feel they want.
Me getting upset, or arguing etc., only harms me.. & also, they're elderly now, many times we still kinda see them as they were back in their 50s & it's just not that anymore.
Many times, I look at my mom like, Who are you, where is my mom... she's 80, 102 pounds, some memory decline from chemo, & in a lot of pain from her spine from 4 car accidents. So, mostly she doesn't want to do anything but stuff around the house & watch TV. And I had to come to terms with that.
I had a birthday dinner for her a few months ago. She really didn't want to do that, not real excited about stuff like that, but, I set reservations, bought a cake at home, balloons, invited family to the restaurant & she had a ball. She loved it.
So, ya do what you can & let go of mostly all of what you can't & in the process, take note of how you're doing & try to take care of yourself.
I often had feelings of, my insides are going to explode & I had to figure out how to handle that so I don't get to that point.
Early on, I told my best friend, 'I gotta' get OUT of here before I have a stroke!' :-(

This situation for me, landed me in therapy & my Dr. prescribing me medication. Things I have never done or needed in my entire life!
I have never been in an environment like this!
So, the only thing that works for me is, when she starts her stuff, I don't even respond, I don't try to figure it out, or defend myself or see what it is she's talking about because that initial response from me always lands me in a loud argument with her. Which is Terrrrrible because she's an old lady. But still tries to be like she used to be!
And it's always because of small things, wash cloths, I take too long in the bathroom but she doesn't even like drinking water because she doesn't even want to get up more than once to tinkle. So to her, it's weird that you drink 6 to 8 glasses of water & use the restroom several times a day. It's just bonkers!
It's also, she moved something, can't REMEMBER something but attacks you.. YOU did it, etc. I have never in my life been in this kind of environment so it's really really hard. AND, it's never anything important, it's over bottle tops, or olive oil or toilet paper or forks & I.m like this is INSAAANE!
AND, I live with her.. (pray for me) LOLL....at least, for another month or 2 & since June as I've been gone 30 years & relocated home to be with her & help her & it's been awful at times & I've had to learn how to navigate this & take care of me.
So, it's leave them alone & let them live the rest of life that is easy for them the way THEY like.:/
And, take care of yourself!
I wish you all the best! ;-)
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She might just not want to be around people. Some people like to use their later years for reflection, some simply enjoy solitude, isolation, and rest after a life that may have been filled with working, caring for a family, or both. Remeber that the things that make you happy don't necessarily make her happy. If you want to do something to make her happy, buy her some coffee or tea, a bottle of wine, cook a meal for her, gift her with a throw blanket or a low maintenence plant, set up her phone with an iTunes account with her favorite music and show her how to cast it to speakers or her TV, get her some audiotapes of her favorite authors, set up a birdfeeder for her, whatever things make her happy in her solitude. Each person is different. Honor her solitude.
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