Some asked for an update on my post…
What do you think? Should I go on the trip?
When my parents moved up near me I started a habit of calling them every day. Pretty much “Hey there how ya doing?” kind of thing. They were up here for about a month then went back to their other home in FL. Kept up the habit. Last week when everything went down regarding my original post I got ghosted by my Dad.
Today I left a message saying that I know he is upset and that I am taking it as he doesn’t want to speak with me so I will give him some space and am ready when he is ready to talk.
He texted me back saying this…
”I am not mad, just broken hearted. I don’t think this can ever be fixed so from this point on please don’t try to contact us anymore. If anything happens to your mom I will let you know. I’m sure if something happens to me she will do the same.”
Feel like I have lost my Dad before I lose my Dad.
“ I’m sorry you are upset Dad , I was doing all I can to assist in setting up PROFESSIONAL help for Mom when she gets home.
I can not be a hands on caregiver as I am not trained .
I have a family and job obligations as well , many miles away “.
Then the ball is in Dad’s court .
Maintain this boundary . You are not a child . He’s trying to make you cancel your trip . You can’t give in , then he will continue to manipulate .
I know it’s heartbreaking . Maybe your mother will accept calls at some point , despite what your father says .
I'm sure I'll have more to say tomorrow, I am sorry
It's like ransom !
That's fine. They were his choices, including his buying a home near you, then choosing not to live in it but to live farther away.
He's enough of an adult to make his own decisions.
He's lying. He is not only mad, he's furious that he cannot manipulate you into doing his bidding. I would doubt he was EVER very understanding of anyone's choices but his own. He is quite selfish. And exceptionally manipulative.
This is what I would tell him.
Dear Dad,
I'm sorry for your heartbreak. I always hoped you would be able to be proud of your son, and am saddened that's not the case.
You have always done things "your way" and I honor your wish to continue. Simply saddened that this is "your way" of doing things. You have had a good life. I must now look to my own.
I have had to make the decisions best for my life and my family. As a very strong and strong-minded man I am certain you will understand and honor that.
I trust in your abilities to find the resources you and Mom need at this time, and am saddened that not getting your own way has caused you to choose to cut off contact with me. It says little of who I am, but quite a lot about who you are.
Do know, should you ever change your mind, I am here. And should my contact info ever change I will update you. I thank you for all you did in raising me, and I thank Mom. Now I am a grown man who must make my own often difficult decisions.
I hope that you have made this decision with your own wife in mind, her wishes and her needs.
Your Son, Dragon.
You are being manipulated by a selfish old man.
You say you feel you are losing him before you lose him.
I wonder, myself, if you ever had him, or if you simply made him up. Because anyone who abandons a son for not doing his will is not much of a father. Imho.
As for you, stand your ground and don't give in.
There was a poster from the UK, who'd tell his Father about his upcoming family trips away (with wife & kids). Father would develop chest pains the week before, or dizziness, or not feeling well in some way - every time - & plead, then demand he cancel the trip.
The Son stopped giving such notice - called on day of departure. You guessed it - Father says "Come quick! I think I'm dying right now! You'll have to cancel!!"
Hang up now Dad & call emergency services. I'll call you from Spain/wherever later tonight.
And souvenirs .
If Dad says “ I need you here “.
“ Well Dad if you can’t manage living independently either , then it’s time to talk about assisted living for both of you “
So much drama. My husband has a daughter who loves making a mountain out of a molehill, and always has. He calls it ADATT: All Drama All The Time. It's exhausting to be around these energy vampires, it really is. I had a mother who was ADATT too. She was dying or "killing herself" since I was young enough to cry in fear about it. Passive-aggressive to the point of insanity, too, where communication was literally impossible. Her FOG (Fear Obligation and Guilt) tactics were SO finely honed, it was a science. The silent treatment was my favorite because she finally STOPPED talking for awhile.
There is a good website you can check out called Out of the FOG, with a forum that's extremely eye opening.
https://outofthefog.website/
If my father sent me a text like yours sent you, I'd reply with, "Love you dad."
Don't believe for a minute you've lost your father......he's just using this strategy to scare you into action, that's all. It's not working this time, which is what you saying "love you dad" means. I'm not playing this game, pop.
Enjoy your trip and if you dwell on this text, dad wins. Because he's managed to ruin your vacation, which was his goal all along. If he's suffering, so should you.
I love love love your short and sweet "Love you, Dad". And then let HIM make the next move. We should perhaps design a chess board together, Forum members?
She will have very helpful comments .
Then he becomes the hero for handling his own responsibility properly and stops wasting time being King Drama. Mom would want Home Care nurses, not her adult son, bathing her, etc. They are great and will keep her calm and recover so much better. Dad just has to be there with his wallet. They order supplies and get them delivered. They text Dad the night before with arrival times.
Tell Dad to knock the guilt off and do his damn job. Mom needs proper care when she gets home. I would tell him bluntly he needs to STEP UP, do what he needs to do, then hang up. Save the drama for the Oscars. Act like a damn husband should and take care of business. Admit he's scared and arrange for home care! Call her Doctor to have him order it. Neither of you are qualified RNs! Home Care can take her vitals, keep her Doctor informed, help her bathe, draw blood samples, you name it. Plus they are supportive and Mom will get her proper care.
Dad can supervise, as he should. Ordering Mom some flowers would be nice.
I completely get Dad is broken hearted over your Mom.
But broken hearted because his adult son won't be at his beck & call? No.
Maybe his own expectations (unrealistic expectations) are causing him that discomfort. Another person in his shoes could choose to could say "I am grateful my Son recently visited. I know he can't be here all the time. I value our phone calls".
Dawn, we wrote at the same time. I APPLAUDE all you wrote.
I would say Barb, above, has just nailed something.
This is unlikely to be "new behavior". This is just Dad.
I finally told her there are nurse’s here to help her and I had to go home .
She got mad and gave me the silent treatment . It didn’t last .
Mine too. She expects me to 'baby' her and wait on her hand and foot like a helpless infant.
Basically, I laugh in her face. I tell her that she has no right to expect that. I help her as far as I'm willing to and it is on MY terms, not hers.
I also remind her that she stopped 'babying' me right around when I cut my first tooth.
I'm Gen X. We were raised on hose water and neglect. Our elderly parents want to be 'babied'? Go find a nanny then.
Are you able to connect with your Mom independent of your Dad? Call her in the hospital or email or text her? I think sending flowers is a great idea.
The only thing I would add is that it is likely your Dad is scared. That doesn't negate his behavior or the fact you should stick to your guns.
I would continue to check in every week or two (it may be further manipulation on his part to have such a drastic request now) and
if for some reason he does reach out to you or health circumstances change, show him as much grace as possible. You are doing the right thing.
My mom and brother are furious at me because I don't work, and I don't do everything for my mom. A decision me and my husband made for now ,when he retired. They think I should be doing everything and I owe it to them because I'm not working. I'm not working because I want these few years of retirement with my older husband, not so I can be my mother pee-on, but mom won't even put me on an emergency list for the doctors. They where trying to groom me to be there slave, as time is going by and they are figuring out that they can't get more from me than I'm willing to give there not happy. All they are doing is pushing me farther away from them and this whole disfuctional family. And end all be all my mom and brother are honestly just plain jealous and don't want me to have a good life.
You know something every thing my mother has said to me that was mean. She had done me a favor. Shows me her true colors ! Just like your dad just did.
I am so sorry for you, I am so sorry your dad is the way he is. All I can really say is , you are so not alone!
It reads to me like dad is making poor decisions and is exhibiting panic.
Has anyone checked out his cognitive skills? And I don't mean "name the president and tell me what day it is".
If he's ALWAYS been manipulative and prone to drama, I would advise simply being in contact with mom. And giving dad space.
But if this is new behavior and if mom is still in hospital or rehab, I think I'd give the Social Worker a call and explain that dad doesn't seem to be making adequate care plans for mom. And that you live quite a distance away and can't be there to do care.
Do not play into this. Take that vacation. Believe me, Dad will need you at some point and will be calling. As I told you in my response in ur last post, my MIL had 10 in of intestines removed with a bag at 70. Believe me, if home recuperation was that bad, one of the sons would have been called. MIL was taught to take care of her own bag. Its just a matter of healing. She eventually got back to going out with friends. I am sure my FIL went out for his daily golfing. All Dad may need to do is wait on her. Get take out. Did Mom wait on him hand and foot? He will be able to make himself a P and J. I will bet when you talk to the relative who is going down, Dad and Mom would have done well on their own.
My sister had breast cancer and needed help in another State caring for a 6 yr old. So my mother went down to stay with her for 8 months leaving my Dad alone. A man she had waited on hand and foot. He did better than we thought he would. An Uncle would check up on him. I would go over and clean up and make sure he was eating. I was not there all the time, I had a family. He was 68 at the time.
My DH was called a MaMa's boy. He did because he could. Marrying me changed that. I came first. She chose to move to Fla, 15 hrs away. Away from the only son that lived nearby. She had expectations about us visiting all the time, holidays down there forgetting we had 2 children in school. When she would complain, my DH would say, well she wanted to move to Fla.
Your father is not getting his own way so he's doubling-down on the shaming, and guilt-tripping.
You are not the one who is wrong here. He is. If this is what he wants, then fine. I don't think it is though. He's trying to manipulate you to get what he wants which is to go back home and become your mother's caregiver because he doesn't want to have the responsibility of her himself.
So, take a break from them for a while. Don't call. He'll call you when he needs to "vent" (which is just a modern clickbait word for complain) to someone or needs help arranging care for your mother.
How To Handle A Manipulator When They Don't Get Their Way
Heres the link:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/stress-fracture/202406/how-to-handle-a-manipulator-when-they-dont-get-their-way
Don't associate yourself with abusive individuals.
My Dad called me today and apologized
I hate to say this , but be on guard for some regression , see sawing . The apology could be because he’s panicking.
Does he expect you to do what he wants because he apologized ?
Don’t give in . Maintain the boundaries.
Go on your trip .
I’m happy your dad had time to reconsider his behavior. I’m sure it felt good to hear from him and check in on how mom is doing. Enjoy your trip.