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"He KNEW full well I was busy .... but he still has to have a go ..... I just let it wash over me and ignored it. ..... its getting so obvious with his awful selfish behaviour I don't feel guilty any more."

Paul, you're getting better at this. Yes, ignore his tiresome complaints and selfish behaviour. As your thinking changes, so will your actions. Good job, Paul.
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901am this morning Im in work. Dad calls me. "So are you coming tonight. I need food". NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

905am. Brother is ringing. (I know whats happened here!). Didn't answer. Both numbers now blocked.

I might leave it this way until I get home from Glastonbury...
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Margaret - I might just do that. There is no way on earth this man has willingly taken on 2 toddlers when he split up with my mother. No way in a million years.

Jasmina - Its scary how he fits the profile of a narc so well. Its really strange.... Some of his behaviour is spot on. I've always said its not so much about needs and wants with Dad its the feeling of being in control.
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Llama- yep thats him to a tee. He seems to think I need permission off his to do things... He really does think my focus should be on him all the time.

Disgusted/Pamzi - yep he'll be staying there as well. Im not cutting it short because I know the chance of it being genuine is very slim.
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Polar - his behaviour is so absurd and downright selfish now it gets easier for me. Before he used to mildly try it on and I'd feel guilty and go.

Now I've pushed back a little hes shown he will go to any lengths to get what he wants. And the fact that hes demonstrated (and said!) that my family don't matter as well.

Glastonbury music festival! The greatest music festival on the planet (90 mins from where we live).... Got lots of stuff on there, including kids stuff etc. (Do you get Basil Brush in the USA?). My 6 year old loves it there. On the adult music side of things The Cure, The Killers (from Las Vegas I believe), Kylie Minogue and lots of others. We're going Wednesday, daughter is coming home friday night to stay with gran for a few days (Sat/Sun is more the adult bands).

Getting a ticket is VERY difficult. 150,000 sold out in 25 minutes last september. I ain't cancelling!
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OMG. After this mornings little performance, I arranged food delivery, so I called him to confirm times. "Well I was just looking and I think I can manage until you come home".

And then he had the cheek to wonder why I seemed a bit "off".....
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Paul, this sounds EXACTLY like what my grandmother does! I make sure the house is always stocked up with soups, Ensure, bread and things for sandwiches, TV dinners, pudding, ice cream, cookies that she likes, cereal- all easy foods my grandmother can have, no prep work needed, ready-to-go. There could be a whole four course meal in the kitchen and my grandmother would still complain... "there's no food in the house, there's nothing I can eat, I thought that was YOUR food"... *eyeroll*

Here's the thing: seniors do this for attention. You could be by their side all day long from sun up to sun down holding their hand every second and it wouldn't be enough according to them. Some people are so negative that there is nothing you can say or do that would make them happy. And it's not because you are doing anything "wrong"- you're doing fine and actually doing the right thing. It has nothing to do with you, it's a personal control issue on the parents' part. Most elderly are of the mindset that in order to get anything done right, you gotta do it yourself. Well, they can no longer do things for themselves, which is why things aren't done to their satisfaction.

As caregivers, our job is to make sure the home is safe, clean, secure and our loved ones are healthy, clean and fed. Our loved ones' personal happiness is NOT our choice or responsibility. We cannot force someone to be happy, as much as we might want to.
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kimmotion - you're not wrong. Whatever I do is not enough for him. I'm beginning to lose the guilt last few months and beginning to realise, I can only do so much. I'm also realising that the only person who's going to look after me and my family is me by sticking to boundaries with Dad.

Part of the problem he can see no wrong with how he behaves. You can guarantee this latest incident won't even register. My wife won't even speak to him (and she's absolutely spot on and I agree with her) but can guarantee he won't know what hes done.....
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Better not tell dad your doing something special that weekend. He will have an accident, emergency, trip fall etc to get you to drop everything to go see him.
My mom would have emergencies on my bday/holidays to make turn it into a command performance. Yes they can and will do that.
Dont say anything about not visiting or why your busy that weekend.
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Jasmina - I did try to keep it quiet but hes seen it on TV so he knew it was next weekend. Which is why he played up this weekend.

Yes Dad has done this several times before. He gets "ill" before I do something. One year I almost cancelled a holiday to Florida....

Twice as well, when hes disagreed with the doctor, hes accidentally hit his head and fallen to get his wish (i.e. admitted to hospital).

First time we were suspicious, 2nd time evern hospital said head wound was self-inflicted. It looked like he'd deliberately, scraped his head on cupboard door.

I intend to block his number this weekend. In the event of a dire emergency, my brother can deal. If they REALLY need me brother can call me and I'll decide if its important or not.
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Paul, I've probably told you this before, but in the 6+ years that my mom was in need of supervision and care, my brothers and I had a deal. We didn't take vacations at the same time. We all did quite a bit of galivanting both here in the US and abroad, but we made sure one of us was around to show up for an ER run, etc.

The other part of this solemn pledge was that if mom died, we'd keep her on ice until everyone was back home.

You make your peace with the fact that each visit might be your last. After several experiences in our collective youth, watching relatives rush to deathbeds multiple times, we all agreed that we didn't need to do this. Ironically, I WAS there when my mom passed.
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Barb - I guess thats just the thing. You never know when its going to happen. Sounds like you had it all sorted though.

Of course, with me it doesn't help that Dad "pretends" hes dying when hes not. Have had a few of those :-(

As you say, I can't just wait around and put things on hold and never go away. It took years and he ruined a good few holidays where I sat in the airport worried sick I shouldn't be going (and then worried when I was away).

Only recently have I realised that these "illnesses" always came on when I was going away and he even slipped up one day and said "You shouldn't go so far (USA - so 8 hour+ transatlantic flight) because its too far if Im ill". I had a bit of lightbulb moment after that when I knew what he was playing at.
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Paul - even if dad had a REAL emergency, what could you possibly do that the hospital couldn't do?

Dad has your brother who lives near by. He can deal with dad's problem for one week. If you cut short your vacation, all you accomplish would be ruining everyone's vacation for NO GOOD reason.

Please block brother's number, too. If you don't, he'll call and lay guilt on you and ruin your vacation for you.
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Paul; Just go away. If you don't keep dancing to his "boy who cried wolf" tune, he might just get that he shouldn't do that any longer.

And if he's really ill, the hospital will care for him and be in touch. What is there that you can't do via telephone?
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Polar/Barb - Very good point. I'll be 90 mins drive away as well. If its Sat or Sun chances are I'll be over the limit to drive as well!

Blocking brothers number. Very tempted!

Barb you're right there would be nothing I can do. Dad WOULD though expect everyone to come running.

An example. He had man come out to look at his gas heating. The man checked (as I expect is standard to be honest) and said there was a gas leak that needed to be done. He was going to send someone urgently to sort it out. (It was only a small leak probably been like it for months but I guess once they knew they were obliged to deal with it).

He went into a major wobbler. Wanted me to leave work at 2pm to come to him. I couldn't. He was not happy. In the end, I didn't go at all. He had a man there who was a trained engineer dealing with it. What could I add exactly? Nothing.

This is EXACTLY how'd he be with the hospital. He'd expect me there in attendance...
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Barb - "the boy who cried wolf" thing. I used to jump thinking "what if its serious this time".

Now, hes done it so many times, I'm resigned myself that when its his time to go, he'll probably be sat in his chair passed away. He will have called his GP (who refuses to come), called an ambulance (same with them they don't rush any more), and called me and expected me to drop everything. And we'll all say "Ah he was ill this time after all"

I've made my peace with the possibility that might happen though :-)
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Paul, I always posited to my mom, that if she wasn't comfortable dealing the the house stuff on her own, she needed to consider moving elsewhere.

When I divorced and considered the idea of "getting" my WWII era home free and clear, I inwardly screamed "Nooooooo". I don't know about roofs, plumbing or water mains. Got myself a lovely coop apartment where everything is taken care of for a monthly fee.
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I had a good friend who used to say “ bad news will find you soon enough”. You might take that up Paul.
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Paul put the 2 of them on notice your doc said you have to limit your stress. Anyone with a brain can see what your dealing with is wayyyyy too much for any one person.
Tell them these constant emergencies are not emergencies and you are determined to be around to watch your child grow up. They arent going to put you in the hospital. You have a perfect excuse to limit the stress and contacts.
Limit their calls. 1x a day or pick every other. If they abuse the call to demand you drop everything, or complain to you, they get blocked for that day. Period.
If your on vacation or out of the area on work, you will see them when you return. Period. Wife can screen calls if they try to push fake emergency. They dont get to get ahold of you wilst on business out of town.
They are 2 grown men. They will live just fine. There will be push back, just back it up with a phone block. When you check in, if they start with the guilt/unpleasantness, they get 1 warning your going to hang up. Then do it. They can be trained. Problem is they have you trained. Now its time to train them. Good luck. You'll get there.
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97yroldmom - what did your friend mean by 'bad news will find you soon enough?'

Did she mean: Don't be complacent, your turn will come? Karma will bite your behind?
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97yroldmom: Paul does not need any bad news if that was the implication of your friend.
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I believe that expression means that if there is bad news, it has a way of getting to you one way or another. So if Paul were away from home and his dad fell ill, the news would get to him easily enough.
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Ah never heard that saying before....
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Jasmina - he is making me ill I must admit. Its affecting things with me and my family too. Every single phone call is him saying something innapropriate now and winding me up....

Last night he saw fit to comment that it "wasn't right" that we're not taking our teenage son with us. (Hes staying home with gran to play computer games all weekend - his idea of heaven. He had the option to come though). This is from the guy who advised my brother to put his daughter into care because "he hasn't got time to look after her with work and the like".

Then there's "so I'll see no-one the weekend, can't you just miss the end and come and see me sunday?" NO. "Can't you ring me?" NO

And then to top it all off, hes seen on TV that people take drugs at festivals. (Shocker there!) So I get a lecture off him. Jeez Im 51 years of age!!!! He gets really nasty and tells me I shouldn't be going to places like this....

(For the record, I don't do any drugs, apart from cider. Don't suppose you can count Imodium - same is USA? - you should see the toliets ewwww)
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Paul, are you familiar with the term "stream of consciousness"?

What you're hearing from your father is his stream of consciousness. He speaks out all of the loose ends and snippets and fleeting thoughts that pop into his head, without regard for their relevance or appropriateness.

This is not necessarily a sign of dementia or even just old age. You meet people who do this in all walks of life, and jolly annoying they are when you've asked a plain question and want a plain answer. E.g. "how long have you been married?" "He was going out with this other girl but her dog died and he fell out with her mum so he came round to our house, it was tea time, and Tom didn't like eggs - he's my brother - is it true they give you salmonella?" But you really do need to know how long this lady has been married so you can't swear at her or burst into tears or walk away, you have to bring her back to the question as swiftly and gently as you can. Think Vicky Pollard.

Your father is the Vicky Pollard of elderly Welsh gentlemen.

But. If this is getting steeply worse, it may be a symptom and you need to keep an eye on it. The other possibility is that your irritation is getting worse because you are now very sensitive to it, having had more than enough of it, and the man can't open his mouth without annoying the heck out of you. Or a bit of both, of course.

What you *don't* do is take what he says to you as a real statement conveying real meaning or intention, or not without triangulating it first anyway.
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CM - maybe you're right. Although his standard thing is "you know me if I've got something on my mind I've got to speak up".

Which is not right of course. Normal people only comment on things appropriately and when its their business.

Most of it is hes got away with it for so long he thinks he can do and say as he wants. Everyone jumps. Also, he uses being old as an excuse for everything.
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"Normal people only comment on things appropriately and when its their business."

REALLY?

Paragons of virtue, maybe. Normal people my eye.

This is what I mean about your developing an allergy to your father. Everyone else around you can be opinionated, bitchy, bossy, whiney, pompous, mean or whatever and that's just normal. Your father does it, and it gives you chest pains.
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CM - OK fair enough. Of course, others do it, My Dad manages to do it every single conversation I have with him.
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Well he would, wouldn't he? - if you've developed an allergy to him, any contact is going to be disproportionately irritating. It is him, in that he is the allergen; but it's mainly you - your reaction to the allergen. Or at least that's the only bit you can do anything about.
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Polar Bear.

It’s an aphorism, “Good news will wait. Bad news will find you soon enough.”

She meant, No need to worry in advance. Especially when there is nothing that can be done about made up problems or exasperating ole codgers.

Here is an example. I used to get annoyed with my mom for wanting me to call her to tell her I was home. No! I’m not doing that.
I covered a huge territory for my work. Driving and flying and a lot of time on the phone. I’m not calling everyone to say I’m fine. Just understand in advance please. I am fine and if I’m not....“Bad news will find you soon enough”. No disrespect meant to my mom. Just not going to give myself another job.

So, it’s an old saying that means ...yes, bad things happen but there is no need to worry, little to be done in advance and it all balances out so don’t fret about what you have no control over. And yes, life happens, but no need to rush it. ‘Cause “ bad news will find you soon enough”.
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