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Are SIL and Bro/BIL able to enable him less?

Are they not able to work and get out from under him?
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BlueEyedGirl94 Jan 2022
Barb, I think the short answer is that they probably could but maybe won't because of the sense of indebtedness to this point. FIL had many years of childhood to condition both my SIL and my husband through physical, emotional and verbal abuse, and still to this day is verbally and emotionally abusive. I can't imagine what it is like to live with him. I think she preemptively does a lot of things just to avoid confrontation with him if that makes sense. To keep the peace.

As far as the rest, I'm not privy to a lot of the details so I really don't know the answer.

What we have basically all agreed to is this - if the other shoe drops and the worst case happens- AKA he cannot stay in that house and there is literally no choice but to send him to a SNF - meaning he can't physically get out of the bed to walk to the bathroom - which is all that he literally has left - the ability to get out of the bed and walk to the bathroom and back or the car and back for drs appts (he transports from the car via scooter and cannot walk more than about 30 feet with the walker) that they will have to find other accommodations - there will be no choice because the house will have to be sold for his care. Other than that we stay out of their arrangement right now.
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BEG, a couple things to consider.

If FIL becomes non ambulatory, he will need care beyond what AL will offer. Yes, some will take him and the cost will be astronomical and the care will be lacking, be on the watch for that. A needs assessment by an impartial third party will direct the level if actual care required. I don't trust a facility to do a needs assessment, they benefit financially from greater needs, just MHO.

Some states will allow the caregiver child to remain in the house after placement. There are rules and regulations about how this can be accomplished, have your SIL do the research or help her. This could help ease some of her stress with dealing with her abusive dad. Knowing what happens to life would be reassuring to me, so I imagine it would be for others.
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I have a PhD in clinical psychology but obviously I have never seen or assessed your father in law so my comments are generic. A narcissist will always believe they know better than anyone else. That includes family members, doctors and any experts. If he wants to engage on the phone with someone to show his superior intellect that is typical of a narcissist. I think you have to differentiate between him just being a frustrating man and true cognitive decline. Also keep in mind that sometimes a PCP just does a basic cognitive assessment to see if he is oriented to time, place and situation, not necessarily an in depth analysis of his thinking processes. Keep in mind the helper also needs to sometimes back away and not beat your head against the wall trying to change things you cannot change. You need to take care of your mental well being too.
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