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Sometimes it's a matter of visibility and a desire to be in control. My mother spent one day a week at my grandparents house and half a day on Saturday for over a decade without a single word of complaint from my father. Then he retired... and that six hours or so one day a week became a really big issue. Dad didn't want to spend those six hours with Mom, he just wanted her to stay home and have a lunch prepared for him while he did whatever he wanted during the day. DH husband has had two surgeries... maybe his time home recouporating has left him feeling his life is a bit out of his control and he is seeking to exert control of his wife to compensate. BTW - Dad retired due to TIAs and although we didn't see many signs yet he was in early stages of vascular dementia when this behavior started.
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Anger often hides what it really is, fear. Is it possible that your husband is just afraid because he sees you taking care of a feeble old man and now you are taking care of him, so in his eyes he's becoming the same kind of burden? The description of how you live- even your username- implies a lifestyle that is about outdoor activity- a ranch? That has got to be a lot of work your husband probably devoted himself to for much of his life. Men like that tend to take pride in their physical abilities to take care of their family. Take that away from them and it can be psychologically devastating.

Perhaps removing the visual reminder (i.e. dad) of what he thinks will happen or is happening to him makes him feel less fearful, like the same fate isn't awaiting him. Went through something similar with my husband when his cancer returned... he didn't say anything until I asked him outright about what I thought was causing his mood shifts, and I was right. We got past it and life went back to normal.

Talk to your husband. Listen.
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You don't mention what your husband does to occupy his time, but one thing that struck me was you take dad 2x weekly to bingo and 1x weekly for shopping and then throw in dr appts and whatnot, then you say you make sure and have an occasional date day or night for your husband. Can you not see how you prioritize your dads needs over your husband's? Of course he is resentful, if it was reversed you would be here telling us that your husband puts him mom 1st and can't understand why you don't want her dropping in whenever she wants.

I bet your husband would stop being resentful if you made him your #1 and set boundaries for dad to not just pop in when he feels like it.

It is a balancing act and I bet you didn't cover this contingency when you were getting agreement or you may not have received it. This particular journey is full of the unknown.
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Redpondranch - IF you are GENUINELY interested in solving the problem with your husband, then you need to stop thinking that your husband is the problem, and that he is the bad guy. He was agreeable enough and generous enough to have your father move in. Now, he no longer is.

Have you asked him why he no longer wants your father in his home? And really listened to his answers? I bet not.

Your first step, stop making your husband out to be the bad guy.

Second, ask your husband (with an open mind and without hostility) what the problems he is having with the current living situation.

Third, you two as a team should work to resolve them to everyone's satisfaction.
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Perhaps carefully and lovingly remind him that if he is so blessed he will get old and need help one day.

The negative we give out will come back to us whether we like it not. The universe doesn't forget.

We need to honor old people and remember the many times they did us a favor. Our turn now if we are to expect good treatment when we will need it.

And if he stresses you out now since you are caregiver and wife (same thing caregiver to him as well) he will be without you when its his turn. There are many women in memory care. When the husbands show up to visit it sometimes gives you pause.

Just remember to take time for yourself. Have a paid in home health care giver come in once per week and you go out for at least four hours to do as you please.
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This touches a lot of bases for me.

1) My parents asked my grandfather to come from England to live with them in Australia, after he was left on his own. My father didn’t get on with him (he wouldn’t hand over all his savings), insisted that he leave, and it broke up my parents’ marriage. It’s a real risk for you to think about..
2) All of us make decisions based on one set of facts or assumptions, and find that they don’t work out as expected. Taking a degree and finding that there are no jobs, having your partner walk out on you – just a couple of common scenarios, but there are many others. Add to that, people can simply change their minds. Did you both factor in that your mother could die, your father would be lonely and want to spend more time with you? Did you think about what could go wrong with the daughter’s family being part of the ‘family compound’? What flexibility did you build into your plans for things working out differently?
3) Years ago I did a survey for a text about working while breastfeeding. I puzzled about why married women said they couldn’t have coped without their supportive husbands, while single mothers seemed to have coped OK. I finally realised that what you can’t cope with is an Unsupportive husband. In one house, you need to keep it together.
4) In terms of coping with unexpected trials, I can tell you from experience that having your house burn down in a bushfire is in there big time.

It would help if you could stop being ‘enraged’ and work out how to cope with circumstances that none of you expected. You and your husband are both unhappy. Please remember that not every aged care facility is plagued with ‘nightmare stories’. One step you could take is to do more research for options that might work. The problems are clearly very distressing for you, and yes you have my sympathy. But tie a knot and move on.
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Alot of good responses here OP. I hope you read them carefully.

I am sure your husband and daughter wanted to make you happy and agreed to have your parents move to the compound. I am sure they figured it would easier on you that way. However you did in fact TELL them you were doing this, not asking them. Most people don't realize what they are getting into caring for an elder. I am sure they did not in vision it being a 24/7/365 commitment.

After my mom died my father would often show up at my house and just let himself in. He saw no problem with that. My husband was flaming mad. Often he would be cooking in the kitchen and turn around to find my father standing there. Telling my father that he needs to ring the doorbell and wait for us to let him in did not go over well. He still would just walk in. We had to start using the deadbolt.

Have you actually sat your husband down and asked him why the hostility towards your father? You are condemning him before having all the facts.

It is great that you do set aside time for your husband but at this point it just might not be enough. He needs to be your priority not your father. You say that after the way he has acted you might not want him around after your father passes. Are you sure he will still be there? He wants to have a life with you, not just scheduled weekends here and there.

Another poster mentioned that having someone live nearby is not the same as having this person involved in your day to day life. It could be too much for your husband.

You said your husband considered your father his best friend before all of this. That was before he had to complete with your father for your attention.

You need to sit everyone down and have a real talk. Everyone in this situation needs to compromise a bit...you, husband and dad.
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Why can't you combine hubby and dad outings? Then hubby will feel included and remember - he DID agree to dad moving there.
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Cutede, you can say that now because you're not face with this situation when u get marry your spouse is your priority and not your parents and caring for an elderly parent is very difficult and for your husband is have all right to feel the way he dose your husband should be your first priority and it will get to a point everyone will resent each other so start looking for a assistant living it will be best for you and your family I think you're bein selfish because you made the decision to care for your parents everyone must be ok with it the did at first because you told them you are not putting them in a home so they had no choice but to say ok but I can tell you it's not ok we don't owe it to our parents when they get old to take care them some of us doit because it's out parents and we love them believe me it takes a toll on you I've been there almost lost my mind and now I'm in the same situation for three years with my husband mother and it is getting overwhelmed for both of us so I had to have a talk with my husband about having his brother come ever other weekend so we can get a break and I discusse with my husband if it get wrost she will have to go in a home she is 85 and can do for her self but my husband do everything for her and I told him let her help her self bc she's going to loose her mobility so u have to think about your self and husband good luck
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Yes you told them so they didn't had no choice but to say ok and I bet they didn't had a clue what caring for elderly is really about it's 24/7 7 days a week and no one should have to do that or put that responsibility on they spouse and children at all it's not healthy for anyone that's why the have places for people when the can't care for them self
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My DH and I spent a little while discussing this, and our own separate experiences of being interested in communes in the heady days when we were young. I was asked to do a legal agreement for a friend who was part of setting up a commune in south Wales. It was seriously difficult, particularly providing for members selling out and being replaced. DH came to the conclusion that the lead member (now a criminal Judge) of his plan was likely to be a bit tricky to live with under the same roof, and eventually the whole thing fell through. Communes seem to work best for young people without much money and at the same point in life. I once saw a cartoon of a manic spiral eyed woman entitled ‘refugee from an open marriage’, and it applies pretty well to refugees from communes too.

Problems with daughter’s family are just as likely as the problem that has actually happened. People change.
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A talk with your husband might determine if it is the circumstances of taking care of your father or something personal in your relationship that is causing the discord.
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