Follow
Share

Whenever my father comes to my home, he finds something to criticize me for. Yesterday, it was my dog. He often says he too big and that I do not wlak him enough. He is suppose to be big because he is a large breed dog. Then he started asking about my dogs feet. He said it looked like something was on the back of his foot. I tried to explain that all dogs feet are made like that. I know this all sounds crazy. I do realize that as a person ages, their thinking changes but he has always been like this. He finds something to criticize me about. It is to the point that I get nervous when he pulls in the driveway. I'm tired of waking up in the morning with thoughts of what he has said on my mind. As stated in my original post, my childhood was not a happy one and I think I'm suffering from PTSD from it because I often have flashbacks of what he has said over the years which was demeaning things to me. Now, I'm the sole caregiver. I do not mind helping but it about to get more than I can handle as I stated previous. I have to take him to a doctors appointment tomorrow. I also have a job interview. I could have gone tomorrow which I would have liked to but we go to the doctor tomorrow. It would be nice to have someone to delegate tasks to. If I return to work full time, we have to have help.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
He should hang out with my mother, she is as critical as they come, has been that way all her life.

I no longer speak to her haven't for 13 years, she is toxic to me...I had a choice it was either her or me...I chose me.

He can hire a caretaker or move into AL, which is where my mother is, and she
loves it! Activities, new friends, bus trips and the doctor comes in to visit her!

I help my brother from behind the scenes, as we also have one in MC, I mainly deal with her, our step-mother, he mainly deals with my mother, poor guy!

Do what is best for you, I understand.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I find pointing out to them when they are being critical often shocks them because this is just how they speak and have no idea they are even being critical.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report
faithfulbeauty Jun 2023
He has done this my entire life and when I point it out, he says I'm too sensitive and he turn the situation to make it seem as if I'm the one being critical.
(2)
Report
See 2 more replies
I wouldn't give this guy the time of day.

Why are you doing ANYTHING for him?
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I wouldn't give this guy the time of day.

Why are you doing ANYTHING for him?
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

When a person is critical of you, you point it out, and they say YOU are too sensitive, that's a passive aggressive narcissism trait. Ugly as it gets. Check out this article which I found to be super helpful on the subject of recognizing these people, identifying them and coping with their hideous behavior:

https://lifelessons.co/personal-development/covertpassiveaggressivenarcissist/

Hopefully I didn't already share this link w you 😂 bc my memory isn't what it used to be.

I have found that ptsd is real from all this kind of abuse. It's none of your father's business what type of dog you have or how big he gets, either. A running dialogue of his opinions about YOUR life is not welcome. So how do you avoid That? You strictly limit your contact with the toxic human. You set the boundaries down, as explained to you in previous posts. This won't change. YOU have to tell HIM what you'll accept and what you won't, otherwise HE makes the rules.

Decide how much you'll do for him, what day a week you'll do it, etc, and then go about putting the plan in place. If dad doesn't like it, back away entirely and do nothing for him at all. It's a privilege what you're giving him, not an entitlement.

Good luck establishing your boundaries with the man.
Helpful Answer (12)
Report

dear OP,

your question is:
does anyone else deal with parents who often look for things to criticize?

yes.
OP,
there are about 4,875,914,709,173,057,401,298,039,182,038 million daughters, in the past and present, out there in your situation (most people who take care of elderly parents, abusive or not abusive, are women).

your father will never stop.
and you feeling anxious about future criticisms, is totally normal. and that won't stop either, because your father will never stop criticizing.

by the way, please choose a nice partner (husband).
women who were abused, often (unintentionally, unknowingly) choose husbands who are abusive. that's because you don't know what a good, non-abusive person looks and sounds like, and what actors sound like.

there is only 1 way OP, and that is less contact.
i personally don't recommend no contact, but that's up to every person. every abusive case is different.

in order to be able to have the freedom of less contact, you need to hire caregivers. i hope your father has money.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report
faithfulbeauty Jun 2023
Thank you for your reply.. My issues have landed me two failed marriages. One was abusive and the other was just a bad choice.
(2)
Report
I sometimes think that this behaviour becomes a habit that is not easily broken. Me, I may say "Dad, your not welcome here if all your going to do is criticize. You find fault with everything I do. Sorry, but I am tired of it. So, if you can't stop then stay home." If he says your too sensitive say "maybe I am, but now I am out of your house, I do not have to put up with it because your my father. I am an adult that can do what I want when and how I want"

You need to stick up for yourself. And please, do not move in with him or him with you. If he needs help because ur working, he pays for it or he goes into an AL if he can afford it. Make it clear you will not be caring for him. Also, make sure u set boundaries concerning work. No calls unless an emergency. I so hope he does not have keys to ur house. If he does, take them away or change the locks. Tell him what ur willing and not willing to do once your working. My one rule would be...no stopping over. He must call because after working all day u may not be in the mood for company. And he should not expect you weekends to be his.

YOU ARE IN CONTROL! 😊
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

When a person like your father is miserable to the core, they want everyone around them to be miserable too, so they find all kinds of things to "criticize" to hopefully ruin their day/life just like his is.
But guess what? You don't have to stick around and tolerate him anymore. That is your choice. Remember that. If you choose to stick around and tolerate his nonsense that is on you, and you have nothing to complain about as you made your choice.
So I hope that you will come to the realization that you deserve SO much better and that you owe your father nothing.....as in NOTHING!
And I hope that you will put yourself and your mental health before your undeserving father.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

I have to laugh. (Don't we all.).Big dog means...he's a big dog. 🐕
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Sorry you are dealing with this, I had a similar experience with my mom. Not that I am a clinician, but everything I read IMHO confirms my mom has strong narcissist personality traits. Others on this blog have suggested you may be dealing with a narcissist parent here too. Irrespective of any clinical diagnosis, this is indeed a pattern of verbal abuse. It is a parent of your father trying to shift his miserable attitude, outlook and experience with life on to you. If he can make you miserable, defensive, feel less than him; then he feels better. Putting you down -- via criticism -- is his way of making himself feel better, superior and in control.

Sadly, this pattern -- especially if a life long pattern from your childhood as it sounds -- will NOT change. No matter how much you say do not do it, be respectful when you speak, if you retaliate back with equally abusive responses -- such as saying "F***off" as some have suggested -- it will only likely get worse as he ages, looses more control with aging and becomes more bitter.

My mom went from general criticism to outright rage, lashing out at me every time I called or went to see her after being place in a nursing home. This behavior was since my childhood, got much worse as she aged and then it went full on rage when in the nursing home.

I am an only child, and was trying to do the one on one care for her in my house; and just having to enter her room in the morning to check on her would raise my blood pressure to the max as I knew instead of a "Good morning, lovely day" type comments it would be the beginning of another day of direct verbal assault at me: the coffee is cold, the eggs are runny (I had to make an bring her all her meal in her room); my TV shows are not one because of the terrible cable service you have in your house; my room is too hot because you are too cheap to run the air conditioning at the correct temp. (she lived expense free in my home, for years); my cloths are not folded properly, the bathroom is not clean enough, you are a terrible housekeeper (I had to do all her laundry and clean her room, bathroom, etc); stop mumbling I cannot hear you, you always mumble (she refused hearing aides and had 70%+ hearing loss in both ears). It was the same when I was a kid.

I finally choose to go no contact about two years ago. I still am her POA and medical agent, so I interact with the nursing home staff, her physicians, handle the Medicaid paperwork as needed, her taxes, etc. But after a particularly bad outburst, her saying on Mother's Day, "the worst day of her life was having me;" I had enough.

She is getting the care she needs and I am working on healing. You might wanted to consider working with a great therapist to unpack all of this and to work on your own healing. It is worth doing this work and focusing on you, your healing and moving forward as there is no changing them. You can only make changes in yourself; how you react to them/their outbursts of criticism. That might be less contact or no contact. It might be strategies to let it go as best you can if you choose to remain in contact. It might be telling them, no critical comments and they must be respectful if they do not moderate their behavior be prepared to walk away in the moment or tell them they have to leave your home then and there; say no visits for a week, then 2, then 4 (double it) if they do this, speak critically. If he can make any adjustment, you'll know then. If he says you are too sensitive, say that is verbal abuse and you need to leave now, open the door and show him out. Set your boundaries and be ready to enforce them.

Good luck w/this, hugs. This is how he has chosen to handle his frustration with life -- put it on you -- and now you have a choice to make as to what you want, what you will put up with or not and what you can do to heal.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report
bundleofjoy Jun 2023
❤️
(2)
Report
I wish I had someone like me years ago the way I am now. (LOL) I would have scheduled my job interview first and dealt with dad's antics and doctor's appointments later. It sounds like you are going to need an aide to come in and help with dad, and he pays the aide. Home care agency aides can drive the patient to the appointments, shop, help bath, laundry and light housekeeping.

You may want to lessen your duties to your parent because of your job duties. Don't have him calling you at work worrying you with a bunch of nonsense since you will be learning a new job. Your livelihood and your well being will become your first priority since you need to save for your retirement. Don't let someone else's poor retirement planning affect your well being.

As for the criticism, learn the grey rock method. Put as little input into the criticism and practice a technique called deliberate ignoring or learning to detach emotionally from these critical attacks. It is more about him and how he was raised. Don't take this personally.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report
MayMay123 Jun 2023
Gray rock is great. I’ve been doing that long before I knew it was a technique with a name. I’d also suggest answering negative comments with positives. Regarding how big the dog is, “Yes, dad I know Clifford is huge. Isn’t it great. We love how big and lovable he is.” and “The vet says Clifford’s paws are just right for him and he’s a very healthy, lovable big dog. He’s awesome.” Smile. Dad is sure to either continue to make negative comments or just be quiet because somewhere down inside he will realize you just kindly disagreed with him. Kindly disagreeing might just stump him into silence. 🤔🤷🏻‍♀️
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
Stop.
That is none of your business.
Knock it off or go home.
I am not going to put up with that.

It is okay to say what you mean without anger or hate. Sometimes everybody feels better when they know what the rules are.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report
bundleofjoy Jun 2023
unfortunately george,
"Stop.
That is none of your business.
Knock it off or go home.
I am not going to put up with that."

OP's father won't stop. He'll just continue criticizing. People like that don't stop. Sometimes it'll seem like you're in the middle of a nice conversation, and suddenly they'll inject an unexpected criticism, catching you off guard.

In other words, every single contact is a risk for criticism.
(6)
Report
See 2 more replies
This book was recommended to me, it’s enlightening on the “why” with poor parents: https://www.amazon.com/Adult-Children-Emotionally-Immature-Parents/dp/B01F2L1HLM/
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
MayMay123 Jun 2023
Thanks for link. I just went and purchased the kindle edition of the book you recommended. I’ve suspected for a long time that my parents were/are emotionally immature. One more than the other. It’s so difficult to be a happy, confident adult when around adults, parents who just aren’t able to be happy, confident adults.
(1)
Report
that's what they do....not all of them, but my parents are like that too...I just agree with them and keep going...My brother hasn't spoke with my parents in over 15 years and doesn't go see them for that reason...
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

I have the same issues with my mom who is in AL. She can’t hear, has severe mobility issues, dementia, and is always “negative Nelly” to my sister and I, and care staff. Whether it’s a phone call, Dr appointment or outing, she starts in. I have learned not to be as reactive and not answer her as much. I turn the music up in the car, and try to block out her criticisms and negativity, and change the subject. I sympathize with your anxiety and apprehension. Don’t take it personally, reorganize your priorities (aka you first) and limit his visits to your home. It’s ok to make excuses to say you aren’t available. Best of luck to you.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

Suggest you seek out a family therapist who can help you sort through your emotions and reactions.............sounds like you get caught up in a "Ground Hog" scenario with Dad's insecurities and mental health issues. If Dad was healthy, he would be able to separate you from his perspectives and graciously accept you for who you are and the choices you make. Love him, but don't sacrifice your mental health for his mental incapacity.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

We normally expect our parents to be wiser, matured, caring, loving, etc. However, just because someone gave us their DNA, it doesn't automatically make them better. Some parents are just bad, awful, and horrible people.

faithfulbeauty, from what you describe, you got a parent who is immature, petty, negative, critical and downright ugly. If you didn't share his DNA, would you even want to be his neighbor, much less his caregiver?

I totally agree with your plan, return to work full time, asap. Take care of yourself and guard your mental health from his destructive, tear-you-down, toxic mouth.

There are doctors who make house calls. Hopefully you live in an urban area where there are such doctors. Find one and sign your dad up. My mother's doctor would come to her place. When she needed blood tests, urine tests, etc., a nurse would come to draw blood, and take urine. Not everything could be done at home, but it cut down a lot of trips. Also, consolidate as much care under one doctor as possible, and drop unnecessary specialists.

I'd avoid your dad's presence as much as I can. Maybe, only talk to him by phone, or facetime. Don't give him anything to criticize.

Be strong. Good luck to you.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
Isthisrealyreal Jun 2023
Usually and unfortunately, just waking up breathing gives these people reasons to criticize us.
(3)
Report
See 1 more reply
My mom was super critical, yet very loving. She grew up the youngest in a large family of super critical people. She didn’t know any other way of life despite us kids repeatedly telling her that she was super critical. She could not recognize it in herself. She thought she was being loving and motherly. Finally, one day I used an approach I read about in an article and it worked. Every time she gave me her opinion, I replied: “Thank you for the advice. I will take that under consideration.” By saying this, I was acknowledging what she said, but not committing myself to anything. I was showing respect for her and for myself. If she went on and on about the same topic, I kept saying “Thank you for the advice. I will take it under consideration.” I did not justify or defend myself. She soon clued in that she would get that same response every single time. My mom’s critical statements dropped dramatically and we had a much more loving relationship after that.
Helpful Answer (12)
Report
southernwave Jun 2023
Lol. You I know what? About a month ago I started telling that to myself when I was trying to go to sleep and I’d start critiquing myself in my head or thinking of things I needed to do the next day. It does work!
(3)
Report
Hi Faithful Beauty,

I deeply empathize with you/r situation.
I won't go into my story alto it parallels yours - growing up with a father I feared.

* Do what you need to do for your own quality of life and quality of your mental and psychological health.

* If you are the only person who is legally (able to be) responsible for your dad, do continue to set boundaries as you need; see a therapist if you can as this could be a slippery slope / a tight rope walking situation / responsibility.

* YOU are the most important person in YOUR life.

* Your dad won't change and he will continue to (get 'worse') decline as his brain chemistry continues to change - and he will continue to lash out at you for any and everything as this is his M.O.

I sincerely appreciate you reaching out to us here. Feeling compassion for you alerts me to feel that compassion for myself, too. Fearing a parent as a child ... doesn't leave us as we age/grow up / become adults (altho we can heal with steadfast determination and action) ... it is further complicated for you as you are the person (legally) needing to be responsible for him.

"IF" it were my dad, I would likely need to - and hopefully be able to - put him in a 'box' or category of a human being needing support and care, and step out of seeing him as my father with all the emotional / psychological wounding/trauma that involves. It IS possible to do this - so you can function as you need to - for both of you. It is like putting a protective bubble of safety around you (imagery, visualization.)

Please do keep us updated as to how you are doing - and how you proceed.
I know you are not alone here - there are likely thousands of us understanding, through our own life experience, what you are going through. And we care.

Gena / Touch Matters
Helpful Answer (6)
Report
MayMay123 Jun 2023
A wonderful thoughtful answer helpful to all of us who have lived and are still living in the shadow of parental negativity.
(2)
Report
See 1 more reply
I did deal with this. Mother passed several years ago. I had a lifetime of it and she passed at 106 when I was 81. You have to learn to love and care for yourself first. Many of us brought up by critical parents have PTSD, I believe.

I was her caregiver but at a distance, worked in my job till I was 73, only visited her where she lived (5 hrs drive away) a few times a year. She had home help and then finally moved into facility care. I made it very clear to her that I could not do any hands on care.

Even seeing mother a few times a year for few hours and often having a friend with me, was very stressful.

As much as you can, get others to help him. Cut contact to a minimum. You don't need any more of that criticism and negativity. It's brought you down far enough. Time to put you and your needs first. ((((((hugs)))) you have a lot of healing to do. Put that as a priority. I have seen counsellors off and on all my life.
Helpful Answer (11)
Report

Faithful; Why do you allow this person into your home?

Does he invite himself? Arrange not to be there.

Does he just show up? Leave when he arrives.

Be as rude as you like; let go of the idea that you have to be polite.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
Beatty Jun 2023
Oh do I mislike *Drop ins*.

Well some are ok.. Good friends that pop in if nearby but if you are busy say so it's no worries, catch you another time. No stress.

The *Entitled Drop In* however, just pops in. When it suits THEM.
Do not listen that you are busy.
Do not care you had other plans.
Disregard your request to call before coming.
These people will only learn by strong boundaries.
(2)
Report
See 1 more reply
I had to set boundaries with my Mom too . She was coming over everyday .

If he has a key , change the locks so he’s not sitting at your home waiting for you to come home . ( Yes, my Mom waited for me ) 🙄.

Find excuses to prevent him from coming over to your home like : You won’t be home , you have to work, you have an appt. , running errands whatever.

You don’t know what time you will be home. MAYBE you will stop at his place if you have time.

IF you see him , do it at his place so you can cut it short , again an appt., errands etc. Try to cut down on visits. Have food delivered , meds, clothes . Almost anything can be delivered now.

Do seek help ( counseling ) for yourself.

Tell Dad he has to have hired help (using his money , not yours ) . If you want to attend a doctor’s visit , meet Dad there . This way you spend less time with him ( no picking him up and taking him home ) . My husband does this. AL drives his Dad and picks him up if he needs to go to a specialist , which we only do when he has a problem. He uses the PCP that comes to see him at the facility .

I believe you said he will be needing more help soon. Look into assisted living for Dad. Call your local Agency for Aging for a needs assessment . A social worker can assist with placement .

I’m sorry you are dealing with this. When Dad gets worse it may be easier to have him placed in a facility . If he ends up in the ER , ask to see the social worker about placement . Tell SW you can’t take care of Dad , don’t let them talk you into taking care of him. They can’t force you. You can walk away and leave him at the hospital. Then they will be forced to find placement . If Dad tells them he lives with you , tell them he does not. My mother used to lie so she could go home.

I hope you don’t have POA. You can go to an elder care lawyer to say you can no longer be POA, they will find a court appointed guardian .

All This is in your best interest and his. Dealing with your Dad will get worse , as he declines . He needs more help than you can provide. You need to take care of yourself . Let professionals take care of Dad .
Helpful Answer (6)
Report
faithfulbeauty Jun 2023
Thank you for your reply. He started an argument with me today... ON FATHER'S DAY! All I did was ask a question. Long story short, he said he needed to go the doctor this week. I asked why ( because it was not time for him to see his regular doctor). He said he has some questions about some medicine that was changed and I suggested he call them or I could call and he blew up at me. All I did was ask why he needed to go when we could just call. So when I got home, my chest was hurting from stress. Also, he has tools that will help him walk better and he will not use them.
(3)
Report
See 3 more replies
FB, here's the thing.

You need to say "no" to any and all requests.

Your dad is competent.

"No, I can't take you to the doctor".

Why?

"Because I won't be doing that any longer". And leave.

No more stressful conversations.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

FB, let me back up and explain. You and your dad are starting from different assumptions.

You assume that he is a reasonable person who, asking a favor from someone, realizes that he needs to explain what he needs and why.

Your father's assumption is different. He assumes that you are a servant whose job is to perform as ordered with no questions.

I don't think that's how you want to be viewed.

Do you think there is ANY chance that, if you explained to your dad in a calm moment that the way he treats you is disrespectful and demeaning and that you don't want to be treated like this any longer, that he would listen and try to change?

If yes, then give it a shot.

If not, then going no contact is your best path to mental health.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report
faithfulbeauty Jun 2023
Hi, Thank you for your reply. I have tried to talk to him many times but when I do, he turns it back on me and says I'm being too sensitive or I'm the one being disrespectful. The last time I tried to talk to him which was a few months ago, he never said a word.. no comment at all.
(2)
Report
"If I return to work full time, we have to have help".

There's your best plan right there.
Do it.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

I think Barb that the way you described how the assumptions differ is clear & easy to understand.

I think maybe a power imbalance has started here. Where Dad thinks he has the power to arrange the OP's time as it suits him, pop in when it suits him. Basically he's a King.

So some retraining needs to begin. That you are another ADULT. Not his servant. Add some new rules. State them. Warn of the outcome. Act on them & stay firm.

If you can think of specifics, I can give examples. I've been through this with the pop-ins, the endless appointments, the one day of the week chores that blow out over the week.

I'm well out the other side now 😃
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

"he said he needed to go the doctor this week. I asked why (because it was not time for him to see his regular doctor). He said he has some questions about some medicine that was changed and I suggested he call them or I could call and he blew up at me."

It seems to me he wants to handle it himself. He is competent. It is healthy for him to handle his own affairs, including doctors appointments.

He said he needs to go to the doctor this week. A possible answer is something like neutral like "Ok," and change the subject so you don't get involved in helping or upsetting him.

You are a nervous wreck according to your own account. It is better then to back off and let him do as much as he can for himself.

I know it is very hard when a parent is so critical and always had been. My only solution was to back away and let mother get home help which minimized the contact I had with her.

You might want to look up enmeshed and codependency. Melody Beattie is a good author re codependency.

When we grow up in a dysfunctional home we often become enmeshed with our parent(s) and develop codependency. This can be unlearned and new healthier ways learned. I wish you all the best in getting a job and a healthier relationship with your father and a less anxious stressed life.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

faithfulbeauty: You must establish boundaries with your father.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

It makes me sad to read you're still feeling and acting like the little girl who couldn't stand up to daddy. Your development to adulthood was probly stunted but it doesn't have to stay that way forever. Do you know that? I mean really really know that?
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

You wrote in another thread: " I wash and clean weekly, take him to all doctors appointments , get groceries , pay/ mail bills and etc. Now he is getting close to the point that he is going to have to have help all the time and I know I can not do it but I feel so sad when I think about Assisted Living."

You do a lot for your father. When you go back to work, something's going to have to give -- on the part of your father. He will either have to get help in the home, or go to Assisted Living (and YOU don't pay -- HE DOES).

Is he still mentally competent? Do you have POA/HCPOA? What is his financial situation?

Why do you feel sad when you think about AL?
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter