I take care of my 86 year old mother during the week. Goes to brother and SIL weekends. I wanted to take a bit more time at home, so I researched medical alert devices and in home caregivers. A friend has one for her 90 something year old parents and provided a referral (no covid so far, very careful).
I mentioned this to my mom and she seemed fine with it. I sent brother and SIL an email with the details. Here's the response I received:
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I talked with Mom...
The reason Mom stopped in home help was due to covid, and that hasn't changed for her. Mom is wary of being exposed. So Mom doesn't want in home help at this point.
Mom also doesn't think she needs a medical alert device, and she asked, "who pays for it?" Send me the info on what company, etc. you were considering so I can tell her about the cost, commitment, etc. I don't want cost to control over safety, so maybe I'll pay for it. The issue also is whether she'll wear it.
Mom says she doesn't want you to stick around because you think you need to double as her caretaker during the week. She gets anxious about leaving her house vacant half the time and would just rent it out and live with us. We'll see how this unfolds ... or doesn't.
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My first reading I was angry and wrote an ugly retort. I decided to sleep on it.
My mother didn't say a word to me about any of this, but she has my brother do it. She also has the money - but doesn't want to pay anything. This nonsense that he doesn't know her finances is a lie. I've seen proof.
I plan to just tell him (and my mother) that I will leave and not return (in a nonconfrontational way - mostly that I understand her fear, since my own home is vacant half the week. I am put off by this and feel unappreciated. Thoughts? We don't communicate but for my mother. He and my mother are very much alike. He does not have a relationship with his adult children or nieces and nephews.
I was so upset when receiving that email but chose not to respond to it. My husband did respond rather forcibly but kindly. Since then they have not repeated their nastiness but even acknowledged the work involved. They are for the most part missing in action.
if your brother wants to take care of your mom let him. He will soon be emailing you asking for support.
Rather than feeling put off or unappreciated, I would accept your mother's desire to move in with your brother as a gift. You're getting five days a week of your life back with the option of seeing your mother on your own terms.
* Consider your needs first.
* If they are 'two peas in a pod,' consider it a gift that she'll move in with him.
* Why would you want the responsibility of caring for her if she doesn't really want you to and/or prefers to live with him?
* Get attorney if you need to re end of (her) life, POA, where you stand.
* Try to get this in writing, notarized, all legal.
* Being clear isn't confrontational - I wonder why this concerns you? Speak your truth although know what you want before you engage in this conversation.
* If I were you, I would talk to your brother first to see where he stands, then talk to your mom, then have a three way conversation, or include a witness or attorney.
* Since you do not have much / any relationship with your brother aside from needs relating to your mother, I would get legal professional advice if you feel it is needed.
* LASTLY, enjoy your life. Do you know how many people 'wished' that they had a brother or family member who would take on this reponsibility? I do understand emotional attachments/hurts from the past. Still. You can visit when you want. Sounds like a gift has fallen in your lap, although this is very subjective, me looking in from the outside.
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Then once a week I would call mom and make a lunch date with her. You can pick something up and bring it to her house and have a mother daughter visit.
If during your once a week visits you notice things are falling apart and she starts declining, send your brother an email that you noticed X, Y and Z and thought he should know.
Sometimes the relationship between a mother and daughter can be strained. Mom is use to ruling the roost and all of the sudden daughter is in the hen house telling mom what to do and she doesn't like it. However, mom does take instruction from a male (your brother) quite well. Step back and let them have at it.
James.
Many caregivers are dealing with family who may be narcissists.
Inviting them to "tell you what to do" could be dangerous.
Caregivers need to refocus their relationship with the person they are caring for, and avoid getting caught up in serving their siblings. imo.
I agree, the OP could step back and let them have at it.
"I've decided not to take this personally. I've done a lot, and my best. Letting it go..."
GOOD decision!!! In the grand scheme of things, this will be better for you. As noted in my comment, stirring up the bee's nest will only bring more stings! It does help to "get it out", whether in a draft email or on paper, but once done, you should feel so much better to get that angst out! It worked for me! My anger wasn't hurting them, only me. I realized while writing these emails that anything I had to say wasn't going to change their attitudes or make anything better. It would likely just makes things worse, so got it out of my system and moved on! I'm the only one seeing to her finances and care in the facility. OB has had NO contact and YB.. no clue what he's doing!
"I am not sure if they will ever understand what I have done until they do it themselves."
In many cases this is so true. Everyone else knows best... Until they get an actual "taste" of the meal. You did mention they cared for the FIL, but his care and hers may not be on the same level. Of course, being a favorite might color her behavior, but you never know. Sometimes they lash out at whoever is the caregiver. My OB was sort of the "golden" child. Could be because he was first, could be because he didn't live close during college and after, so less contact. If she only was aware that after his last brief visit with her over 2.5 years ago he refused to go back, stating he "didn't know what to do with her"!
BOTH brothers, on learning how much MC costs (I was already aware it wasn't going to be cheap), pondered this, stating for that kind of money, they would take her in! I warned them that they really need to know what they might be taking on (she was in early dementia at that time - we were looking at facilities.) Personally, neither had a clue then or now and it would have been a disaster if either actually followed through with this idea!!!
So, let them do what they want. She moves in or stays in her place. He's "in charge", so let him be in charge. When they come crying for help, dab your eye and say nope, nothing there! I see that there is a "plan" to have you step in for OOT, but I would keep ANY assistance to the barest minimum. Sure, she's your mother, but you've already been "burned" once, why go back for more? If they need to be away in the future, let them hire someone to watch over/help her. YOU can be busy too!!! Enjoy your home, your own kids, grandkids and let them deal with this.
I LOVE your feedback!!!!!!!!
My mom's never been direct (i.e., honest) with me (or her other 2 kids) about anything. I was her primary caretaker for 5 full years, in her home. I had zero physical or emotional support from either my older or younger sibs; they wouldn't respond to any of my texts or e-mails during that time, except for the designated older one to let me know they thought I was being 'hysterical' during that time about mom's ever and rapidly escalating physical and mental deterioration ("she's doing fine! I saw her last Christmas and she looked good!"), and that I 'couldn't handle it'. After the first 2 911 responses (falls and broken bones, strokes), many 24 hr. ER hospital shit (for me) and following ambulances at midnight-2:30 a.m., they never knew about the next five.
I came to learn that my mom was communicating with my older (completely emotionally and physically) absent sister--then I got the exact type of e-mail from her that you did from your brother--all the voice of reason and authority. Pure, classic gaslighting. (That's when mom's dementia/Alzheimer's began to really rev up; it was COMPLETELY out of character for her to ever talk to any of her children, except for the happy/fun holidays and obligatory b.d. parties.)
I was VERY hurt and VERY angry, naturally, just like you--any healthy person would be! I'm 65 now, and have absorbed and accepted that I was an unintended player in a dysfunctional family. Thank the stars! Turns out, I'm the most psychologically well-adjusted of all of us : )
The same time that I moved in with my mom, I'd bought a nice house in a different state far away that I rented out on VRBO. I gave the two sibs and mom 30 days notice that I was moving there, no details or explanation (there never had been in our lives). No confrontation or drama. Mom flipped out that I was taking my cats whom she'd become especially fond of; my sisters hatched some half-baked plan in a flurry of businesslike research and activity (caregiving that fit the parameters of LTHC terms), fall alerts, pressure pads if she got out of bed at night, etc. They were going to now perfect the situation and make everything o.k.! It involved hiring a part time (4 hrs. a day/5 days a week) caretaker (using the LTHC policy that I'd set up 20 years earlier for her after dad died), and my sister's young adult kid spending nights at mom's house and saving rent expenses to buy a house.
Within a year, said kid left to live with her boyfriend. Despite my sibs' ongoing dramatics about me being 'too nervous to handle' spending 21 hours a day in my mom's house, they decided that maybe mom COULD be left alone overnight and for a few hours a day (mom's PC doc and her post-op PT looked me in the eye and said NEVER leave mom alone--and the sibs strictly imposing that mandate on me). Well, they never did get the fancy pressure pad, the baby monitor, any of the 'magic solution' stuff that'd make life easier (I'd already managed the installation of all things 'aging in place' for mom's physical safety, which they never knew about. The house is now less clean, no one makes mom do her balance exercises 5 days a week for 15-20 minutes, or sees to her emotional comfort/coddling.)
Bootsiesmom, I did it, and you can, too. I am at peace with myself and my conduct. Find your strength and confidence in your intuition. Do not be bullied! Love and support, 'Davenport' : )