Follow
Share

My husband is working in overseas and his work schedule is 20days work and 10days off every month. Our house is three hours flight away from his parents’ home. His two siblings are living nearby to his parent but none of them are hands on helping with their parents. My husband always fly back to his house to be with his parents and also wants me to live with my in-laws so he can meet me 10days every month. For me, I cannot waste my live taking care of bed ridden father in law, cleaning him and dressing his pressure sore. His younger sister always send her 2 year old daughter to me to babysit the child while she is working in an office. I am stay at home wife and we have no children. I told him I cannot serve his whole family as a slave while everyone of his family are taking advantage of me. He said he and I are a team and I should contribute to his difficult situation. I told him cooking three meals a day plus taking care of 2 year old (not my child) plus helping with bed ridden patient is not my life. We became distance and also not meeting very often due to his house situation. I think he has been very selfish. I do not want to give in to his request because I will have no life at all. I still love him but I want him to think about my side as well.

His Dad needs a Wound Care Specialist (generally a Registered Nurse) to regularly come to the house to treat the pressure sore. His Dad's PCP can prescribe this.

I'd consider getting a job. It will give you a reason not to care for FIL and also get you some extra cash and if your marriage does not work it will be an income stream for you.
Helpful Answer (6)
Reply to brandee
Report

This is a discussion he should be having with his siblings! PERIOD! They have a responsibility to their parents, not you! They are closer and yet they want nothing to do with them? That's their problem! Husband and siblings should place the parents near the siblings so they can be on hand if something should arise. Obviously, they don't understand the duties of being a caregiver and especially for someone who is bedridden. I'd be like, who's POA and who's in the will? Those are the responsible parties! Is what I'm reading correct, he wants you to move in and leave your home? Three hours flight to his parents? Who's going to maintain your place and the bills? This is disturbing, best to sit on the sidelines and let them work it out for themselves. Your hands are tied and you're under enough pressure with an insincere man.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to JuliaH
Report

Did you laugh hilariously at your husband's suggestion for at least an hour?

You may want to start a separate bank account at another bank. I have a feeling that you may need it in the future.
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to olddude
Report

Stay strong and continue to refuse these unreasonable, excessive demands. You’re a wife, not a servant.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to JeanLouise
Report

You are right, you cannot possibly take care of a bedridden man. #1, I would not be caring for a man other than my husband. And if I was, no SILwould be leaving off a 2 yr old dpfor me to care for.

Tell DH that your are not trained to do this kind of care. His father needs to be placed where professionals can care for him. At least bring Hospice in. They will send a nurse to care for that bedsore. My daughter is a woundcare nurse and that sore needs to be looked after by a professional or an infection will set in and then sepsis.

I would find a job to protect yourself.
Helpful Answer (6)
Reply to JoAnn29
Report
JuliaH Sep 26, 2024
Yes,hospice really did a great job with my mothers sores on her heels. They were very black and she got her heel pillows and treated them with medicated lotion and they came back! They know their stuff!!
(1)
Report
You still love him? I can't imagine why.
You are an adult. Your life decisions are yours to make.
You have some choices to make.
I myself would have long ago been gone, alone with 1/2 the assets of the marriage. But you may wish, rather, to stay as you are.

Remember, nothing here will change. Certainly not your hubby. He's perfectly happy and why wouldn't he be?
So it's "the ball in your court" as we say in tennis.
I leave you to your decisions and wish you the very best of luck.
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to AlvaDeer
Report

See a divorce lawyer. The first consultation is usually free. You need to know your rights under the law in the country where you live. You may be entitled to more marital assets than you think, and that would be a good thing to know. Even if you don’t wish to divorce (yet), a lawyer could lead you and husband to mediation where he could realize what he’s doing to your marriage.

Do you ever visit him where he works? A surprise visit might provide some interesting info.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Fawnby
Report

As is often on here, your issue is more a marriage issue than anything else.
Your husband is choosing to put his career, and parents before you and your marriage, and that my dear should be as concerning to you as it is to me.
I am sorry that your husband doesn't put you or your marriage first, and I can only guess that he probably never has and that you have tolerated it for far too long and now it's finally coming to a head.
So....it's only you that can decide what if any changes need to be made to improve your situation. And yes, that may include separating and even divorcing.
Hopefully your husband would be open to some marriage counseling before it had to come to that, but if not, you now must do what you feel is best to keep from being used and abused from your husband and his family.
You deserve better....don't forget that. And you are stronger than you know, and will be just fine if you have to start over and reclaim the one life you have to live.
God bless you.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to funkygrandma59
Report

Have you thought about getting a job so you are not available to be his parent’s caregiver ?
You will also want a job in case this marriage falls apart .

This is not a team . It’s a family who have put you in servitude .

Your husband also said you “ should contribute to his difficult situation “. This is not his situation . It’s his parents situation where other options need to be considered that do not include you .
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to waytomisery
Report
notgoodenough Sep 26, 2024
It's not only not a team, it's not a marriage!

That you refer to his parents' house as "his house" rather than the one you live in is very telling. If 30 days out of the month you are not together, what sort of marriage can you possibly have? For myself, this would be a deal-breaker.

It may be time to consider that each of you wants more than the other can give and end this relationship so you can both find someone else more in tune with your individual needs.
(3)
Report
See 1 more reply
His elderly parents need in house care at a facility. You can't do this. Bedsores require professional care. He needs to set up a care team himself for his elderly parents, and you are not it, my dear.

Work on getting full time employment including job training if need be to get your independence back. Being a traditional wife in this day and time is risky. Many women have found themselves divorced with no assets.

Stop putting people ahead your independence and well being. Your husband may not like it at first, but he will grow to respect you in the long run.

There are doctors, nurses, aides and other staff who are paid to do this type of thing.
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to Scampie1
Report

Family helps family, yes?
Try family helps family *within reasonable limits*.

Reasonable limits must be in place to protect against abuse of good will, free time & free labour. Without damage to wellbeing, without damage financially, within ability + scope of training.

Caregiving is a freely given GIFT, or resentment will build.

I would ask your Husband to really look hard at his request.

Some conversation points in case he is stuck;

#1. Why YOU?
Why is he wanting YOU to provide this care? Why not hire an aide, a wound care nurse, other home help?

#2. Team player.
He wants you to be a team player...? It appears he is acting as Team Captain & ordering what position you play.

Separate people.
A Wife's hands are not an extention of a Husband's body.

The Good Son.
Many fall into this line of thinking. I must be & appear to be 'The Good Son' & somehow they add on 'by providing the care myself' then add again 'spouse will do the dirty work.

See if any of that gets him thinking. If not..

No. That's it. No excuses. Just NO.

If I stooped to ranting, it may go like this..
Get over yourself man. Stop being such a Solo Hero & get a proper care team for your folks. Starting with a wound care nurse for that bedsore.
Helpful Answer (11)
Reply to Beatty
Report

This is all about as wrong a situation as could be. Dealing with a bedsore requires many levels of care. Do you have narcotics to even help you treat him? I have great knowledge about this as my mother suffered from this. Are you aware of the stages of bedsores which are diagnosed by experts?

He needs to be placed under hospice care. You two are not a team. You are the team and his attempt to reason with you is completely lame not to mention taking care of a two year old who is not your own child.

Stand up for yourself. His bedsore needs to be seen by specialists in that field. There are about 5 stages of a bedsores
Do you even know which stage he is in? If he could be hospitalized you could then tell the hospital he is an unsafe discharge and you are not equipped to treat this condition and ask to seek hospice for him.

Your husband is browbeating you especially since he is away a good deal of the time. You have to give the ultimatum that you cannot continue as is. You are completely being put in a position of servitude.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Riverdale
Report

It’s obvious that your H is torn two ways – between you and his parents. He wants you to make the changes, so that he can have it all. Problem is, he wins, parents win, his siblings win, you lose. If H put you first, he would come to YOU for his 10 days off, not go to his parents. His two siblings aren’t doing any or much care, and his sibling sister is using you as a free child care center. You are indeed his family’s slave. No-one in his family is on his family’s ‘team’. You and H don’t add up to a ‘team’. At present you scarcely make a couple, let alone a team.

You ‘still’ love him, but the ‘still’ shows that it’s becoming more a thing of the past. Make it clear that you are not going to live with his parents. Perhaps call APS to visit his parents, to see if their current care (including for the bedsore) is adequate. Don’t get sucked into propping up his and their delusions of independence. Think about what is in your best interests NOW – perhaps a nice holiday for 20 days! Perhaps you visiting H on his OS posting would be a good way for you both to get closer. Getting a part-time job yourself could be a good move, if only to say that you can't move away. Find ways to put yourself first. At present you are seen as having lots of 'free time' for other people to make demands on. Until you focus more on yourself, you won’t see what’s really happening to your life, or what will work best in YOUR interests rather than theirs.
Helpful Answer (6)
Reply to MargaretMcKen
Report

I’m glad you’re standing up for yourself. Please don’t take on the care of a bedridden person with a bedsore, it’s too involved. He needs professional care or the bedsore will likely lead to his death. Your husband’s parents are in over their heads trying to live on their own and expecting family to prop them up. This doesn’t make it your responsibility. If your husband won’t support you in this, you may need to find employment soon, just something to consider. This is a marriage problem more than a caregiving issue
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to Daughterof1930
Report

Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter