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I see by your profile you are Asian born living in Asia. I agree with most of the posters here in saying that your mother is far too young to "give it all up and depend on others" and that your decision to have children is solely between you and your new husband (be aware that children, even when highly desired and welcomed, do change the dynamics of the relationship between husband and wife so you may want to wait on children and develop your relationship further but .... that is your choice).
Having traveled in Asia and having many Asian friends I just want to remind you that you are going to be swimming upstream against several thousand years of cultural history which has dictated that children will always "take care" of their elders and give them the great gift of grandchildren to carry on the line. That's not my opinion at all but you need to realize that you will be doing something out of the ordinary if you don't follow the traditionally proscribed program. Do I think you should do something different by not supporting your very young and very entitled Mom and having children only when and if you and your husband wish? Heck yeah!
But Mom is going to be the anchor on your ship and will put up a heck of a fight to get you to do it her way. As long as you and your sibling continue to support her and countenance her actions, she will have no reason to change and she will not. If you want her to change and let you live your life, you are going to have to be strong in your decisions and actions and steel yourself to comments from Mom and others. In other words..... you cannot continue to enable her and expect to live your own life on your own terms.
Whatever you decide, I wish you good luck and happiness.
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There is some great advice here and I would suggest you take them to heart. When I was in my early 20's my mother started the campaign for me to have children. Since I was in college, single and had no money and was still 2 years from graduation I could not even think about marrying or having children. The straw that broke the camel's back was when she said "I need decent grandchildren". That's when I knew I had to do something, after some very harsh words (No profanity) and a general accounting of where I stood financially. I ended with. " My future children are not your business, stop asking me to have children because I'm not ever having children just to please you".

Oddly enough I have a nephew who got married 5 years ago, my mother made his wife a baby blanket about 3 weeks after they got married they still haven't had a baby and that blanket is in a shipping box at my mom's place.

I'm 58 and I still never want children.
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BurntCaregiver Jun 2022
Jhalldenton,

Wow. Just wow with your mother. Unbelievable. Maybe she should have been better at raising her own kids. That way she wouldn't be demanding they make babies to give her another crack at it. SMH...
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You seem to already be stepping into the role of caregiver. STOP NOW! Stop enabling your mother and start living your best life. Travel with your husband and explore life, then think about kids in a few years. Your mother made her choices, and at 52, she is still very young and has more decisions to make. One of them is to stand on her own two feet. Now that you are married, your focus is to your husband and your life with him. I'm not saying turn your back on your mother. I'm saying stop letting the enabling happen and take charge of your life. It's time! Have a sit-down with Mom and tell her you love her and want the best for her, but she will have to start helping herself and start planning for HER own future. I know you may feel that is impossible to do but it IS NOT. Support your Mom in every way you can without sacrificing your freedom and new married life which is filled with endless possibilities. I strongly urge you to find a therapist to help you navigate this process if you feel you cannot do it alone.
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Do you want children? My husband and I did, we couldn’t afford them but when they arrived we made it work. If you don’t want children then don’t have them. Mum has no say in the matter.
I’m 55 I’m an admin assistant which pays the bills (just). my eldest has a good job, my second child has a summer job (and is making decisions about life) and my third is in university. I do not expect them to pay my way in life. People do have the expectation that children will take care of aged parents but considering the age of retirement is 65, means your Mum is not yet aged, (and caring for a parent does not mean being in the thick of things).
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May I ask you a question? Now please don't get offended or think I'm being harsh because that's certainly not my intention.

Are you crazy? Seriously, are you unwell mentally?

You do not have to financially support your mother and provide her with a place to live. Neither does your sibling.
If at 52 years old she has never reached the level of adulthood necessary to provide for herself without being dependent on her kids, then she is mentally disabled in some way. Help her to apply for disability benefits. It is extremely unlikely she will be able to find employment that she can provide for herself with. Not if she has had a lifetime of depending on others.
As for you having kids. Do you want to have kids? You're 26 years old and have plenty of time to decide that.
Some people don't want to have kids and no one has to explain their reasoning. I married young to my first husband (18 years old). We were married 11 years. No kids. I married my second husband in my 30's. He was a widower with one child. We were married 10 years, got divorced and are back together now. We didn't have ant kids together, but I adopted his son and he is my son.
It's okay to not want kids, but don't anticipate that you will be a parent like your mother was and is. You seem to have your act together. She did not.
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Do not base your decision to have children based on your mother’s Needs and be bound to her welfare by sacrificing your life. Two separate lives, live yours and pursue your happiness. If it is a family or a life of achievements or a combination of both.
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venting Jun 2022
Right!!
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Your mom still has twenty years plus that she could work and prepare for retirement. DO NOT GIVE UP YOUR DREAMS!

Mom needs to be told NO MORE!

I see you are from SE Asia.where caring for parents is a cultural more.

Did your mom care and support her parents? Did you grow up in a multi-generational household?
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never have kids unless you really, really ant them!!! In addition to the wisdom already posted, think how much they cost now to give them a decent life and a good education. And by the way, how does your husband feel? Would he really help enough with the kids and/or your mother? You have to think of you first, your marriage second, and then mom.
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No not wise. Let your mother take care of herself financially. If she does not have enough money there are many social programs like welfare and Medicaid.
you can certainly help out but play the system. She may need a reality check.
your well-being and happiness comes first you have your whole life ahead of you.
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HI, Kimino:

Age 52 is middle-aged and too young to not work. Are any jobs like processing at a Goodwill center available? Like some other readers have said, your mother needs job counseling to get motivated and earn her own way. I don't want to pry too much, but how did your father and mother support you when you were a dependent child? Your husband and yourself make your own mature decisions, not from your mother's.
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What does Kimono want?

If you're not bothered by the idea of never having children, there's no shame in deciding not to have them. Plenty of us are doing that. I did that. Never wanted them, never had them, perfectly happy with that choice.

But if you and your husband, in your heart of hearts, long to be parents, then please do not deprive yourself of that joy. Certainly not for the reasons you're giving.
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Your mother doesn't get to rule your life -- not with her dependency on you, nor with your desire to have children or not. YOU and your husband and in control of both those choices.

Until you make the choice to put your new family first, your mom will continue to call the shots. That's not on her, though -- you've left that door wide open, and she's walked through it.
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At age 52 I was working PT AND helping to care for my sudden burgeoning onslaught of grandchildren (13 in 7 years!!)...and if someone had called me elderly I would have been deeply offended.

At 52 my mom was basically bedridden with numerous sketchy ailments, all related, as she stated to 'you kids'. Actually, looking back, she had agoraphobia and wouldn't leave the house for months and months. Wouldn't even go outside. Until I read a previous post by someone who mentioned THEIR mother's agoraphobia, she was just non-existent in our lives.

Your choice to have or not have children is you and your husband's choice. Not mom's. Sounds like a good frank discussions about boundaries is in order.

One of my 4 daughters has chosen to remain childless. This does not affect me AT ALL as she is being true to herself and her lack of any desire to be a mom. She is a loving and delightful person and I actually enjoy that one of my girls is 'free' to talk to me without interruptions and who can be a true and wonderful friend. BUT, I also adore the 14 little weasels that my other girls and DIL have had.

NONE of our kids mooch off of us. (I see enough of that in my DIL's family to turn my stomach!) It's not healthy and it never seems to work out well.

You may think 52 is old. My mom turned 92 on Friday and she said her doc says she'll live to 100. I bet she does. That's 40 more years of this...is that what you want??
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I am a bit taken back that a 52 year old is being called an aging parent.

Your mom isn't aged, sorry 52 is WAAAAYYYYY to young to sit back and demand your daughters finance your laziness.

Unless you are willing to only have part of a life for your mooching momma then you should stop financially supporting her. She needs to get off her lazy duff and get a job, it's not a dirty word.

You and your sister are disabling her by stepping in and providing everything for her. She has no reason to do anything differently, she has no needs. You will be amazed at what she can do if it means homelessness or hunger.

People like your mom turn my stomach.
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I think it's important to keep in mind that kimino and her family are from Southeast Asia. Expectations are very different there, although they are beginning to yield somewhat to present-day realities. If you want an eye-opener, watch the 2002 documentary "Daughter from Danang" about a girl born to a Vietnamese mother and American soldier father during the Viet Nam war and given up for adoption to an American family. When she went to Vietnam to meet her mother's family as an adult, they immediately expected her to send them money, bring the mother and other family to the US to live, and start picking up her share of the "filial obligation" for her mother's support, even though all these people were total strangers to her.

My point is that the mother's behavior may be reflective of the expectations within her culture and may not be unacceptable there as it would be here. Should the OP (and her sister) cease to support their mother financially, that may be deemed unacceptable in their community. We can't really judge the situation by our standards, I don't think. I'd be interested in what kimino has to say about how the situation is viewed within her own culture.
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polarbear Jun 2022
I watched that same documentary years ago. Very interesting.
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The logic behind your mother's attitude? She's a user. She's lazy and expects others to finance her life while she does absolutely nothing herself to earn a dime. She's horribly entitled and demanding you to give up your life and financial security for her.

No decent parent would EVER demand such a thing.

You are thinking 10000 times about what to do, knowing in your heart what you WANT to do, and that your mother is WAY out of line and being unreasonable with her demands.

If it were me, I'd tell her mom I love you, but I'm not going to finance your old age. Period. Figure it out now, marry some poor slob who will support you, get a job, whatever, but I'm hereby freeing myself up to live MY LIFE ON MY TERMS. Then proceed to do so, without guilt. Have children if YOU want to, and enjoy your life.

Parents should never have children to force them into caretaking and financial exploitation for life, for petesake! Our job is to love them and raise them to be loving and productive members of society. That's all.

Best of luck to you
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Regarding the decision to have or not have children, that should be based on your and your husband's wishes for a family or to remain childless. Your mother should not influence it, and it certainly shouldn't be affected by her desire to continue to be supported.

I understand you are not in a Western country. Is this type of arrangement common or acceptable in your homeland? It would be very rare in the US or Europe for able-bodies, middle-aged adults to expect to be supported financially by their children. Also, does your sister have the same reservations you have, or is she content to go on supporting your mother for the rest of her life?

If I were you, I would give Mom a deadline to become self-supporting, and help her look for/apply for jobs that she would qualify for. It would help to be able to present a united front with your sister so the whole burden would not fall on her if your mother balks, and she would not become resentful towards you or feel you were shirking your share of the responsibility.

How about 6 months? A year? Short enough that she'll know the cut-off date is approaching, but long enough to give her a fighting chance to succeed. Can she work in an office? A factory? Can she cook? Wait tables? Work in a shop as a saleswoman or cashier? We all figure out how to do things we don't know how to do. We all cope with situations that are unfamiliar to us. When she tells you she doesn't know what she would do, remind her that she has to do something and she needs to figure it out. If she has to do it, she will. That's my advice, anyway, for what it's worth.

Wishing you all the luck in your future and your decision!
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I am 52 years old and my son just turned 26! On his birthday I reminded him that I had him exactly at the same age! LOL He mumbled something about his girlfriend wanting to wait until she's 30... anyway...

Unless your mom has some medical issues or something, my opinion is that you need to set some boundaries with her NOW. And by the way, we are all "aging" but 52 is not exacting "aging" as in on this forum. Why is she so dependent on you and your sister? Why didn't she plan for her retirement (for which she is still too young for)? Why isn't she working? Her lack of financial responsibility is not YOUR responsibility.

As I said, unless she has a medical issue, that would get old really fast and I would distance myself from all that. Maybe point her toward some resources, but it sounds like she is way overstepping her boundaries.

Sorry, this post is a little hard for me to believe, but if it is real, I would cut mom off and focus on your own life.
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You need to make some decisions about your life and plan accordingly.

It was not mentioned if your mother is ill or disabled but 52 is way too young to be so dependent on you and your sister. She needs to work or apply for assistance if she is eligible.

Having children is up to your and your husband not your mother.
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You said earlier that “thinking about this 1000 times, I still can find the logic behind her attitude”. The logic is obvious – she hasn’t had to do this for a long time, feels nervous, and has no incentive to make any changes while you and your sister support her. Of course you understand this, it’s in your face.

In many countries, Covid has resulted in labor shortages, and it’s fairly easy to get a job. If your mother’s little ‘pavement’ shop wasn’t successful 30 years ago, it might be better for her to look for a job. ‘Checkout chick’ might be well within her abilities, even if she feels happier getting you to support her.

The ‘culture appropriate’ suggestions about her providing child care for you – they are well meaning, but be careful. It would involve her moving countries, losing all her friends and the things she is used to, and becoming totally dependent on you for almost everything. The forum experience is usually that it’s a nightmare. It’s a very different thing from the restaurant owners who had years of living on the spot.
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kimino - I am sorry your mother is a leech. It sucks (literally) the life out of you.

You are wise to think ahead about the stress and responsibility of having children. It is a lot of stress, at least for the first couple of years. But also a lot of joy.

If mom is able and willing to help you with taking care of your future children while you work, it might work. She's young and hopefully healthy. Let her do something useful for once.

Not having children is just fine, too, if that's what you want. Again, you're wise to think ahead. I wish most people were like you.
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We have a Chinese family that had a restaurant her for years. The Mother and father ran it. The children grew up and married. The children took over the restaurant when they had children and the mother watched her grandkids. I think they all live in one house. I heard this is how it is in China.

Your Mom is not in age decline. She just likes being supported. In the US our 50s are when the kids are on their own and we can now take the money we make from our jobs and spend it on us. I think all 3 of you could do with some therapy. Your Mom needs to understand that it is not up to her children to care for her financially. Even living with your sister, she needs to support herself. Mom needs to get a job. Anything at this point. I then would look and see if she qualifies for low income housing. What resources are out there for her. I would tell her she is unfair to you and sister. That you both are entitled to lives of your own and should be putting money aside to buy homes and to be able to afford children. For your future. She is very much able to care for herself and she should be doing it.

Here in the US we have Social Security that we pay into when we work. When we retire at about 67, we then can draw from this fund but what we receive depends on how much we worked. And because we paid into SS at 65 we qualify for government Health insurance. Do you have something like this?
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kimino Jun 2022
Hello! Thank you for your advice.
Unfortunately my mom hasn't been working since 30 years ago if I'm not mistaken. So she doesn't have anything similar to retirement pension or else so she is fully dependent to her children :(
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Your question's answer is your own choice for your own life. Do you wish to HAVE a life or will you instead lay it on the altar of your Mother's poor choices?
I suggest counseling so that you can come to a conclusion about separating your life now from your Mom's. You are grown up. It is time to fly from the nest. No bird stays behind to watch the decline of their parent. They move on to build their own nests and care for their young.
I wish you the utmost luck. We all make choices for our own lives, and they determine the quality of those gifts of ONE life.
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venting Jun 2022
"No bird stays behind to watch the decline of their parent." 

Actually I discovered a while back, that incredibly some birds fly back to their parents yearly, and help raise younger siblings, and later also help with aging elderly parent-birds.

Incredible. First, that they even know how to find their parents again. Birds move around, but somehow they find each other. Second, that they do fly back and help their elders.

Turns out, many animals take care of their elderly-relatives.

Anyway:
"It is time to fly from the nest."

I agree AlvaDeer; and OP, your mother should really be telling you also, to live independently from her.
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So the three of you (mother, sister, and you) live in East Asia. Does your culture demand that the younger generation takes care of its elders? Trouble is, your mother put herself in the dependee role far too early.

But, regardless, you really aren't going to ever change things, I suspect, and you and your sister will be your mother's servants for the rest of her life. Just one question -- what does your husband think of all of this? Does HE want children? Does he have deadbeat parents, also?
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kimino Jun 2022
Thank you for your opinion.

"So the three of you (mother, sister, and you) live in East Asia. Does your culture demand that the younger generation takes care of its elders?"
-I was raised in Southeast Asia(SEA) and now living in an East Asian country which (surprisingly) shares different value comparing to the country I was raised in Southeast Asia. And yes, In SEA the culture demand of the younger generation takes care of its elders SELFLESSLY. As someone who have lived abroad for more than 7 years, I can't relate with that value anymore, sadly.

For my husband, he dreams to be a dad but If raising a child is a burdensome task for me, he says it's okay to be childless since my mental health is his priority over anything else, he said.

Anyway, regarding his parents, they are independent ones and once told us not to worry about them ( tbh I would be happy to take care of them since they treat me better as if I were their daughter, sorry to say but even better than what my Mother did when raising me as a kid.)

Being an ungrateful child is out of my life agenda. However I'm sorry to say this but I never asked to be born but I cant be a billionaire in a night to provide my mom.

Oh also, making my mom stay with me and husband in one roof is an answer I'm looking for since my childhood trauma is hard to erase until now and our different character/life value can cause mental damage for me if we live together, I suppose.
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How does your husband feel about all of this? Specifically: 1) the decision to have/not have children and 2) your extreme financial/social support of your mother? It seems to me that he ought to have a big say in these decisions, since they will affect him as much as you and mom.

I know my husband would have been monumentally disappointed if I decided to not have children, especially since we had discussed and decided on children before we married. If it had been a medical reason to not, he certainly would have dealt with it, but to decide to not have them because I/we were financially supporting another capable family member - well, I don't know think he would have accepted that very easily. Did you and your spouse discuss (and agree on) children before your marriage? Because if you did, this is kind of not fair to your husband, to change the rules of the game mid-way through. Even if kids aren't a deal maker-or-breaker, this extreme coddling of your able-bodied mother could potentially cause a serious rift in your relationship in the future. Are you willing to chance that?
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kimino Jun 2022
Thank you for your opinion.

Regarding child, he said he would like to have an experience of being a dad but if role of being a mom is too burdensome for me, he said we don't have to.

Anyway,
the thing is he lived a VERY different childhood with me and event his current life as a first-born of a family is totally different with mine (my PIL are independent even they've retired already, and I love them so much). So once I asked for his opinion about what to do, he said, it's okay to cut the tie if I think that this bother my mental health.

But well, cutting tie is not as easy for me. I mean, IF only it's the final decision that I have to take, maybe cutting tie is the last option of 10000 possible options that I can take. So hard to do.
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Unless your mother has a MEDICAL reason, this could be physical or mental, condition I see no reason why you or your sister have to support her.
You mention "age related decline" well this happens. Fact of life as you get older you can not do what you could do 5, 10, 15 years previously. Your mom is younger than I am and can probably do more than I can. (again unless there is a medical reason she can't)

You can't have another child, you have one now the problem is she is 52 years old. Unlike babies that will grow up and out of the house at this point your mother will not leave your house. You will, if this continues, care for her for the rest of your lives. At this point there is a possibility that your mother will live another 30, 40 + years, do you want to continue to care for her for the rest of her life? Where does that put you and your retirement plans?
Now...if mom is healthy then living with you may, let me say that again MAY have benefits. If mom can work around the house and do the housework. If mom can care for your children while you work that would be wonderful. It would save you money that would be spent on child care. But would your house be YOUR house or "mom's house" it depends greatly on the dynamics that you have.

Just for Socialization, meeting people her age, getting involved, for her own satisfaction, her own pride, confidence your mom should be encouraged to look for a job. A few hours to start would even be better than nothing.
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The decision to have kids should be made by you and your husband only. Not your mothers desires or her long term physical and mental needs.

Why do you feel your parents would be dependent on you as they age? They can only be dependent on you if you let them. It is unlikely she will change so if you continue to mentally and financially support her, your life won't change either.

If you aren't happy now, how will you feel 30-40 years from now, childless, having devoted your life to a person who never tried to find their own happiness or being accountable for their own actions?

I would make a plan for your own dream life, without the pressure of what your mother wants or her current condition. Whatever you decide, it had to be based on what you want or you too will have an unhappy life.
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My mother was a bright, funny, creative woman who was totally disabled by agoraphobia when she was in her late 30s.

In retrospect, I believe that both my father and her several sisters and brothers (and perhaps I also, even as a child), protected her so constantly that it served to make her MUCH WORSE than she might have been if we hadn’t acted as we did.

I did many independent things while growing up, but never quite at the level as my age peers, and in retrospect, I can understand my own awkward insecurities as part of the anxiety based syndrome that she unconsciously bequeathed to me.

I married a wonderful man whom she adored, and subtly began to encourage me to remain childless.

In her case, she and my father were financially stable, and since my husband and I had every intention of having a family, we moved ahead with OUR plans.

Her entire estate, close to a million dollars, was ultimately spent on HER CARE during her final 5 1/2 years, and both my husband and I worked for most of our child care years to support our family.

Unless your mother has a demonstrable INABILITY to care for herself IN ALL ASPECTS OF SELF CARE, I think you need to start backing off on your “support” while ge try explaining to her that you don’t have the “luxury” of supporting someone who is able to care for herself.

As a younger person, I was ALWAYS afraid of the consequences of pushing my mother to be of her own person, and when we ultimately did have our two children, she was an AMAZING and OUTSTANDING grandmother, and LOVED being so.

If you are not speaking to a therapist yourself, you may find help FOR HER, by doing so. A cognitive behavioral therapist was a great deal of help to me as I moved through my mother’s life stages AND my own.

You and your husband are good people who have found love for each other. You deserve your autonomy as a couple. Seek it!
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Did your Mother ever work outside the home? Or have others always provided for her?

This is a nosy question, (sorry, no need to answer..) but how/who funded your lives before you could earn for yourself?
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kimino Jun 2022
As I know, she used to work in office before she got married, but after she got married she always had someone provided for her, when I was in uni and providing my own life, she had a partner who provided but now no longer providing her so she is fully depending to us.

She used to have a small business like small snack store and laundry shop but it didn't go well that time. Next i used to ask her if she want to do small business again (which is i'm willing to fund at that time with an expectation of her can provide her own), she said she has no confident to do business. So i have no words anymore..

Any thoughts?
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What did you live on while growing up if mom refused to work? At 52 your mom is way too young to be sitting back and asking you to support her. Check with social services to see if she is eligible for support (unlikely). As for kids, gave them when you are ready nit because she is living a fantasy. Good luck, get away from her or you will be saddled with her for another 40 years and your life will be in ruins.
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kimino Jun 2022
"As for kids, gave them when you are ready nit because she is living a fantasy."

Thank you for the enlightment!
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