My 85 year old mother has some dementia and she leaves nasty messages on your answer machine she does not get her way. I am a caregiver to my husband who has Parkinson's disease, severe to moderate dementia, suffered several strokes, diabetes and other health issues. I have to assist him in bathing, going to the bathroom and other daily tasks. He has fallen several times and broken bones, so he is a fall risk. My mother who lives in an independent senior apartment who me and my siblings pay for an inhome care aid to come 7 days week to help her. My mother is so jealous of me taking care of my husband and when I have inlaws coming to visit. She says I was stupid to take care of my husband and not doing anything else in my life. I was fortunate to retire from the Federal Government after 39+ years. I enjoy being at home because before I retired I did not have a break (always worked more than 40 hours a week).
I was married before to a physical and verbally abusive man whom I divorce after 12 years of marriage. I did not realize what a relief it was to be out of that situation. Now, I am content with just taking care of my second husband with the help of my son. When my mother is verbal abusive to me it brings back memories of the fights I had with my first abusive husband. My question is what is the difference tolerating a verbally abusive mother and a verbally abusive husband? I left my first husband and never looked back. Should I do the same with my abusive mother?
Never, ever allow another human to abuse you - they are not worth your allowing them to do this to you. They are sick, evil, selfish people. I learned this far too late in life but once I did, my life improved.
If she leaves a message and you begin to listen and you find it abusive delete it do not even listen to the full message.
If you visit and she starts say you are not going to take the abuse and walk out.
It sounds like you did the right thing, the difficult and brave thing to leave an abusive marriage. If you were counseling someone and they gave you the same circumstances between you and how your mother treats you what would you tell them . It does not matter if the abuser is a parent, a spouse, a friend or significant other. Abuse is abuse and it can not nor should it be tolerated.
Why place yourself in a toxic situation just because the abuser happens to share DNA?
I have an abusive elder mom and dad. They will never change. The same cycle has been going on all my life with them. Now they are old, and meaner by every year. They know that they hurt me but just don’t care. They also abuse eachother verbally. I divorced them, bc they only tear me down thats the only thing that is for sure.
Thanks everyone for your input and caring.
Thanks everyone for all your advice and support. It means a lot.
Is mom not able to pay for assistance on her own? Why do the children pay for it? As her dementia progresses, she'll have to move to AL or MC. Some assistance is built into the cost, additional assistance will cost more. Is she going to be able to pay for this? As someone else noted, NH is NOT what mom needs. That is for those who require specialized nursing care that AL and MC will not provide. She is nowhere near needing that and it would likely make her even more cantankerous!!!
As for her behavior, whether it is long-standing or new due to dementia, you have choices to make:
1. If her voice messages begin with nastiness, delete it without listening to the whole message.
2. Don't discuss care for your husband or in-laws visiting. She doesn't need to know and can't complain about what she doesn't know! If she brings them up, tell her you haven't seen in-laws in months or years, and hubby is doing fine. End of discussion!
3. If she calls and starts being nasty, stop her and tell her if she continues, conversation is over, then hang up if she continues. Do not answer if she calls again, and if need be take the phone off the hook (cell phone, turn off sound, or "dismiss" call and let it go to voice mail.)
4. If she is nasty when you visit, bring someone else along. Sometimes having another person inhibits this. If not, tell her to be nice or you will leave. If she continues, leave. Someone else mentioned this and I have seen my mom behave much differently when "others" are around (have to keep up pretenses so the others are not aware of the dirty laundry!!)
5. If this is new behavior, it isn't easy but let the nasty comments roll off your back. YOU know what you do for her and YOU know her comments are unwarranted. Yes, it can be hurtful, but if you just chalk it up to dementia and let it slide, don't take it to heart, it'll get better and easier over time.
6. If this is old behavior, you can still try to let it slide. Before our mother developed dementia I finally told her one time that it hurt that she called me a freak when growing up. I know she had told me how her sisters had called her that. Her response? I don't remember that. Sure you don't, because it didn't hurt YOU! Some people have no idea how much they hurt you by things they say and do!
7. Attempt to change the discussion (refocus, redirect.) This does sometimes work with those who have dementia. If not, then make your excuses and leave.
8. Bring some little "treat" along, whether food/beverage item, special book, etc, that you know she likes. Focus is then on her and takes it off whatever she thinks is wrong/bad.
Although those with dementia often don't learn, repetition can sometimes work. If you draw that line with her (stop or I will leave/hangup) and follow through, it might eventually leave an impression. Someone mentioned it took about 3 months for their attempts to work! Final option is to reduce the number and length of visits. Stay STRONG!
Key take aways: Don't believe or dwell on her nasty comments and learn to walk away if she won't stop!
None of this means you need to grin and bear it though. I would encourage you to try and receive it from a different perspective, maybe learn to re-direct your mom if you can't correct her, maybe enlist more family members or friends close to you both to help, talk up your current husband, fill in some of the time gaps so she doesn't feel alone so much (warranted or not, you could be there every day and she might still feel it's not enough). Maybe try to find a way to touch base with her, include her in your day electronically with one of these new and easy to use face to face devices. But if none of this works or you know it wont (this has been her personality all your life) set some better boundaries for yourself, be realistic and try to ignore the pointless hurtful stuff but don't cut her off completely, she is your mom and you obviously love her or you would have let it go long ago, it isn't the same as divorcing a spouse (hard) and I worry you will regret missing what time is left.
Tell family you need a break. No one has to hear obsenities and or screaming on their phone. Doesnt matter who is doing it. You dont need ptsd on top of everything else. That is abuse and you dont accept abuse from anyone. FULL STOP.
I had to go no contact with my mom & sibling. They learned. Still have to do it from time to time. They try to go back to negative abuse patterns when I was young.
If your mom is smart enough to remember details about your life, she will soon learn what no contact means. Give her 1 warning. When she does it again there will be no satisfaction for her. No daughter to guilt trip. Phone blocked. No one to answer the phone or visit. She will learn. It might take a while but she will get it. You have to set boundries and mean it. Dont feel guilty bc you wont accept abuse. Family doesnt mean you have to accept it.
She also can be put on medication to help mellow her out some.
I find it is best to talk to them when it is convenient for you and do not feel obligated to answer the phone.
Be tough and stand up to her. Its hard but I am treated better now.
I would not tolerate an abusive spouse, not for one minute. Now, my DH is as clueless in some regards as they come--but abusive? No. Never. I'd take clueless over mean any day of the week!
His mother is another story. She is abusive and by choice. She KNOWS what she's saying and she knows why. I have cut her out of my life completely--(realistically, I know that it truly impossible, but you know what I mean. I no longer make any attempt at a relationship with her and will not endeavor to do so--ever.)
My DH and I have had a rough marriage--probably not worse nor better than anyone else's really--we've just been together so long there's simply no romance nor magic anymore. We live together as brother and sister. And it's OK.
I have seem far too many women stay in abusive marriages for whatever reason they may have--one being "for the sake of the kids" and I can tell you, the kids wish you'd split up. I know my DH wished his parents had divorced 30 years before they finally did.
Abuse is never OK--but there are times when you do have to deal with it in some form. You cannot always walk away from the abusive person--often it's family and you simply HAVE to deal with them to a degree. But deal with them and walk away. It's hard to do, but necessary. (I'm thinking of my brother with whom my mother lives. I HAVE to get past him to see mother. He's toxic, but if I don't "play nice" I am cut off from contact from mother.)
Life is too short to have abusive people in it. I'm my own worst enemy in this regard. I am harder and more unkind to myself than any other person can be.
Maybe we start with ourselves and go from there?
If I don't like myself, I find I will allow others to treat me poorly.
I have had to tell Mother on more than one occasion that I'm taking a time out because I don't think we are being nice.
Difficult enough to take care of one ailing, so trying to take care of two is a lot more difficult.
In the eyes of the Lord, your spouse and your children comes first. So, you are not wrong for caring for your husband. At no age are do we have any entitlement when it comes to what is needed or wanted even at 110 years, so if your mom needed to be where she is at, she may not like it, but there is a huge difference between caring for kids and caring for elderly. And it is not like you just threw her away; you are doing things for her. But I understand if you want to not go visit her with her abusing you. For her to understand you sacrifing your life caring for her is beyond challenging, so to respect you better. That, and hubby does come first, so for her to accept that. I am not great with words sometimes, so I do apologize for any confusion in my words. If you need to separate from her for awhile, I understand. You cannot be good to anyone unless you are good to yourself first. Plus, you may need counseling if you may have PTSD. If you believe in God, pray for peace and see what He would have you to do.