For those who don't know me, my husband and I live with my mom who is 91 and has Alzheimer's and a weak heart. I take medication for depression but it still gets a hold of me. We rarely get out together as my mom can't be alone. My brother and sister live far away...brother gives us breaks maybe once or twice a year. Sister doesn't lift a finger. I've been doing this for almost 5 years and making other arrangements is not an option for me. My husband says I'll feel better in the spring. I don't know... Guilt goes along with the depression. If I don't do anything I feel guilty, but I some days don't feel up to doing a thing.
Wow!, your situation sounds overwhelmingly depressing.
What are your mother's health needs?
Why did she come to live with you and yiour husband 6 years ago?
How is your husband handling this?
What are your mother's resources for and is it even possible for her to live in independent or assisted living.
To me, it sounds like more is going on with this depression than only grieving the past life you once had. It sounds to me like you feel hopless and are anxious about being in this situation with your mother from which escape might be difficult? It also seems that your mother's verbal abuse has enslaved you into the F.O.G. What I'm hearing is that she's made you a bit fearful of her; obligated to keep her in your home and keept putting up with her critical argumentativeness; and guilty for even wanting a life or thinking about how her care could be different as well as maybe some fear about not only your own heatlh, but possibly your marriage?
I think it is a good idea for you to see a doctor and get some anti-depression or anti-anxiety meds. It would also help to see a therapist. Also, you and your husband, if you haven't already, need to have a serious discussion about this entire situation; how it's impacting each of you, your marriage (probably); and your mother in terms of what does she need now that would provide her with good care and saftey but not destroy you in the process. If it were me, speaking as a husband, I would be fed up with a MIL who was so verbably abusive, and feel like my wife had been totally taken away by her mother (which BTW, I have both felt this and dealt with it in my own marriage).
I have post traumatic sdisorder and insomnia plus anxiety. guess the anxiety helps me get stuff done..but i hate not sleeping. They say I am too young for valium and I will get addicted! and I'm 47!! I just need some sleep to help me deal with all of this!!
So, I had to tell my mother why we were going to be a couple of days late getting home. She went BALISTIC, why did we let this happen? Why were we doing somthing so dangerous? (we were hiking btw) She want's me home. How dare I not come home immediately (even though my husband was in the hospital with a broken neck!) on and on and on - I'm so terrible cuz I didn't just leave him the hospital to get home to her.....
So, now I'm home. I went over to her place today to do her meds, get groceries, etc... She started in immediately on how I'm so mean, I and my family hate her, NOW after 11 years of begging us to go back to Colorado, she doesn't want to go. I told her fine, she can stay here, but we are going since my husband has a job there and quit his job here in Arizona, we have no choice but to go...
How dare I say such a thing to her!! I am so mean to say such a thing - she even told me she would die if she moved back to Colo and don't I even care about that! (well, what do you all think?)
Anyway, even with all the stuff going on with my husband, it was still all about her (as usual). I'm working hard on the FOG issues and trying to get past them. I do as much as I can for her, but then I walk away. I walked away from her today as she was screaming at me about how mean I am. I just can't take her abuse any more. No matter what I say or do or how hard I try to make her happy. She wants something different, or I said it in the wrong way, or I didn't react in the manner she expected or wanted me to....
OK - same story different day - at least I can vent here to you guys and I really appreciate that!
When Mommy and Daddy had us as little kids, they had their own lives to live as well and they did, so why shouldn't we as adults now having to be like a parent to our aging parents?
Try and address it as soon as you can, it probably won't go away, as long as you caregive. Guilt is a common trait of caregivers' depression.
I am off to a very nice place to housesit for a week, mother is furious and being her most wounded self, but I'm so happy to be getting away!
I haven't made any entries here since I joined this group in February. My mother's final illness was very fast-growing and I literally had no time to get online or to even make a phone call. She passed away on March 12. I wouldn't have wanted to missed the opportunity to help her and be here for her, even though she sometimes behaved as if I wasn't measuring up to her expectations. But I know for a fact that unless we've been in someone else's shoes, we really don't know how we would feel if we were in that position. I've never been 78 and dying from cancer and in pain from severe rheumatoid arthritis. I've never been married to my dad who can test the patience of a saint. I haven't lived the life my mother lived. But I can say with a clear conscience that I did everything in my power to make her life comfortable and to allow her to pass away with as much peace that God and I could allow. And I will miss her.
Do what my SIL and BIL do when they have visitors or someone works on their house. They have a metal dog cage in a room they put the dog in and close the door. or If no one is going outside, they put the dog in the back yard which is fenced in.
BTW, what kind of dog is it? If you really think that dog might bite your mother as well as a stranger, then that dog is not safe to have around period.
Also, that was so mean of your mother to program like she did you as a little girl. I'm glad to hear you are on an anti-depressent, but you are limiting yourself and cruxicying yourself with a limited view of taking care. It does not always mean doing all the carring for your mother yourself. Believe me it's not just people with parents who were born in europe who do that to their children and particularly to their little girls gggggggggggrrrrrrrrrr dang child abuse if you want my honest blunt Irish-German name for it.
It sounds like you have a very clear grasp where this F.O.G. (Fear Obligation and Guilt) came from, how it got there and who put it there. However, you are not your past nor are you a little girl anymore. You do not have to be your past programing which you see very clearly. The impact I've seen on this site and even in my extended family is the power that a mother's F.O.G. can have on a grown woman whose been a college professor; earned a doctorate from Duke; been married for several years; has her own children like my wife from functioning emotionally and mentally as an adult to being that fearful little girl again. Thank God my wife got into therapy so that she's not like that anymore or we probably would not be married anymore because I'd not live in a marraige where I felt like I was married to more than one person. So enough venting on my own which I'm sharing for a purpose.
Here's my action list of suggestions.
1. Get that dog out of the house or in a room away in a cage.
2. Get someone in there who will help. If your mother's doctor orders home health care, medicare normally covers a bit part of that.
3. Enjoy some time just for you.
4. Remind yourself everyday and possibly more than once everyday that you are not your past programing for you are an adult who can chose either to follow past programing or not to follow past programing. You do have the power of choice as an adult.
5. Given that none of these steps are easy, I would strongly suggest at least some short term counseling since you already have so much self-insight already which is awesome.
If they have not responded already, I'm sure Pam and/or along with others whose names escape my brain will or would tell you basically the same thing but in their own style and maybe not so 'take no prisoners' like I do sometimes. Take care of yourself, come here as often as you can for this is a great group of people to support you and cheer you on. I think Pam telling you her personal story of overcoming F.O.G. in her life straight from her would inspire you greatly.
miz
Both of you are understandibly exhausted. Some of this is depression and some is compassion fatigue. Feeding off of your husband or anyone for that matter is called enmeshment. It is when we make how we feel dependent on how others are doing. Your emotional tank is below E at least in my opinion. There sounds like there is nothing left to give and you feel deprived of no one giving to you and in particular your own self and sense of being a seperate self from both your mother and your husband has been deprived the freedom to let yourself do something renewing and nice for yourself for a change. No, you do not sound selfish. You sound very normal but on the edge of an emotional crash.
well i cant go cuz i have to sit at home . i think that would be a emotional crash ..
Feel a million miles from their real self.
Feelings of anger, negativity, exhaustion and anxiety are overwhelming to the point that your ability to pursue a 'normal' life and 'normal' relationships is beyond just being tough, but nearly impossible.
Depression leads to extra sleep and or escape from the stress of the present. I get on my computer in my "Man Cave" to escape stress and drama. Most of the time, it is the one consistently neat, organized and correct climate place in our residence. Life gets really tough when that one place gets out chaotic and dirty. Whenever, I re-boot so to speak, I have to start there before I can really deal effectively with anything else. Thus, after some time keeping the records of my parent's long over due tax information that I was working on cramped the joy of that place and thus I moved such items out into another room and container. This led me to see that another burden in this room was items in their from keeping up with our personal budget and yearly taxes and I moved all of that out. I think I've now basically freed the room of any reminders of current or old stress and only have reminders of past accomplishments academically, athletically, community service as well as nice trips that I have gone on plus the best books of my personal library.
Financial stress and related depression can creat an "until debt do we part" senario. Please don't let guilt drive you into burrying your anger over financial strains into deeper depression by hoping your husband will just get over being depressed so that you can feel better which will just not work. I'm not a therapist but possibly some of his depression and yours is some silent suffering going on concerning your marriage that if it is so really must be talked about by you to in some 'husband and wife' time or possibly with a trained and objective third party.
It does not sound like spring time has liften you up beyond where you were back in February. I think it is because it this depression is more than just seasonal. Taking pills for depression is freequently not enough for often both talk therapy and some liftestyle changes are needed.
If I may be my typical Irish/German blunt self, I'm hearing a ton of obligation fueled by and enormous amount of guilt and kept afire by some undefinable fear. Do you perceive yourself or have others pereived you as functioning in F.O.G., Fear-Obligation-Guilt?
Is any of this guilt coming from feeling like you ought to be up to taking care of your mother at the level of need that her health is now and somehow afraid that you might already be at or past that point, but feel obligated to go on because the guilt of having to say I can't do it anyomore just like this frightens you from some powerful sense of obligation to be super-daughter or fear that someone(s) might think less of you if you don't just gut through it even if it destroys your physcial and/or mental health, finances and marriage? I get the feelilng that you are extremely hard on yourself for some reason. I might be totally wrong about all of the above and if so I'm sorry and forget what I wrote.