She's been with us now for 5 weeks. This was supposed to be temporary for a few days, while my FIL made the home "livable" for her. It is not safe for her to be there. It is cluttered and filthy from pet "accidents" and her own accidents. She is not able to care for herself or clean up after herself. He is not making progress there, but no one (including my husband) seems to be willing to make a plan for what is to happen next.
She is getting very comfortable in our home. I am still raising a teenage son. I don't feel like I got a chance to voice my opinion on any long-term arrangements. I have been the one to take her to her appointments, help her with dressing, make her meals, etc. I work outside the home, so between my husband and I, we try to sneak home on our lunch break to check on her. She's on oxygen full-time now. We do have some PT, OT and nursing staff that come in a few days a week.
I feel bad that I don't want this situation. I keep voicing my opinion on deaf ears that she needs assisted living. I feel trapped because she is not my mother, and I can not make any decisions for her. I do not know where I could even start, because I don't have access to any finances or even her health insurance information.
I feel like we should contact an attorney. I love her, but I'm quickly resenting the situation, my MIL, my in-laws and my husband.
So many red flags waving from your words, even if you don't realize it. My take-away from all you've written is that you are cheating both your kids out of a good relationship with YOU.
Get rid of MIL today, she has a home and a husband and a daughter, plus your husband who is her son. Let them sort this out from HER home, not from YOUR home.
1. You wrote "My daughter is getting married in about a month. I don't have my dress yet." How does your daughter feel about the reality that her mom is dramatically involved with MIL rather than excitedly and lovingly helping the bride-to-be? If I were your daughter i would be terribly hurt that I come second (or even farther down the list) to MIL.
2. "I'm nearly out of PTO at work." So in the lead-up to daughter's wedding you might not be able to help her at all since you won't have any personal time left? Nice.
3. Your job: you mention you and husband are "...late for work most days" due to these new obligations caretaking for your MIL. How long can you even keep your paying job if you show up late most days? If I were your workmate I would be fed up and angry that I unfairly have to pull your weight when you mosey in to work late daily because MIL demands your attention. And if I were your boss, I would have already placed you on a PIP, warning that if you don't rectify this immediately you will be fired for cause. So, in actuality you might not need to worry about using up your PTO from point #2, since you might soon be unemployed and thus have plenty of time to care for MIL.
4. Regarding your son: "is there a lesson here on how to treat others, a way of modeling being kind to others to my son?" You are modeling perfectly to your innocent son that neither he nor you matter at all, only MIL matters and that everyone's life needs to revolve around her selfish insistence to be cared for at your house. He is learning the eye-opening lesson that he doesn't matter so much to you, and you've even mentioned concerns about money. How lovely that money you may have earmarked to help him get a good start in life will instead be soaked up by MIL's selfish wants and needs, which are apparently paramount in your extended family. That's the lesson you are modeling for your son, and if you don't see that, I feel sorry for your boy.
5. "SIL came over last night with a big box of my MIL clothes and just hung them in the closet." Pack those clothes up right now. Put them in your husband's car and tell him TODAY, not in a month, to take the box and his mother back to her own home. The whole family of MIL expects you to just roll over and play dead, then give up and become the permanent feces-clean-up personal assistant and maid and medical-appointment driver and cook and housekeeper to MIL. Thats what you are right now, and SIL and MIL and FIL have no intention of changing the dynamics to help you.
6. You mention that when you get home you try to steel yourself by first crying in the garage, and/or guzzling beer before heading inside the house to start tending to selfish MIL once again. This is so unhealthy and unfair mentally and physically for you.
In conclusion, for every day you let this situation continue, you are dumping on your daughter, your son, your job, and on yourself. All of you deserve better than what you are getting right now. Please save yourself and your nuclear family NOW!
I send good wishes to your daughter, I know she will be a beautiful bride, and she deserves a happy healthy smiling mother in the wedding photos with her, not an exhausted worn-out red-rimmed crying-eyed woman who had to guzzle beer to get through the day. Please save yourself and your nuclear family NOW!
We're caring for my 87YO stepdad, who married my mom (she died 3 years ago) when I was about 40, so never really got to know him and he needs care due to dementia. My husband was taking his side and acting like the stepdad's feelings are the only ones that mattered, and that just isn't a good way to stay married.
Hubby is a great guy who is caring and not easily stressed. I was very resentful that I had to suddenly give up my life, big house, and freedom to care for someone who didn't appreciate it. He can't because the dementia means, well, he CAN'T understand. But Hubby knew.
I finally had to give him a taste of what it would be like if he didn't want to take my feelings, and our relationship into consideration, and just knew I couldn't live like that anymore. It hurt horribly.
I went to our room (not even a whole bedroom), packed a small amount of clothes and some meds, and didn't tell anyone. About an hour up the road I texted that I was going to stay with a friend who lives 3 hours away with poor cell service in the area.
I couldn't take it any more, and I don't want you to get to that point. You have to take care of YOU or you have nothing to give anyone else, including that teenager in your house. Show him how a strong woman handles being trampled on, and let him know it's not ok!
It's a hard conversation to have, but if you don't want to be miserable and jobless, you NEED to have it. Make it clear that MIL needs more care than you can give. I ended up with my dr upping my blood pressure meds to FOUR times what it had been, and told hubby the situation can literally kill me if it doesn't get better. I'm not dying for this guy, and you shouldn't be expected to either.
Best of luck and I pray for your health, because it's clear nobody else has thought about what it's doing to yours.
I agree with the others. This is a hopeless situation that should not continue and your husband should agree with you on that. I also think that your MIL may be past the point of going to AL and may need SN. Either way she will have to be evaluated.
My son was married a week ago. Even though we didn't have the major obligations we still had ones and there were many issues to deal with. At times it became exhausting. I deal with a mother in SN. The past month had many stressful situations with her as well. I can't imagine having her in my house generally let alone at a time preparing for a wedding.
My mother is basically kind hearted but she is now completely immobile and incontinent. My husband and I have our hands full enough with our health issues as well as visiting 3 children ( 2 with grandchildren and another on the way ) and helping them at times. Our home cannot become a SN center. Neither should yours but you need to take action now and if you are not granted POA then take her back to her house and attempt to reclaim your lives.
My husband and I are both only children. Our mothers were widowed and divorced. When it came time that they no longer could manage living on their own they went into AL. They came to accept it. We visited, took them out when feasible, brought them to our house etc. We just did not turn our lives upside down. I hope you can impress upon your husband (who should already realize this) that you cannot continue to be the doormat they have turned you into.
FIL isn't making substantial progress - discuss with the group. Explain where the the problems are (ie - carpet needs thorough cleaning due to pet stains, stacked/junk sitting around needs to be organized, once house is clean by the group participating - a housekeeper needs to be hired to help them keep it straight). If the house doesn't get decluttered or cleaned, mom cannot go there. Again, this clean up can be handled by a house cleaning service if mom has money or if family willing to pay. Since you are inquiring about AL facilities, I assume there is money for that since Medicaid usually doesn't pay for that level of care in most states. Medicare doesn't, for sure.
If no one will step up to the plate to help you and to help them get house in order, then one more phone call with all of them where you tell them you will not carry the full load...and since they have not committed to helping, it is time to visit some facilities for her to move to. AL is probably not going to be one of your options because the name implies what they provide - assisted. Meaning mom can take care of her self with little effort from paid staff. Still no commitment on visiting some facilities???? Then you go do the visit yourself. Find a couple that seem to be decent (preferably one that handles her current needs and then has an area for her to transfer to when her needs go beyond that).
You're going to have to be unavailable more than you are available to get their attention and to light the fire under them.
Are you at the point where MIL has to move out? If your husband and FIL got people to help with the care of MIL in your house and helped you with housework, will that be okay?
Your husband is the one who has to talk to his family members to relieve you of the load you are under. In my state, there are facilities where you pay by the month. There are also respite programs.
I'd start with getting the "pet" out of the house, if it came with her. If Mom goes to managed care, she probably won't be able to take the "pet" with her, especially if it has accidents. You can get a caregiver for the Mom and they will clean up the Mom's accidents, however, they will not clean up the "pet's" accidents.
If you are willing to assist and your husband agrees with it, I suggest that you find out what is going on with FIL's house. Maybe he needs a professional restorer (look for restoration services) to help him clean up the "filth". Maybe he needs some help going through and getting rid of the junk. Maybe he just needs someone to keep him going while doing these things. Regardless of whether Mom moves back or not, someone will still need to do these things to the house.
Depending upon how attached your FIL is to the material goods, this could take a while. So your husband needs to figure out what to do with Mom in the meantime. Hire 24 x 7 caregiver? Put her in a month-to-month living center? Hire caregiver for nights and a housekeeper? They are not easy decisions. Work with him on these decisions.
If you can't get your husband to budge, I'd suggest professional therapy for you and your husband. Your marriage and the upbringing of your teenage son is at a crossroad.
My prayers are with you.
my SIL, And BIL were too busy fighting… I just did it…
He knew when he moved her in that you would be the one taking on her care. Is it possible for you to stay somewhere for a while? Let him take on the responsibilities of his mom and I bet he changes his tune and makes her moving out a priority. Men respond more to actions than they do words.....
Get a geriatric Dr to evaluate and do a recommendation, get an advisor to help pick a place. Dad's home situation is not going to be good enough fast enough. You don't have to be an extreme hoarder like on TV to have a real problem.
Money is an issue. Use resources from the social worker (from the Dr) to figure it out. Get on waiting list but go beyond your county too. The advisor should be able to find places you might not know about. My mom just went to a MC over the state line that will take Medicaid (and is not a skilled nursing home) which we did not have in our area. Yet, she is 20 min from me and 10 min from my bro. Also my mom was actually much worse than we realized while at home. Quite possibly your LO will qualify for help based on her care needs being higher.
Prayers for you and yours.
Let your spouse know what you can do -within reason - to care for your MIL while she is with you. Let him know what things he will have to do or get others to do. Stick to a reasonable plan.
"I feel bad that I don't want this situation." With all due respect, that's the problem. While you 'feel bad' you will keep doing. Change your narrative. Do you really think you should be feeling bad? You say you feel trapped and I can most definitely understand that feeling but it is up to you to stop feeling trapped, no one else can do this for you. Pointing the finger at others will keep you in victim mentality. If you start to change and stop doing so much and are brave enough to ask her to leave (for your own sanity) some won't like that...so what! Do you need them to approve of what you want? If so , why?
I was brought up to put OTHERS first always, especially parents. (This comes from very narcissistic mum btw). I sense my unpopularity with my family (mum/dad/siblings/nieces) very much so. So be it.Whilst this doesn't feel nice, I understand why they think this way and I know its not personal...ultimately.
Its difficult to change a conditioned narrative but in actual fact are you actually being loving and kind if you are doing something for someone else and resenting it?? Good luck.