My father is aggressively controlling access to my stepmother. She is in dementia decline. He is very anxious about her safety and blocks access to her by friends and family. Ironically he also will not entertain any changes to her care, even if they are to improve her safety. It’s clear that it’s a combination of
- his panicking at her decline;
- his lifelong inflexibility becoming even more rigid with asvanced age; and
- his anxiety about incorporating any further changes into his/their life
We step siblings need advice on how to intervene.
That her care is not adequate? That she would like her life to be different?
If you don’t think she has proper care you could contact Area Agency on Aging and ask for a needs assessment for both of them.
You could also speak with APS.
I know how frustrating this must be for all who love your parents.
Its like he wants to capture “time in a bottle”.
Of course one could file for guardianship which is expensive and time consuming and might not happen in time to see her depending on her condition.
I suspect your father has a degree of dementia of his own although perhaps not to the degree that he would be deemed incompetent.
Tell us more about their day to day life. Does father drive? Does he shop? Is there a caretaker or housekeeper? Is anyone allowed to see her?
Sometimes there are family members who are inadvertently enabling this behavior by propping up fathers illusion of independence.
It’s easy to do this as it’s so gradual.
Tell us more. You seem to have a grasp on dad’s motivations but how is he pulling it off?
We had a social worker regularly ring to try to reason with him, but he was so irascible and would listen to no one.
The only thing that broke the status quo was my reporting him to DMV and having him lose the ability to drive.
Does your father still drive?
Adult Protection Services would be another option.
If you have a local Senior Center you could check there to see if there is a Social Worker that you could talk to about the situation.
I am sure he is doing this to protect her and prevent her from being embarrassed by her decline.