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In April we brought my almost-90 year old mother to live with us and our 11-year old son. She has her own space but not a full kitchen. She wants to help me all the time, with cooking, etc. She is very slow and, when I do accept her help, ends up doing things her way instead of the way I have asked. I have asked her to wait until I ask for help but she cannot stop herself. She is very active with her church and still drives. I am thinking we need to go to a therapist or I need to tell her I'm just not going to answer her when she offers help.

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i dontthink going to a therapist is going to solve a 90 yrs old woman . she has her ways set and that is how her mind works .
just give her something simple chores to do . maybe laundry ??
my mother in law did the same thing to me , i was makin homemade noodles and she came in and messed eveything up . i had to go out in the barn and grab me a beer to calm down ,. my husband said oh hun im so sorry .
we end up havin a all diifrent shapes of noodles for supper .
im just glad i dont have to take care of her . just my dad and he just sits in recliner watching tv . whew !
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She does the wash the way she wants, too, but I am living with that. I asked her to dry only but she does not remember and does the wash too, often when I would have waited to include additional items. The drying has its own problems. Hangers facing the wrong way, hung clothes folded and vice versa. I have one pair of jeans and it was lost for a long time because she folded them with my son's and they got in his drawer. My only white t-shirt finally surfaced after 6 months, caught in a contour sheet. She empties the dishwasher, carefully drying each item. If she has forgotten during the day, she sometimes does it while I am trying to make dinner. I try to be calm as I say it is not a good time.

I have suggested she continue unpacking all the boxes she brought over here when she failed to weed her possessions after selling her house, but she hangs her head, doesn't act, and continues to offer to help me.
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You should just smile and thank God you have a busy, active mom who wants to be with you and share household activities. I would love to be in your shoes. Don't sweat the small stuff. Life may not be the party we all expected, but while we're here, let's dance! Have a great day with your mom and smile. ~Sooz~
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Your mom might have some dementia problems. It sounds as though she isn't trying to upset you but instead is perhaps truly confused about how to do tasks. My mother-in-law, who has Alzheimer's, is very helpful but also often does things the "wrong" way.
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Sooz, I'm sorry but I'd like to take away your star! When you are floundering and getting very angry about an elder's behavior, being told to be grateful that it is not worse is not very helpful! I hope this can be a place where we all try to empathize with one another's trials and weaknesses and don't one-up one another about who has it worse.
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Hi, reagor. I can understand your anger. Again, while your mom may not have dementia, I can relate to the behavior because of my mother-in-law. She so wants to be helpful because that is what she has always done and the kind of person she has always been, but it is very frustrating to witness her do things repeatedly or the wrong way or negligently (burning food). I wish that I could offer more than commiseration.
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I'd suggest telling your Mom you'd like to "assign" her a few meaningful tasks that would "help you out so much" aand ask her for some ideas of things that need doing that she most enjoys to do or is "best at". Select a few from HER list and "assign" them to her, not forgetting to tell her how much you appreciate having her help. Then let her go about them her way, even if it takes her longer to do them then it would take you, and even if you'd do them a different way. Each of us wants to find meaning in our lives. As we age, that can get harder and harder. By "helping out", your mother has a way to maintain her dignity. If she's cognitively aware, (and she must be doing pretty well since she still drives!) she wants to feel like she's still "good for something". I appreciate how frustrating this can be for you, and I don't mean to minimize that. However, try to imagine how frustrated your mom must feel. The intent of my suggestion is to find a way to meet your mom's need to be useful and minimize your frustration.

-- Sheri
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Sheri, I think you are exactly right. My mom needs lots of praise and lots of activity. My husband says she is like this with everyone and not just me, and that she does not know how to 'just be' and probably never has. I have resisted the idea of expanding her task list because I have already felt it is a full-time job to keep her occupied (that's why cooking with her has been such a strain--she'll make the salad and then say 'What now?' and I can't think fast enough to tell her what is next that I don't mind her doing), but I think you may be right that she needs a longer 'to do' list. I just need to find time to lengthen it, and it needs to be mostly things that are NOT food-related, because I am usually tired and under time pressure when I cook on weeknights and not very patient (obviously). Hey, I give my husband a 'honey do' list and that works much better than yelling at him for sitting on his bum! Maybe this could work for my over-achieving mother...
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oh u leave sooz s star alone ! she is right , just be happy and dont worry , it;ll be all right ! at least ur mother isnt mean t o u or spits at you or cuss at you in every name ofthe book , a very evil woman ! you dont have that . heart breaking and makes you cry , your mother is wantin to help you ,. all u can do is apprecated it and be thankful . i wish i have somebody here to help me clean around here , im the only ones that does it all ,
my mother in law would put pots and pans in my clothes closet in my bdrm !! i was floored and alot ofthe stuff i dont know where it went cuz she puts them to an odd places .
at least she dont live with me so i know the frustations and anger builds up inside of ya , my mother in law would take her socks off her feet and wipe downmy kitchen table , i was glad i stood there and seen that ! told her to go put her socks away and i wash down the table good with soap and rag !
but i shake it off and knowing she cant help it .
she comes here once a great while and honest i dontthink i could deal with that everyday .
but then i remind myself at least shes not spittin at you or kickin ya . break ur heart .....
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I am sure your life is much harder than mine and I should not ever have presumed I had any right to join a support group. Thanks.
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REAGOR:

I tried to picture your mom, and came up with Bree from "Desperate Housewives." Give her an inch, she'll take a mile; including your house. Of course you don't want to offend her and/or hurt her feelings, but it's your house and she's your guest.

My mother, whenever she comes by my apartment and I happen to be cooking, will immediately start to supervise and make comments. "I'd do it like this," "That's not the way I taught you," "I hope you're not serving that," blah, blah, blah. ... I put the cooking on hold, serve her coffee, crackers and cheese, and put her in a taxi 1 1/2 hours later. Her way of trying to help is actually a way to take over, and that kind of stress is NOT an option for me. So every now and then I have to review the boundaries and code of conduct while at MY house.

My fiancee refers to her as "Ms. Buttinsky" every time she intrudes on our most intimate conversations, whether it's on the phone or in the privacy of our bedroom. She also curses like a Puerto Rican sailor (a pirate is more like it) and, with a PhD in child abuse, insists on corporal punishment as a cure-all for my grandchildren's "bad" behaviors. (She once suggested I line them all up and shoot the first one that moves, so there's no way in Hades she'll get to babysit in this lifetime, next one, or the one after that.)

To be honest, I'm glad my parents divorced and I went to live in Manaus (Brazil) with my dad and his parents. Otherwise, I'd have been dead, in jail for murder, or strung out on drugs and living on a park bench instead of Park Avenue. She's quite a handful, and I have to keep her in check or show her the door when her behavior begins to erode my peace. But she's beginning to develop internal boundaries when browsing through my domain. Eventually she'll know what types of behavior I consider acceptable.

-- ED
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