I am not happy about my "new normal" and cringe every time the phone rings or I receive an e-mail from the NH. Just cannot get past the fact that I am the one who handles her finances, personal shopping and all interactions with nurses, social workers, activities coordinators, dieticians, etc. when in fact I would rather not. I have read everyone's advice and implemented many helpful strategies found here, but I still feel used and abused by my mother. I have spent many years in therapy (although not lately) and have read many books, articles and on-line blogs to understand how to best love with boundaries. I was feeling very positive and content with physical and emotional distance from her until she was forced out of independent living after 2 falls and Covid. My father divorced her many years ago, my only sibling does not want anything to do with her except for holidays and other relatives/friends are no longer in the picture. She is nasty with the staff and makes unreasonable demands even though she is on Medicaid but wants to be the "Queen Bee" and act like she has all the money in the world for frivolous spending. I understand that she is grieving over the loss of independence and is suffering from many chronic conditions. However, she did not take care of herself having been a smoker, overweight and out of shape. Am I the only one who feels that all the wounds from the past are ripped open each time she lies, manipulates and puts me down?
You also do not need to act as her POA or advocate.
If you walked away, she would still be cared for and if she needed an advocate the nursing home would involve DHHS and they would do an emergency petition that would make her a ward of the state and she would have a court appointed guardian to act in the capacity you are now, without the history.
I don't usually think walking away is a good idea but, I know there are people that can destroy you if you don't protect yourself. Only you can decide if you can walk away and be okay with it.
You could still visit, if you chose to.
You matter and your well-being matters. Don't let her need to abuse you cause you to lose that.
Sometimes distant nieces or great second cousins or whoeverer are asked to be POA, as the only viable family member.
They may choose what level of involvement - from frequent visitor to completely hands-off in the background.
They may outsource many tasks to accountant, law firm, or geriatric care manager.
Someone can then be authorised to authorise any purchases the NH may request for your Mother eg haircuts, more clothing, new shoes.
You could choose to be completely non involved. Think about what feels right for you.
1) You don’t have to visit. You don’t need to witness the ‘Queen Bee’ act, the nastiness or the unreasonable demands.
2) She is on Medicaid, so the NH takes most of her money and keeps her small amount of spending money in a trust account that she can ask for. That isn’t enough for ‘frivolous spending’. The NH can’t give her what isn’t in the trust fund. She shouldn’t have finances that you need to handle at all.
3) She needs very little in the way of purchases. Her clothes will take a long time to wear out, her creams etc should last for ages. The NH will have some residents who have no family left at all, and they will have a ‘personal shopping’ system for buying what is needed. Ask about it.
4) You can cut right back on interaction with ‘nurses, social workers, activities coordinators, dieticians’ and anyone else involved in her care. You give them permission to make their own best decisions, without your involvement. They probably think that they are doing you a favour by keeping you in the loop – they aren’t! Once again, remember that some residents have no family left at all, and this is what happens for them. The staff can deal with the ‘nastiness’, and you don’t need to be an intermediary or to apologise for bad behavior.
5) You can limit involvement, and the information that comes to you, to serious emergencies.
If you look at this list, don’t feel guilty if you decide to go along with all of it. However you can pick and choose what you will do, and what you won’t do. You can also change your mind as you see how things work out. You may find that getting rid of some of the stresses means that you can keep a ‘decent’ amount of involvement without going around the bend.
Best wishes, and I hope this helps!
Now that your Mom has passed from well abled into dementia it is too late to do this easily, but it can be done.
What you should know first is that, if there is no other family member willing to take this on, then Mom will fall into guardianship of the state. At that point you will have little to zero input in her placement or her finances, though--with Mom being on medicaid--there may be few finances to worry about.
Once you have decided to resign you will need an elder law attorney; it is more difficult to resign care of a person with dementia that it is with one who is well and competent. You will need to notify each and every entity that you deal with that you are no longer POA.
Short of resigning, I don't know what boundaries you can set up for yourself, but sounds like you will need some. You say Mom was removed from independent living and now is in a nursing home. You might consider a visit with admin to work with a her about a careplan that precludes Mom's constant outreach to you.
I am so sorry you are enduring this. There are so few choices, and this must be so anxiety provoking. I surely do wish you the best.
I took in her personal toiletries, right there next to her bed, but for some reason the aides did not use it. They used what they provided. They have toothpaste and lotions. She has a Personal needs account where a small amount of money (in my State $50) is placed in the acct monthly. This can be used on haircuts, snacks, sodas whatever she needs. If you buy her something with your money, you can be reimbursed from the acct. It has to be spent because it effects the 2k in assets (amount maybe different in your state) she is allowed. Its counted as an asset. If you want, you can put xrtra money into the acct.
I allowed the NH to become payee of Moms SS and pension. I figured if there was any problems with either after Mom passed (like pulling back payments too soon, which happens) the NH would have to deal with that. Ask the financial office for the form allowing them to become payee.
Since Mom is only allowed about 2k in assets, what other expenses does she incur? Medicare is her primary and Medicaid secondary so should have no other health insurance. You should NOT have any out of pocket expenses. If Mom does not have the money, then she does not have the money.
You should need no interaction with anyone now Mom has been there 15 months. Time to tell them to handle things themselves. Unless its an emergency, you really no longer need input. POA does not mean you have to constantly be involved or run Moms errands. If they are having problems with Mom then they need to handle it. Tell them you need to back away. I give you permission to do this.😊
You are the compassionate child. The one who wants to make everything right. The one who is trying to find love from a person who can't give it. She doesn't know how. And you don't deserve the abuse she hands out. She has lost friends and family because of how she treated them. Her heath is the way it is because she didn't take care of herself. This is not your fault. You can't fix it.
Your profile says nothing about Dementia being involved. You may want to tell Mom that you are going no contact. You no longer will take the abuse she dishes out. She is on her own so she better be nice to the staff because they do more for the nice residents. That the NH can take care of her basic needs. Then you talk to the Director of Nursing. Tell her you want no more calls unless its an emergency. That Mom is competent enough to express what she wants and doesn't want. She has been there 15 months so they should understand why u need to back off. If you receive any calls from them, other than an emergency thank them for the call but that you have asked that other than for an emergency, you were not to get calls. Its now between them and Mom.
You can block Mom. Call her when you feel like it. As soon as she gets started tell her you are hanging up and hang up. If you don't want to visit DON'T. She has brought this on herself.
dear taylorb, you wrote, "you are not alone, try and find some me time and try not to let it stress you"
wise words for us all.
currently putting it into practice: ME TIME. :) :) :)
i wish us all a gooood sunday, today! :)
dear OP, i hope many people have great advice for you. i send you lots of warm thoughts and compassion. it's very hard. hug!!
i don't have any advice. i'll just type some funny quotes here, to at least try to make us smile:
--"Work hard, complain harder."
--"Bad luck = right time, wrong place."
--"Try & try until you cannot succeed."
--"Procrastinate now. Don't put it off."
--"Given a choice, you will always choose wrong."
--"Help others and you will (not) reap the rewards!" 🙂
--"Just wanted to tell you I'm not thinking about you."
--"Happiness is just sadness that hasn't happened yet." 🙂
It took me DECADES to make peace with the fact that although her tragic condition resulted from my birth, I wasn’t “complicit” in its cause.
She truly did what she was able to do, but only because her 4 younger sisters were a part of my early years was I able to access a fairly normal adulthood.
I know the path you walk, and I will tell you that you MUST divorce YOURSELF from “…the wounds from the past…” to free yourself from the treadmill of her destruction.
Your description of your current life suggests that you are still in an emotional “push-pull” with your mother, and SHE won’t put the rope down, so for your welfare, YOU MUST.
I know this, because I lived your life until I was in my middle 20s.
NOTHING you have written about your mother’s current life is intertwined in YOUR life.
You didn’t make her the woman she is. Caring for her is an onerous occupation, but what she is or why she’s who she is now is not part of YOUR PRESENT.
Make your contributions to her management a “mitzvah” - the gift that you freely give, and expect nothing back. It took me YEARS to perfect my ability to do this, but it can be a wonderful release when and if you do.
YOU are worth the effort it takes. Reward yourself, tangibly or otherwise, for each task you feel obliged to perform. Cut your actions toward her to essentials, NOTHING that is “extra”. You have observed that she is not ABLE to accept your kindness and generosity, so STOP OFFERING IT.
Seek the help of others to do the basics.
Last, and probably at this point, MOST IMPORTANT, you must give yourself 100% permission to IGNORE her lies, slights, and insults. Her caregivers ignore her, and couldn’t care less what pretensions and actions they observe from her. Your welfare needs you to adopt the same policy.
It is a difficult life being the child of a parent who is unable to express the gentler loving feelings that we all crave, but you can become a good parent to yourself.
I did. Come back to the Forum when you need a renewed dose of resolve. You can expect to receive it here.
After 2 years of being the sole carer during lockdown, I got to October last year and I was having very dark thoughts, despite having a loving marriage of 35 yrs, 4 beautiful grown children, grandchildren, a fulfilling career and a comfortable home, etc. I was overwhelmed at the thought of being solely responsible as POA, which Mum took pains to tell everyone I’d tricked her into signing! My brother has been out of the picture for a while - he came back briefly when I was moving mum into extra care housing to help. And he really did help, but he was rewarded with her full on victriol, so has retreated again. I realise his absence was self- protection.
The best thing that ever happened to me was that my desperation reached such a bad place that I finally sought counselling. I began in January and already have made such strides in coming to understand the dynamics. My counsellor has helped me to work through the sadness and grief of a mother who wasn’t able to meet my child’s needs. I’m actually in a place now where I can have empathy for her, set some boundaries to make it possible to take care of her without it being at the expense of my own mental health. I’ve also realised that her behaviour has nothing to do with me and is a result of multiple childhood traumas she suffered - a coping strategy, which has devastated her life, as well as mine.
Consider, if you can, seeking professional support. It has changed my life for the better and I’m able to care for my Mum as I wanted to, with professional carers, whilst still being able to take care of myself.
Good luck. Take care of yourself. You matter!
As the caregiver child in my family of origin, I struggle with some of the same issues, including siblings who seem to have no issues.
As for the wounds of the past being ripped open every time she lies, manipulates, and puts you down, I think that happens to us all. You're a human being and you have feelings. You don't have to tolerate abuse from her or anyone else and you shouldn't. You don't have to take every call from her. You can hang up if the conversation starts getting abusive. When you visit her, you can get up and leave if she gets snide and abusive. It's okay to.
My last care client who I was a caregiver to for seven years never drank, smoked, ate right, exercised regularly, and wasn't overweight at any time in her life was invalid from dementia by the time she was 70 years old. By the time she hit 71 she was bedridden in diapers needing to be washed, fed, and dressed by caregivers. She lived like that for eight years.
My grandfather who drank and smoked his whole life dropped dead at the age of 97 while arguing with his neighbor about a fence. He was literally smoking a cigarette when he died. You never tell in this life.
Remember the movie, "Network" and line, "I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore." Limit yourself to occasional FaceTime visits IF you're so inclined.
I am at a loss to understand how you came to accept these without appreciating that they in themselves made you responsible for all decision-making related to your mother's financial and personal wellbeing, but I do know that you are by no means alone in this. Goodness knows how many well-intentioned family members cheerfully fill in the forms and then forget all about them; and even more never ever get round to reading the explanatory notes and guidance that usually accompany them.
You don't have to do it, you know. It is your choice. Everybody else has got away from her, and there's nothing to stop you doing the same. Is there?
My mother has NPD and the rest of us have suffered from it. And now she has Alzheimers. As an adult, I chose to go no contact several times because I could feel her influence affecting how I was raising my kids and I didn't want that for them. I'm very proud of the fact that I have taken my experience as her child, worked through the many issues that caused, and grown into a healthy adult with healthy adult children BECAUSE of who she was (anybody can be a good role model OR a cautionary tale). Now, after burying two husbands and a sister, she considers me to be the only member of her family remaining (she has two stepchildren who care for her quite a lot but she has no regard for them). After fifteen years of estrangement, she contacted me five months after her second husband died and I went to visit and found her malnourished and showing distinct signs of dementia. That was three years ago. After one visit, she made me her DPOA, MPOA, sole heir and Executrix. Then she declared she no longer wanted to make financial decisions. She has a sizeable estate that came to her through the hard work and wise planning of her second husband. She refused to consider that his children should have any part of the estate or the decision-making regarding the management of it (I keep them informed as a courtesy and I plan to share the estate when the time comes). I feel like this is largely because she felt she had to buy my cooperation and loyalty. To be honest, it IS a lot of money, but if I didn't feel considerable love and respect for both my dad and my step-dad, and if I didn't feel they would be pleased that I am looking out for her, I would and could walk away. All the money in the world isn't worth the abuse she doles out sometimes. Most days I do okay. If she is behaving badly, I position myself as a caretaker - nothing more. Because of her Alzheimers, I try to be very consistent in everything I do- visit at the same times, call at the same times, etc. If she becomes too abusive, I leave right away and tell her I will see her in a few days and I let staff at her AL know I won't be there as planned. I don't feel guilty for leaving her alone on Christmas or Mother's Day - she chose to be alone because of her bad actions. I don't feel guilty for taking breaks. And I try real hard not to fall into old patterns of avoidance when insults start - I stand up to them as I would with anyone else and I leave if she doesn't back down. If I find myself feeling the old weighted down victim-y feeling I felt before I got on top of things, I back away. First and foremost, I have to protect my own mental health. I've worked too hard to get to where I am to allow her to drag me back down to where she had me as a kid. If I ever found myself unable to maintain my own healthy mind, I would not hesitate to step aside and allow someone else to do the work of maintaining her. BTW, I know it's mortifying to watch your mom abuse staff at her NH, but they know how to deal with people like that. At least that's what they tell me at Mom's AL.
I know that feeling all too well. I moved my mom to assisted living recently to ease the stress on myself because I was taking care of her and her home on top of my own family and my own home. I almost gave up guardianship because I just couldn't do it anymore. Once she was in AL, I thought that would calm down but then AL staff called me all day long about this or that for a couple of weeks. It stressed me out and overwhelmed me to see their number pop up constantly. I eventually had to speak with the director and let them know to please not call me unless it was an emergency or something I needed to OK on. Because I had my own life, job, and family and it was a constant disruption to call about things I didn't need to be aware of.
I also came to terms with that just because she was my mom, didn't mean I had to visit her. My mom was also very verbally abusive and mean to me as a kid. She was terrible to me after my dad passed recently and it made me resent her even more. I still took care of her in regards to getting her care. I felt like I had to visit her in AL because I was the only child, but I finally accepted that it was making me more depressed even thinking about going there because I honestly just didn't have the energy.
If you decide to give up POA/Guardianship, you might feel guilty, but do it for your mental health. You have to take care of yourself at the end of the day, and don't let people guilt or manipulate you otherwise.
You are not alone. My mom is a narcissist and have spent a lifetime seeking her approval. Last fall, while still doing well (she just turned 92) I wanted to discuss with her and my two siblings the impending elder care issues, etc. I am only child that lives locally. I had been providing all "assisted living" (i.e., shopping, cooking, laundry, etc.) No one wanted to talk about it. However, the one decision that was made was to transfer her accumulated savings to my brother (out of state) because (I suppose as a male) he would be able to make good decisions (I'm a lawyer, he's not.) I didn't know she had done this unbeknownst to me. I found out after she fell in January and I had to deal with all of the aftermath being the only one here. Anyway, it was just a final straw to a lifetime of being thought of as "chopped liver" even though I'm tap dancing my heart out just to be viewed as the good girl. So..... I am struggling like you between being an empathetic daughter (she's now in nursing home and not very happy) and establishing the long overdue (but very necessary) boundaries I've needed to manage my life in balance (work, husband, adult child, friends, hobbies, volunteering, etc.) Take a breath, and a day at a time, and know that you are not alone. I feel those scars picked at, poked at, and that sometimes bleed, too. Keep your chin up and know that YOU matter and deserve to be happy and live your own life. She has lived hers and you are doing your best.