My almost 89 year old mom gets crabby frequently now and wants me to listen to her complaints without responding. (I spend at least three days a week with her to keep her engaged in outside activities.) That's easy to do when the complaints aren't out of line, but she complains a lot about my siblings, especially my brother, when it is undeserved. If I try to explain his side of things she explodes and says she just wants me to listen. I have been trying to get her to go to a counselor so I'm not in the middle but she refuses. My brother lives with her part time and has a girlfriend. Most of her complaints about him relate to his relationship with his girlfriend (for example, he takes her places but he won't take my mom anywhere). Are their tricks/techniques for listening to irrational complaints? My brother doesn't take my mom many places except to doctor's appointments but he is otherwise good to her. Help!
My MIL I think felt she should come before her DILs. She was in for a surprise, wives always came first. So much so with two sons that wives family trumped the sons. Not with my husband and me, our families lived in the same town. Then MIL moved to FL meaning she saw the son that did for her a lot less.
I guess you are just going to have to listen. I would tell her though, just because you listen doesn't mean you agree.
For yourself, reflecting her feelings back to her without agreeing may help " I can see that that upsets you", "I hear you are very frustrated by this", and such. Defending your brother is further aggravating her and is not accomplishing anything good. He is satisfied with what he is doing and doesn't need you to defend him.
Set some boundaries - if your mother continues to complain then limit your visit and tell her you will come back when she is feeling better. I know it is hard to sit and listen to someone who b*tches all the time - especially about the same subject. My mother did that and wanted me to agree with her. Mostly I couldn't agree, so I limited my time with her when she complained. "Gotta go, I have errands to run."
Another technique is distraction - change the subject to something that interests her and even if she is negative, it upsets you less.
Finally detaching emotionally will help. Here are some points on detaching:
Accept that others are responsible for their own choices. (e.g.complaining)
Anger – deal with it in a healthy way.
Blame – don’t blame and don’t accept blame.
Consequences – face them and see that others experience consequences of their choices too. (you are facing what listening to the complaints is doing to you and looking for ways to deal with it e.g. limit visits as a consequence for your mum.)
Decide what you are willing to do and what you are not willing to do. (how much time are you willing to listen to her complaints)
Detachment is not a feeling so much as a choice of behaviors, though the feelings should (will) follow the behaviors.
Detachment means you can maintain positive behaviors towards others – kindness, compassion.
Don’t enable the unhealthy behaviors of others. (continual complaining is unhealthy)
Focus on yourself and what is good for you. (It is not good for you to have to listen to complaints all the time)
Forgive, but don’t forget the need to protect yourself.
Refuse to be manipulated e.g., emotional blackmail
Respond, don’t react - be proactive.
Separate yourself - physically, emotionally, spiritually, mentally, socially from others behaviors/feelings if necessary
Set boundaries.
Say “No”.
Space –create it between you and them.
Try not to take their behaviors personally.
Good luck. You have to look after yourself too. I doubt it helps your mother for you to listen to her complaints for very long, and it certainly doesn't help you.
BTW - I am 81 and my daughter wouldn't put up with that from me and I am glad that she wouldn't.
One last thing - does your mother have dementia or is she in pain? There may be a health reason she is more crabby.
I think God has given me things to strengthen my patience muscle. lol
You two will have to talk about it. you don’t address that in your question so I don’t know how off my suggestion is.
As far as listening to her complaints, I would suggest when she starts, ask her if she wants advice or if she just wants you to listen. If she says she just wants you to listen, then be nice & friendly and gently say you can give her 15 minutes but you’ve got other things to do. After that, tell her you’ll be back later to listen some more when you can take a break from them. And then do it. Be consistent.
be polite and positive but the most important thing for yourself is be consistent. Back up what you say. Even if you don’t have something to do really, go away for a while, 15-20 minutes. turn on the shower and hide in the bedroom, whatever it takes. it’s the respect you have to establish with her more than the time it’s self and only you can establish that. And you really can. A good thing to do too, is to Surprise her occasionally and sit down and offer venting time when she’s not expecting it and then noting your time limit to yourself, and make an excuse to go when time is up. It’s so hard, I know Good luck & God bless
I will try being patient and give her a time period, as per your suggestion. When I do try to listen without saying anything, she tells me that she knows by the look on my face what I'm thinking, lol. We have that in common I guess because I always know what she's thinking too:-)
Not my mother, but I was fond of a Career Complainer who was a bit like this on the subject of my (lovely) SIL and her (excellent) husband. She would ring me up for an enjoyable hour's slandering of them both. When it got actually slanderous, as in actionable, I would exclaim "D-! You can't say things like that, he'll sue!" but most of the time she was content if I just chipped in sound effects like "gosh, really?" and "tut" and "dear dear."
Or, you can try the Socratic method and ask questions instead of making comments. The difficulty here is not sounding sarcastic or overtly incredulous.
E.g., if you have to respond to "he never takes me out to dinner," "hmmm, I wonder why?" will not go down well. Try: "is there anywhere you'd love to go for a special occasion?" and see if that opens the subject up in a nice way.
Also - I should have said this first - make sure the complaints are irrational, all the way through to the bottom. They may just be in disguise, with something real in there. You say she's *become* crabby. Have you noticed any other changes?
My brother really is doing the best he can, and I think he avoids Mom because she doesn't approve of much of what he does. On the other hand, he built his home five years ago and has never taken her out there with him. He used to promise that they'd sit on the porch and watch the sun set, but then the place became a gathering place for him and his friends to play cards, drink beer, and hang out. I think he wanted a place where he could be himself and not be treated like a child. Mom's well meaning, but she can't break from her vision of my brother as her little boy. She worries about him being cold, working too much, wearing the wrong clothes for the weather, hanging out with the wrong people etc. She also finds his habits annoying because he smokes and isn't the neatest guy in the world. (He's pretty sloppy and she likes everything neat and clean.) My brother goes to his own house to be a 57 year old man who makes his own decisions. He told me he has to escape from Mom's complaints sometimes.
Mom was a good mom when we were growing up and I want to make her later years happy, but it's hard because she gets so negative now. I take her just about any place she wants to go and suggest activities for both of us. My other siblings (a sister and brother who live nearby) also visit her often and have her over to their homes or take her out, so she does have visitors and gets out of the house pretty often. She also still has a car and drives herself short distances occasionally. She isn't socially isolated.
Sorry for going on and on but I am feeling a little worn out. I want to be Mom's friend and companion, not the person she complains to. I wish she would talk to a counselor but she refuses. Her doctor suggested it too.
That is very beyond helpful. Anyone struggling with this can be, "I cannot listen to chronic complaints. Because I have self-accountability for my actions, I won't be around it for I do not want it to rub off me and I do it myself!"
I'm afraid it doesn't make me very hopeful. I think you are right to think that your mother needs a proper assessment; and unfortunately what you'd be looking for is changes in her brain which explain her negativity, constant criticisms, and painfully low mood.
But. If her doctor suggested a counsellor, the doctor must also recognise the need for a specialist consult. Rather than you asking her to do this, won't he? Can't he tell her he needs further and better information to manage her health as well as possible? - it has the great virtue of being true!
Won’t take long for her attitude to change!
I would clearly state I am not going to spend my time listening to your complain. If you plan to spend the day complaining, then I am taking you right back home.
If she continues, ask her "Why would brother take you on a social outing when all you do is complain the entire time?"
One thing I have done is find a distraction, cooking on stove, important phone call, etc.
I tell mom that unless she wants a burned dinner that I have to get back to cooking, make a phone call, anything like that.
Several year’s ago my mom started getting real crabby & that was so out of character for her. When I took her to a doctor appointment I brought it up. (I didn’t tell my mom prior to the appt that I was going to talk to her doc about it.) Her doctor simply said, “we can take care of that easily”! He started her on an anti depressant. Wow! What a huge difference that made after a few weeks. Now we have our lovely, happy & good natured mama back.
Just a thought. Good luck!
Lynn
I think you are well within your rights to tell your mother you will not listen to her complaints about brother, his girlfriend, or other siblings, and then follow through by getting up and walking away from her. As another poster said, this type of complaining can be contagious -- the toxicity leaks into other areas of family life. It also turns innocent people (like the girlfriend) into scapegoats, which isn't fair and can do real damage.
Your mother may react to this boundary with rage, but you don't have to listen to it. Walk away.
By the way, I have to chuckle at the advice that poor brother take mom out for a meal once a week. Do you really believe this would satisfy your mother? I doubt it. She is busy hurrumphing at the attention brother shows his girlfriend. Oh, that one weekly meal could fix that!
You seem like a very smart and compassionate person. Best wishes as you figure this out!
His 2 sisters encouraged the “venting” & would join in; now they are just like their mom. One brother moved 3 hours away & cut off all ties with everyone, and his children are lovely, well-adjusted adults now. Youngest brother moved 12 hours away with his wife & 2 small children. His wife, thinking she could change our toxic MIL with kindness, fell into the trap like I and our other SIL did.
When MIL would start in with “venting” (slanderous, made up insults), she first tried defending us & then went the ignore & say “oh what a shame” route. MIL was thrilled because she found a new sounding board & would call her a few times a week to unload. Poor SIL — this went on for months & the burden was too much for her because she knew we were doing so much for MIL & yet she still trash-talked us. SIL would then unload on her husband, or he would overhear the venting. He, in turn, felt obligated to defend us to her & got mad at her for “being disloyal” to us. It started to cause a wedge in their marriage. He also would repeat to my husband, his brother, the back-stabbing going on while my husband, I, and our 3 adult sons were catering to our in-laws’ wants/needs.
Huge blowup ensued; MIL brought up slights, both real and imaginary, from over 30 years ago (when we were dating!) and we all blocked her from social media and from calls/texts to our cells. It’s been a year and I have never felt so at ease with life.
All this to say that once-in-a-while “venting” can be ignored with “oh what a shame” or “hmmm”. On-going, negative bashing should be cut off at the 1st complaint each & every time. Anything else is encouraging her and implicit that you are agreeing with her. Well, that is how it was with DH’s family.
Does brother know she is doing this?
Mom wants to stick with her own doctors, but her own doctor has suggested a mental health evaluation, hasn't he?
What part of "mom, you are crabby because you are depressed and there's treatment for that" doesn't she get?
Get up and walk away when she crabs. Say "mom, that's not you talking, it's the depression. You need to get treated".
I have a question for you about depression and if the patient doesn’t want a doctor to know. I suspect my mom has mild depression at times. Who can blame her? 93 with Parkinson’s. Whenever the doctor asks about her being depressed, she always says no. Is this common for seniors? Should I speak to her doctor privately about this? She says she doesn’t want meds. So confusing at times, wanting to respect our parents, keep our sanity and bottom line, do what is best. Know what I mean? Thanks for listening. I value your support.
Parents screw up too. It’s nice when they admit it. Some do admit it. Some don’t. Just like kids. Some do, some don’t. Not sure why. Pride? Never learned to? Whatever...
I agree we can always work on patience skills.
As for her complaining - about the only things you can do is just tune it out and mmmm-hmmm her to death (like the old images of dad reading the paper at the table while mom drones on!), OR let her go on a bit and try to divert the conversation, or come up with a pretense to leave. Chalk her negative comments to what they are - nothing. In one ear, out the other. You can't change her, only your reactions to it. Certainly try to avoid correcting or arguing with her, as this will accomplish nothing other than to work you up. It isn't worth it.
Some people just thrive on this kind of behavior. Especially prevalent in elders, but it really doesn't know age boundaries! Our mother used to bash/trash talk various people (brothers, her own sisters, my SILs, my ex, her "friends" in the condo area, my kids' SOs.) It was nothing new, but certainly can ramp up with old age (and loss of filters!) I used to think to myself if those friends or relatives ever knew what she said about them, they'd probably not speak to her again! I'm certain she probably trash talked me as well, when I wasn't around! It can be toxic, so yeah, it takes effort to let it go and purge it. As for my former SILs, one was long divorced from my brother and later passed away following surgery. The last time she started in on her, I swore if she ever brought it up again I would lambaste her, say the woman is dead, LET IT GO! Turns out that next time never happened. Dementia crept in and the topic didn't come up again, thankfully. At this point, her complaints might be there's nothing to do here (MC.) Can't tell her you had nothing to do at home in your condo either, but here that's because you choose not to participate in any activities - some maybe of no interest, others she just declines. Well... choose your bed and lie in it!!
So long as you know your brother is doing the best he can, be supportive of him. Don't relay the negative comments to him, just be thankful TO him for what he does to help out! Laughter is the best medicine, so try to laugh it off with him! I wish my brothers would take more initiative in visiting/interacting with mom. She has already started to forget who they are today (no clue who YBs kids were, or that he even had been married/had kids!) I try to keep those memories alive with chat and pix when I visit. I had the girls' mother send me recent pix and it did bring back some memory of them, but her comment was that they looked "Irish"! Pig-headed old thoughts from wayyy back in the day! But of course they WOULD look Irish, if there is any such thing, since their mom has Irish ancestry! My son's wife - who is she, she looks like a foreigner... Those kind of comments irk me, but I do realize that this is old ingrained thoughts from when she was growing up - not due to dementia or old age, it is just who she is.