Let me start with I am 15 years old. For the past 7 months I have been taking care of my recently disabled mother. In July my mom got diagnosed with a rare auto immune disorder that rendered her arms and legs (practically) completely useless. I couldn't leave her home alone and had to drop out of school to take care of her, she's a diabetic with a very bad pressure ulcer and I kept coming home to the house trashed from her trying to make herself food and falling so it was clear I needed to be home more. The doctors have her on a ton of steroids and a recovery time of at least 2 years and a full recovery is not promised I started online classes but we couldn't pay for it once she was forced to leave her job and we're currently waiting on her disability check. Anyway, I'm now in night school and my online credits couldn't be transferred so I now have to take summer school as well. I'm so physically and emotionally exhausted, I now drive her everywhere, I do all grocery shopping, cleaning, cooking, all important calls to doctors and lawyers, I even have to cut up her meat for her.
Everyone tells me that I'm so brave and such a good person but I don't want to be anymore!! My mom refuses to get a home health nurse, it makes her feel uncomfortable, and also doesn't want to go to assisted living though it has been offered to her on several occasions. We have no family here, so I'm doing this myself, I have no friends, no one to talk to about any of this. She also takes her anger out on me, she's shoved me, rammed her walker into my legs, yells at me all the time about all the things I do wrong. I just don't want to do this anymore. We plan to move closer to family later this year, her health permitting but I know its still going to fall on me. I feel like im honestly taking care of a toddler, when she's angry she throws her drinks and screams and cries and I know it's mostly because she's angry at her illness and not me but I can't take it.
I'm also scared for my future, I want to go to the university of Miami, its my dream school, but this summer school is really going to set me back and I'm scared that my mom won't be better in time for me to go to college. She's even asked me to consider online classes during college so I can stay home and take care of her. I'm scared that this is all my life will ever be, taking care of my mother until she dies. I get these sick thoughts that I wish she would die just so I wouldn't deal with this pressure and her tantrums and I would actually have a life again. I WOULD NEVER HURT HER OR GIVE HER SECOND RATE CARE THOUGH. Just saying. I cry almost every night and I just want to scream at her that I'm trying my best but I'm just 15. I only have my license because she's disabled, I'm not old enough to get a job. I feel like I'm 30 years old with a baby, I have to feed her, dress her, help her go to the bathroom. I do everything and it all happened so quickly my head is spinning. Its not even like I can take a break, I have no friends to unwind with and no one to leave my mom with.
There isn't much on the internet for kids like me taking care of sick parents so I figured I'd post here for advice and help and for someone to just tell me it's going to be okay i guess. And please don't suggest I talk to her about it, I've tried and she ended up guilt tripping me on how much worse she has it. Thank you for listening to my rant and I appreciate any words of wisdom you could give me.
If 15 is your correct age, you are far too young for this big responsibility. You need to contact adult protective service and tell them what is going on.
Do you have any out of state relatives that would help you get back in school and provide a home for you?
Tell Mom that she does not have a choice in you returning to school. She wants you to care for her at the cost of YOUR future, or maybe she is not thinking about it that way. Have you tried having a rational, calm discussion with her. I find it hard to understand why a parent would want a teenager caring for them.
I thought students had to stay in school until they were 18? Are you working on your GED?
Your mother sounds like she needs some serious help and you need a break. I can't really think of any other way to do that than to call adult protective services.
Why are you so afraid of your mother? She needs your help not your fear.
Your mother's refusal to accept outside help is wrong and you are getting burned out and used in the process. Do you want to stay stuck just like you are or do you want out like a normal 15 year old should be?
Maybe others have some ideas, but this is all that I can think of. Good luck!
But meanwhile you have to do your best to look out for your needs. You need to go to school. You need to have time to study. You need to keep up your grades so you will get into the college of your choice. You need to socialize. You need to hang out with friends. These are not luxuries that you are unreasonably asking for. These are necessities you deserve.
A home health nurse makes your mom feel uncomfortable? Tough cookies! I am sorry, but expecting you to sacrifice for her "comfort" is totally unreasonable. You did not cause her disease. None of this is your fault. I am truly sorry for your mother, but she needs to suck it up and do what she has to do to have a chance of recovering.
Contact APS. Tell them that your mother needs extensive care and that you cannot provide it. You want to see her cared for and getting well. Can they help arrange that? She should not be alone so much, but you have to go to school. If your mother will never forgive you for this, then, I'm sorry, she really isn't much of a mother, is she? But I suspect that her current un-motherly attitude is tightly tied to her disease. She probably can't help it. Forgive her. Love her. And do what is right for her and for you. Get an adult in a professional role who can help you both.
I wish you all the best.
Such fear is the fruit of emotional blackmail and abuse via fear of making the person angry or hurt, an abundant sense of obligation to overlook things that most people to not overlook and take action about and then guilt for even thinking of taking the kinds of actions you need to take for your own well being and the well being of your mother although she might get angry which it sounds like she is already. This emotional blackmail is also responsible for you feeling guilt for writing the post. You may not realize it or may not want to believe it but your mother is not functioning like a loving mother would sick or not sick. She's controlling you and emotionally blackmailing you which is a form of verbal and emotional abuse.
One thing that your really need to realize that in this situation you are the one with all of the real power and not your mother. She wants you to be afraid of the limited power that she has that can only get angry and make throw a thing or two at you but from your description earlier it does not sound like her arms are all that strong to throw all that well and her legs sound so weak that she can't chase you around the house. Nope, the fact is your mother is totally dependent upon you. She can't afford to not have you under control because then who would she be able to depend upon? No one! I hope you let it sink in that you have the power and have no real need to be afraid of your mother or of where you will end up once adults who are professional from APS are called in. People here are trying to help you, but there are things you must do to help yourself with the advice and support we are trying to provide you.,
I'm glad that you had the courage to write this post and I believe you have the courage to call APS to help, not to rat on your mom.
You have plans to move yourself and your mother out of state to some out of state relatives who don't realize how bad off your mother is? Have you told them in plain detail how totally disabled she is and what he current disposition is now? If they don't grasp the seriousness of how needy she is, that is not fair to them and the might not give you the help that you are looking for.Plus,your mother does not need more family members taking care of her. In her condition she needs professional care from adults. If you move yourself and your mother out of state, you will loose the power to have and live your own life, plus have a future.
You basically have two choices.
1. To not call and hope no one ever comes by from CPS or otherwise learns what is really going on inside your house while things get worse and worse in hopes that one day things will just get better on their own and move to another state which is only a way of running away from your problems instead of dealing with them which is not a very grown up approach to life.
2. Your other choice is to make a call to APS and tell them what is going on with your mom, and that you at 15 have the responsibilities of the entire household and your mother's care resting on your shoulders with is not sustainable.
I think everyone on this thread would agree, please make the call if not today, do it on Monday. You are not in a healthy or safe emotional, relational environment. Do something that will help and save both your mom and yourself. You may not feel like you are valuable enough to take care of yourself, but you are!
Please keep posting, keep venting and keep in touch!
I think everyone has given you great advice and I'm so glad that you reached out to this group. I have just a few things to add to all the great ideas that were put here. Do you go to mom's doctor appointments with her? Not just to drive her but to be in the room? You might enlist help from the doctor to while your there in a safer setting. They might guide you to other resources in the area. I also wonder about the steroids that she is on. Any time my husband used to get prednisone to treat an illness, the family headed for the hills. It made him very angry and he's not normally like that. Also, is your mom medicated for the bipolar and depression? She may need an adjustment in her medication. So the other helpful thing that going into the doctor visit would do is to give you a chance to ask about the medications' effects/dosage/etc. They need to know how she is behaving at home and how it's affecting you. If mom or anyone else tells you that you are too young to go in or it's not your business, they are wrong. When all of this care was dropped in your lap, it became your business to know and have access to the doctors. Sending hugs to you.
This is not betrayal. This is not ratting her out to get her in trouble. It is trying to find help for her and for you.This is NOT remotely like a teenager being disgusted with his curfew and calling authorities to make trouble for his parents. This is a mature and thought-out attempt to fix a very dysfunctional situation. I hope you can understand this distinction -- and convince your conscience!
I also understand that you'd be scared where you'll wind up. If you have out-of-state relatives who are willing to help out, perhaps that is where you'll wind up. Does that seem a viable solution? With your level of maturity and level-headedness I'm pretty confident you'll make the most of where ever you wind up. And can it be much worse than the situation you are in now?
Your mother is mentally ill. Not her fault. She now has a rare condition that has disabled her. Also not her fault. Nobody here wants to see your mother punished. We all want to see this situation improved for both your sakes.
Does the night school have a counseling office you could go to to discuss this situation?
APS and CPS are pretty scary options. But you are in a very scary situation. Something must be done.
I want to add that as a child of a disable parent you can also receive an additional 50% of what your Mother is going to be receiving each month. This might help in paying any portion that you might incur for in home health care.
http://www.ssa.gov/dibplan/dfamily.htm#fmax
Look up your local Social Security office and call them Monday. Get the ball rolling sweetie they arent the quickest at starting the payments.
http://www.ssa.gov/dibplan/dfamily4.htm
How was your mothers behaviour towards you before she became disabled with this vasculitis. Had she always controled you with guilt and manipulation?
You said you are back in school does your school have a councelling office. Can you got to see them and tell them everything you have told us. Print out this thread and show it to someone you trust, a counciler or teacher. Invite them to come home with you after school so they can see the state of the house after mom had been alone all day. Make an excuse and say something like. "Hi Mom this is Ms------she just came by to look at my art work" or any excuse you can think of and keep the visit light and brief. Re assure mom it will only take a minute then you will make her a snack or whatever. keep the visit really short and don't go outside to discuss anything leave that for when you meet at school the next day. The bottom line is that you are a child and your mother is abusing you. This is fact not guessing and there are laws against. She is very sick mentally and physically and probably can't help it but that does not alter the fact you both need help desperately. Never mind destroying your life there is a danger of driving to to want to end your own life. We can advise you all we want and the majority of us have lots of life experience and knowledge but in reality you need someone older to make sure the authorities take your situation seriously and take action. It is always easier with a friend at your side. Keep writing to us shelby it really does help to be able to write your thoughts and fears down. Mom is not going to agree to anything voluntarily so don't even try and persude her tell her. She has put you in the position of being the responsible adult in the family so you need to exercise the power she has given you. I know you are afraid I would be too but you have already shown how brave you are. This is not about whether you love her although in a way it is because you will do what has to be done because you do love her. Love and blessings to you Shelby. I have a grand daughter your age and she is equally mature but I can not imagine making her take on your responsibilities
It is a good idea to talk with your principal some more. However, I still suggest that in the crisis you and your mother are in that come Monday morning that you call APC and CPS! This situation at hand needs your full attention now and your energy focused to follow through on.
Not only are you not 18, but your mother cannot apply and be approved for social security disability insurance until she has been out of work for a whole year and the process takes time. Plus, she has to have worked enough years full time to be able to draw these benefits. The older a person is the more work credits are needed to qualify. I know for I am on disability.
It could take a short time of 3-5 months or it could take a couple of years for it to be approved. This is not a given in your life right now. Without your mom being on social security disability insurance, there is no applying for benefits for children of a disabled parent and that only applies if the child is under 18 and must be applied for by the disabled parent after they are awarded disability. Again, I've been there, I know, my two boys received money which was spent according to the guidelines for parents who are the representative payee for their children under 18 as outlined @
http://www.disabilitysecrets.com/resources/social-security-disability/ssdi/payments-representative-payee.htm. There is also an annual report that is required concerning this money about how it was spent and how much was put in an interest bearing account for the child's future use. the payee, the parent, cannot use the money for their own personal expenses like paying for their own home health care. Like you wrote, this process is complicated.
Right now is not the time for you to look into it. Right now, you have a crisis to respond to. That is something that you can do something about. This disability money application and award plus money for you as a child under 18 is not anything that you have or can do anything about right now.
Focus on what you have to deal with now and what you can do something about now. Veronica91 and Jeannegibbs have given you wonderful statements of support and advice. Listen to them. You are going a good job. Hang in there. I know it is tough, but there is light at the end of the tunnel and it is not an oncoming train. Keep posting and talking with us and together we will get through this crisis with you.
Please accept what help is out there! Go to college and make a life for yourself! APS is there to help her and you will always care about her but the expectation that you were put on this earth to take care of your mother to the detriment of your own life is wrong. I really regret taking over the care of my mother at such a young age and if I could do it over again I wouldn't have. The adults around me should have stepped in to take over.
My mother was oblivious to the fact that I didn't want to give up my life to take care of her. She just assumed we were "pals" for life. I was in my 30's before I voiced my displeasure. You need to emphasize that you're looking our for BOTH your futures not just hers. You have every right to your own future!!!!
How are things going financially at home with your mother not being able to work since becoming disabled last July, taking her to see the doctor, regular household monthly expenses, and any cost involved with going to night school?