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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU unreasonable to expect him to come home from abroad and set up life here instead of there

107 replies

Scotblue · 27/02/2023 14:33

I am going to be honest in this. It might be triggering for some.

My mother was overbearing to my brother.
She was overly invested in him even when he was well into adulthood. She pitied him for being male and she did everything for him.
If the two of us got sick or broke, she only ever really cared for him.

She did everything for him - cooking and cleaning and paying bills and allowed everything free with no consequences.
He took advantage of that.
He became rude and obnoxious. He had girlfriend at one stage. My mother never left her true feelings known to him but I knew then. I saw it in her face that would stew every time he brought her home. She hated the girlfriend.
I think my mother saw her as a threat.
He was bad at one point with his drinking/drugs. He used to drive home in a state and not even know his name or where is phone was or where his car keys were even though he drove his vehicle home.
My mother always blamed the girlfriend for him and his bad way even though I never saw her in a bad way. She just refused to believe that he was responsible for himself. Eventually he lost his girlfriend and his job. I knew then, it was an addiction he had.

Eventually he got a chance to get a visa and go away abroad.

Since he left my mother hasn't been the same. She's pining for him. She does things aimlessly around the home.
For example she was wiping shoes with baby wipes then she took a pile of used baby wipes and wiped the counters down with the same baby wipes before wiping the the outside and the inside of some of the kitchen appliances with the same wipes. I just thought it was fairly mindless.

Even before he left I had suspicions that maybe she was going senile.
There was a few things happening that wasn't quite right with her. Aside from her obsession with my brother there was a few things not quite right. I think maybe there was something happening like the possibility of a dementia brewing for a long time but maybe she was living her life through my brother and it wasn't seen or observed a few years ago because her focus was on him. I remember an incident a few years ago from her.
I received an email from my aunt - her sister who lives abroad.
Work had me booked for a stint but when I became free I did tell my mother about the email from the aunt. She lost the plot at me. She was shouting and raging and fuming because I got an email from the aunt and in her words I didn't tell her but thats not what happened. I did tell her when I was free to do it. It wasn't on the exact minute the email came in but she was told about the email.
It was unreasonable.

I let my brother know last summer that there were things happening at home and our mother wasn't behaving normally for the past few months and I told them that I am not qualified to diagnosis but it looks to me maybe it's some form of a dementia brewing with her.
At this stage I would put money on a dementia happening with our mother but she's not too far gone down the rabbit hole a dementia progression.

My brother is talking about gaining sponsorship from his employer abroad.
I know I should be happy for him but to be honest I am somewhat resentful of it.
I think it's only a matter of time before things will progress with our mother. I think it's unfair that the load of caring will fall on me by default because I am still at home. I think it should be shared between us.
I think he could set up a life at home for himself and he doesn't need to move across the world for work. There were opportunities available at home at the time if he choose to seek them out but he choose something different and a life of drink and drugs at the time.

I know my mother isn't too far deep in this suspicion of a dementia just yet but I think it's happening. There was an incident yesterday at home and I realise now that I won't be able to care for her.
She has no Internet skills and she decided she wanted me to help her with some internet shopping.
I told her that I wasn't able to do it today (as in yesterday).
I was sick and I didn't have the money in my account either. Usually when I help her with the Internet shopping like that, the process can take hours.
I would have been looking at 4 or 5 hours yesterday.
I was too unwell to do Internet shopping for her.
The stuff she wanted wasn't urgent.
I was telling her I will help her but will be mid week.
She wasn't able to understand it. She wasn't able to tolerate a 'no'. She was shouting and being rude and disrespectful to me and it reminded me of a temper tantrum from a toddler.
It dawned on me then. She wasn't able to be reasoned with and it's just something else to add to the suspension of dementia.

My brother doesn't believe me when I am talking and trying to raise awareness that there's something happening.
He says she sounds fine on the phone whenever he calls.

AIBU to expect him to come home. Not now but maybe do another year on the visa and then return home and share the load of any of the caring work.

There was an incident last week where it my mother wants to sign the family home over to my brother.
This is just quite simply sickening to me. There will likely come a time where she will need more care and I will probably be expected to do it all while I get nothing in return except for grief. I get a sense she doesn't appreciate it me at home. Even though I am providing company and help. She had no respect for me yesterday and it was rich considering she wanted me to spend my money on her wants. All she wants is my brother.

OP posts:
Codlingmoths · 27/02/2023 21:15

You need to understand that there are some things you can change/do and some things you can’t. You can’t make her give you an equal inheritance. This is probably good news because what difference does it make to you if it gets sold for care fees? You will be sad to see it go but isn’t that better than sad and resentful to see it handed to your brother? Also, why would you agree with him the house should be kept if you think it will be given to him? Why are you working to provide him with an inheritance?
help your mum as much as you are comfortable with and able to, and no more. Tell your brother you’re at capacity, and can’t do anymore. And it’s lovely she seems normal for a chat on the phone but a chat on the phone doesn’t get food into the house and cooked, why doesn’t he call her and do an internet shop to the house while talking to her? I think perhaps you should look for counselling to help draw your boundaries.

Thepurplelantern · 27/02/2023 21:32

This is a very messy situation @Scotblue I think I would be advising you to first get some counselling for yourself just to get your own thinking in a row on this. Both myself and my DH come from families as dysfunctional as your own. They bring with them some significant challenges when care of an elderly person creeps in.

Take care.

Snugglemonkey · 27/02/2023 21:37

Yes, yabu. Your brother is no obligation to take care of your mum. Perhaps he wants to steer well clear of this difficult family dynamic.

It seems you feel aggrieved because you feel the burden falls to you. You also have choices. You do not have to do anything. You do not owe her anything.

Your brother was raised to know it was ok to suit himself, you were not. The situation now reflects that. Yet neither of you needs to stay in that role. Unless you want to.

Lndnmummy · 27/02/2023 21:51

AcrossthePond55 · 27/02/2023 16:55

You can't make your brother provide care for your mother

You can't make your sister provide care for your mother

If you choose to care for your mother despite your feelings then that's on you. You don't have to do it and you shouldn't feel resentful of your Bro & Sis because they made the choice that you are afraid to make for yourself.

As far as 'not wanting to sell the house', why should you care if it's sold if it means your mother is cared for by someone other than you? If you expect that your brother will be left the house you aren't losing anything and you are being relieved of a 'burden'.

The voice of reason, year after year. So much cyber love and respect for you @AcrossthePond55

ilovesooty · 27/02/2023 21:58

MrsTerryPratchett · 27/02/2023 15:51

Your brother is a drug addict and is selfish.

No, he did have an issue with drugs and now doesn't is how I'm reading it. He actually made healthy choices moving and prioritising himself over a deeply unhealthy parent.

Good for him, I say.

I agree. He's managed to make a much more stable life for himself abroad, and in his position I wouldn't be coming home.

maddy68 · 27/02/2023 22:07

Sounds like your brother has escaped from her overpowering clutches. Why should he upturn his life to come back. ? He's made a new one. You should be glad for him. You had exactly the same opportunities

You also don't need to deal with this.

Why are you allowing yourself to be a martyr?

AcrossthePond55 · 28/02/2023 00:23

Lndnmummy · 27/02/2023 21:51

The voice of reason, year after year. So much cyber love and respect for you @AcrossthePond55

thanks @Lndnmummy

Much love to you too. And my best wishes that life is treating you and yours well.

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