Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not want to care for my mum every morning?

219 replies

Partiallyclosed · 23/06/2023 09:29

First of all I need to say that the title makes me sound an awful dd but hear me out, so sorry it’s long winded.

I am 50, married with a 17 year old ds and 15 year old dd.

My parents are in their early 80’s. Dad is in good health but sadly my lovely mum is not well. She is bent over with osteoporosis, has a pacemaker/heart disease and has had Alzheimer’s since 2017. As with this awful disease, she is getting worse as time goes on.
If you met my mum you probably wouldn’t think there is too much wrong with her (other than her physical issues as she is bent over with the osteoporosis and looks so old) but we see such a huge difference in her and her capabilities. Mentally she can be very much like a small child now.

Over the last few years my dsis and I (dsis also lives very nearby with her partner) have started to help mum and dad quite a bit. My sister works full time running her own cleaning business and will pop in a couple of times a week and also cleans once a week for them.
I go round at least 5 times a week to help them. I was washing mums hair but insisted they get a hairdresser in once a week as I’m not the best at blow drying! I change and wash their bedsheets once a week, I order all of mums medications and collect them from the pharmacy, I cut mums nails for her, organise her wardrobe and clothes (she has a tendency to mess thing up and put stuff away in the weirdest of places), I organise and keep all of her hospital and medical appointments, do all their life admin, take mum to her day centre once a week etc.
On a Tuesday and Thursday I wouldn’t pop in as I was working but sadly was made redundant a fortnight ago so have been popping in every day since.

The problem is that my dad is becoming overwhelmed with being mums carer, it doesn’t come naturally to him and he gets angry that his life is over too and will often say it’s all a burden to him. I feel so sorry for him but truly believe that if I said I’d would give up my life and care for mum full time then he would happily take a back seat with it all (this does annoy me as I wouldn’t and won’t dream of asking my dc to care for me at any time but dad is old school and believes daughters should help out).
For a long time he refused any outside help, he said carers were a waste of money (he is very tight with his money) and mum wouldn’t like people in her house caring for her (this is true she will make a fuss but most dementia sufferers would be the same as they just don’t acknowledge they are unwell).
Money is far from an issue here for they have hundreds of thousands in the bank.
A year ago, I did eventually insist they got a career in as the stress was making me very unwell (I was close to a breakdown) and I was doing everything like their washing etc which I’ve now made dad do as he is more than capable of doing washing and hanging it out. I have these daily anxiety and gut issues which have been very bad over recent years probably exacerbated by worrying about my parents all the time and just couldn’t do everything.
Anyhow, I arranged for a lovely lady carer to come in, initially once a week for companionship and to give dad a break and then we were to up the care as time went on. However, this never happened, dad insisted all was ok (but would moan to me all the time that it wasn’t), and eventually let the carer go.
So, currently, apart from the once a week at the day centre where mum goes for the afternoon, my dad has no other help apart from me going in every day and my sister a few times a week.

The issue now is that my dad moans every day that he is struggling with mum every morning and that she is getting worse. She often refuses to get in the shower, doesn’t wash herself properly and is now not dressing properly. Yesterday I went round to find her in the trousers she had been in all week (with stains down them) and wearing a winter cardigan buttoned up with nothing on underneath. I helped her get into different clothes but it was hard for she kept saying she didn’t want to wear anything else and that she does not care what she looks like. This is heartbreaking as my mum loved clothes and always used to dress so lovely. She also tells me every day she wants to die which crushes me.
I would love to be the person to go in every morning and help but the truth is that I feel so poorly every morning, I am riddled with anxiety, have had such an exacerbation of my IBS/gut issues recently that I need to be by a toilet every morning and just don’t have it in me to care for my mum every morning whilst feeling this way as it’s such an overwhelming emotional thing to care for a parent, a professional carer obviously doesn’t have this emotional attachment. Watching your lovely mum’s brain waste away is such a sad thing to witness. I also have my dd to get ready in the morning as she has inattentive adhd and if I did not shimmy her along she would be in bed still at midday. My dog also needs walking in the morning (he’s a rescue and has anxiety issues), I can’t just give up on them to go care for my mum.

I have told dad all of this and he accepts it but looks very disappointed and upset. When I first told him I’d been made redundant his face lit up like a Christmas tree, he said it was for the best as I could now take the ‘burden’ off him and become mum’s carer! It makes me feel such a bad daughter to say no but surely I need to put my mental and physical health first? I also need to find another job but can’t do this if I am crumbling away physically and mentally.
So today, I have contacted a care company to ask if they can come in and help every morning.

I feel like a failure but the cold hard truth is I don’t want to be my mum’s main carer and that makes me feel like shit.
AIBU?

OP posts:
Partiallyclosed · 23/06/2023 09:30

Should add that my dsis and I have full power of attorney and people have said to me that I should just take money out of mums account and pay for carers and insist etc but that is so much easier said than done.

OP posts:
SisterDonnarix · 23/06/2023 09:33

Your dad can martyr himself all he likes, but he can't make you into one as well.

Professional care is needed.

Yikesno · 23/06/2023 09:36

You need to be very firm with your dad as to what your boundaries are and stop allowing him to manipulate you. Once he knows you're not going to take the burden off him he can make his own decisions about carers, etc. But if I were you I think I'd be willing to go and help say twice a week for an hour each time and that's it. Tell him that clearly and then use the "grey rock" technique when he acts sad, etc. Go home and cry about it afterwards if you want to but don't let him put too much on you as he clearly wants to do. The fact that he is "old school" i.e. sexist is his problem not yours.

Mrsjayy · 23/06/2023 09:36

Yanbu and I think he needsto get proper carers in for your mum even if it's for a morning visit to shower get her dressed for the day. And tell your dad this, he will probably lay on some guilt but it's OK to ignore this, you love your mum but there is only so much you your sister and dad can do and cope with.

MrsSkylerWhite · 23/06/2023 09:37

No, you are absolutely not being unreasonable. Caring is a skilled profession. Your dad is going to have to understand that you are not that person and that he is going to have to allow a professional into the home.

To say that you can now relieve his “burden” is incredibly selfish (something unfortunately not uncommon in older age).

You and your sister need to sit him down, tell him straight and offer assistance in arranging care.

If he refuses, personally I would not offer help for a period. He is an adult and will come to his senses if you’re not there to pick up the pieces every morning.

hulahooper2 · 23/06/2023 09:37

Yes get help if you can , but I would do as much as much possible to help out.

AmandaHoldensLips · 23/06/2023 09:37

He is neglecting her. She needs professional care.

AndTheSurveySays · 23/06/2023 09:37

Your father is neglecting your mother. You need to take charge and insist on carers.

Mrsjayy · 23/06/2023 09:37

Partiallyclosed · 23/06/2023 09:30

Should add that my dsis and I have full power of attorney and people have said to me that I should just take money out of mums account and pay for carers and insist etc but that is so much easier said than done.

Just say to your Dad it's time for care and you and your Sister will organise it.

honeyandfizz · 23/06/2023 09:42

YANBU. I have been a community nurse for many years and can see how hard the burden is on family. I think you need to step back and let your Dad know you just cannot carry on as you are. You need to make sure he doesn't cancel the carers again and if he does you don't pick up the slack again. It must be a heartbreaking place to be to see your DM like this but honestly he is neglecting her. Have you considered a care home placement if he can't cope?

Krickley · 23/06/2023 09:43

Your dad needs to stop being tight and pay for some extra care. You cannot live like this, youre making yourself ill. You are already doing enough for them and have your own family with a ADHD child included (i have one too, not easy). However, ultimately perhaps its time for your mum to go into a home? Have you thought about/discussed this with your sister/dad?

Aquamarine1029 · 23/06/2023 09:45

First of all, you need to see a specialist to get relief from your peri-menopause/menopause issues. You do not have to live with this anxiety every day.

Secondly, the time has come for you to put your foot down and hard. Tell your father you are getting a carer or you will be finding a placement care home. He can take his pick, but you are going to be taking a massive step back because you simply can't manage anymore.

StrawberryWater · 23/06/2023 09:46

Get a carer for your poor mum. The money is there and your dad will just have to put up with it being spent. Surely that’s the point of having savings? To make sure him and his wife are looked after properly in old age. He can’t spend it when he’s dead so he can spend it on making life easier for everyone.

Framboisery · 23/06/2023 09:46

Agree, sounds v tough on you. And a big assumption by your dad that you can afford not to work.
I would get carers in, or say to your dad you otherwise might have to consider a care home.

rookiemere · 23/06/2023 09:47

YANBU, it sounds like you have more than enough on your plate already. Your DF should have been grateful you organised care for them instead of cancelling it.
You've done the right thing contacting a care provider, you need a paid job so you have financial security in your old age, your DPs money should be used for their care.

Partiallyclosed · 23/06/2023 09:50

Thank you everyone. It has been so hard to see things clearly when you are in the thick of it all.
Dad does need to accept mum needs help now, he has been in some kind of denial for a long time.
honeyandfizz krickley I have contacted a local care home regarding respite care but I honestly think it would kill mum to be in a care home right now and my other worry is that dad would end up in an ‘out of sight, out of mind’ scenario and would probably only visit mum once and week which would then place the visiting burden back to dsis and I for I would hate the thought of mum stuck in a home with no regular visitors.

OP posts:
Partiallyclosed · 23/06/2023 09:54

Thanks Aquamarine1029 I have just this week had a prescription for hrt which I need to start.
Framboisery It absolutely winds my dh up because dad thinks dh should support me financially but as dh says, if I give up work and become mum’s carer then he, dh, is actually supporting my dad whilst he has hundreds of thousands sitting in the bank!

OP posts:
Twinsmummy1812 · 23/06/2023 09:54

I’m sure your mum has looked after your father all of their lives and it’s his turn to step up now. He needs to accept a carer to come in and get your mum clean and dressed for the day and then he needs to be there for your mum as I’m sure she would have been there for him. If it makes you feel any better OP if you were his son not his daughter he wouldn’t expect you to step up like you and your sister are, so you need to work out what you want to do to be there for your mum while still protecting your health and do that.

All the best for you and your mum x

KR2023 · 23/06/2023 09:55

I didnt read it all sorry, (too close to home 😪) but yes, today is the day you decide enough is enough.

Great that you have POA, this is exactly what it is for. Get private carers in every day. Soon your dad will be relieved you have taken the decision out of his hands and the burden is eased. For you and your sister as well. Your priority must be yourself and your family. As much as we love our parents, they must come 3rd and you are being an excellent daughter by getting professional help in.

Such a tough situation @Partiallyclosed I can fully empathise xx

rookiemere · 23/06/2023 09:55

At least being in between jobs gives you some breathing space to set up some care arrangements. I'd be very clear to your DF if he cancels these you aren't stepping in.

I would say the natural progression is to try at home care, before moving to a care home scenario. It seems frustrating because if your DF would just accept it, it could maintain the status quo of them both being at home for some time. Maybe you need to say that if he cancels carers then care home for DM is next logical option.

AncientQuercus · 23/06/2023 09:55

This is a story I hear over and again at work, people arranging carers for elderly parents after months of stress and juggling and them cancelling.
It must be hard to admit you need help but so unfair to burden your daughters (it is rarely if ever sons who are expected to drop everything).

YANBU. You cannot make yourself ill to meet your father's unreasonable expectations.

harriethoyle · 23/06/2023 09:56

Been where you are @Partiallyclosed - contact ageuk, they were great with my Dad when Mum could no longer cope with care and although Mum was initially very resistant, once they were in and she saw the positive difference it made to both of them, it was fine.

Sparkletastic · 23/06/2023 09:56

Your father needs to understand that his options are professional care for your mum or a residential care home placement. Try not to let guilt consume you. My mum saw her mum once a week and moved her into a home when she couldn't cope. It wasn't that she didn't love her. She just knew she couldn't be her cater and still live her own life.

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 23/06/2023 09:58

How convenient for him to be “old school” when it means his daughters have to take on a burden and not him.

You need to be really firm with your boundaries OP. You may need to use the power of attorney to just pay for the care - what was the reason for you having it an not him out of interest?

He needs to realise that he has to step up and do this and/ or pay for carers. Anything you and your sister can do is an extra

xogossipgirlxo · 23/06/2023 09:59

Your dad needs to take some responsibility too. This really hit me:

"The problem is that my dad is becoming overwhelmed with being mums carer, it doesn’t come naturally to him and he gets angry that his life is over too and will often say it’s all a burden to him. I feel so sorry for him but truly believe that if I said I’d would give up my life and care for mum full time then he would happily take a back seat with it all (this does annoy me as I wouldn’t and won’t dream of asking my dc to care for me at any time but dad is old school and believes daughters should help out)."

So his life can't be over, but yours can? They're married and he has some responsibilities. I agree with others re having professional carer for mum. Current system is unsustainable. You still have life and you have children, you need work and money.