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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Elderly dad and wife expect me to care for her

410 replies

Adrienne23 · 04/01/2025 00:10

My dad left home for his now wife of 50 years when I was 8 years old and they by and large lived their own very comfortable lives together, seeing me around 4 times a year until my teens, then we saw very little of one and other aside from speak on the phone twice a month or so. My mother raised me in relative poverty with not much financial support from my dad at the time he used to claim he didn’t have the means and we only discovered in recent years that he and his wife were far better off than they said they were. My mother passed away nearly 10 years ago from a long illness and I was her main support, although she tried very hard to maintain her independence and not lean on me unless absolutely necessary mainly in order to protect my emotional and physical well being.
I started to see more of my dad since my mothers death and increased communication considerably during lockdown. In the past few months his wife has been diagnosed with cancer and they now both absolutely expect me to provide all sorts of support and care for them both as my dad’s health is also poor. I am starting to feeling incredibly resentful. I worked hard on myself following my mother’s death, getting a new job, social life, etc, but I am still deeply affected by the loss. The level of support my dad and his wife expect from me far exceeds the support my mum expected (or received) from me, I get calls and messages about the health condition of both, several times a day irrespective of what I am doing, demands to drive to and from appointments, visit the house, messages that seem urgent and can’t wait only to just want to chat about themselves, and so on. How can I draw boundaries now before I am completely consumed by them and their needs to the detriment of my own?

OP posts:
GreetingCeridwen · 04/01/2025 00:17

My own estranged father has been starting to try to pull this recently, too. He's suddenly very interested in having a relationship now that he and his wife are knocking on and her kids (who he bent over backwards for while wanting little to do with me) have made it clear they won't be helping. I've done alright for myself, her kids are slackers, the old chestnut. I find the brass neck of it quite amusing myself. That resentment you're feeling will just get worse if you give in. You need to explain to him that he's made his bed, and now he's going to have to lay in it as best he can. Actions, consequences and so on.

GreetingCeridwen · 04/01/2025 00:19

I'm sorry about your mum, by the way. The cynic in me wonders if he's trying to tap into that grief for his own benefit.

BMW6 · 04/01/2025 00:22

Tell them exactly what you've said here - he abandoned you and your Mum, he made his choice so of course you won't be playing the part of a dutiful and caring daughter!

Go NC if needs be. He's a selfish git still.

BoxOfCats · 04/01/2025 00:23

Just be unavailable. "Sorry, I'm not available to help with that, you'll need to make alternative arrangements." If they bombard you with calls and messages, just ignore them and respond when it's convenient. Tell them you are busy but you will call them on xxx day (whenever actually suits you). They will get the message eventually.

Renamed · 04/01/2025 00:23

YANBU. Unfortunately you will have to tell them. If there is anything you would be happy to sort out, eg an online shop, or liaising with the Gp, you could say something like “Due to other commitments I have 30 minutes per week, I can do this in this time if it would help”. Otherwise you will need to say I can’t take all your calls, I will check in every so often, you will need to sit down and talk to a MacMillan nurse about what care and support is available.

Gymnopedie · 04/01/2025 00:23

How much do you want to maintain some sort of a relationship with your father?

My inclination would be to tell them straight that you're not doing any of it, and tell them why. But it would probably be NC after that, from them if not you.

If you do want to stay in contact decide how much you're prepared to do and tell them. But they will want more, a lot more, so you will get a lot of pushback and they could turn nasty. In fact I expect they will. They've been selfish for 50 years, they're not going to change now. I think you'd save yourself a lot of heartache and resentment if you let them go.

pikkumyy77 · 04/01/2025 00:25

Just so sorry you are suffering this abandonment twice. If he had been hslfway decent to you this wouldn’t be an issue.

LadyGaGasPokerFace · 04/01/2025 00:26

Tell them to swivel.

Randomontheinternet25 · 04/01/2025 00:27

Id tell them to look into adult social care, if they can no longer look after themselves.

username299 · 04/01/2025 00:27

I would organise a needs assessment with social services.
Teach them how to use Uber
Give them the number for Age UK
Give them the number of carers and food delivery should they need them

Direct all calls to voicemail and not respond to texts.

GreetingCeridwen · 04/01/2025 00:29

LadyGaGasPokerFace · 04/01/2025 00:26

Tell them to swivel.

This, I'm afraid, is what it boils down to. Obviously you have to handle this in the way that causes you the least distress, but be careful you don't conflate that with the path of least resistance.

Fedupmumofadultsons · 04/01/2025 00:31

Honestly I would let them go unless you actually want them for company or such like .a man who would let me live in poverty knowing he had money to make my childhood a bit better would certainly not be getting my love or support and his wife would get even less you owe them nothing

pikkumyy77 · 04/01/2025 00:32

username299 · 04/01/2025 00:27

I would organise a needs assessment with social services.
Teach them how to use Uber
Give them the number for Age UK
Give them the number of carers and food delivery should they need them

Direct all calls to voicemail and not respond to texts.

He abandoned OP 50 years ago. Not in 1850. I presume he managed modern life just fine.

username299 · 04/01/2025 00:33

pikkumyy77 · 04/01/2025 00:32

He abandoned OP 50 years ago. Not in 1850. I presume he managed modern life just fine.

What are you talking about?

Turophilic · 04/01/2025 00:34

Only speak to them when it’s convenient to you - there’s absolutely no reason for you to jump to attention because they want you to.

Leave their messages unread and don’t pick up their calls until you are ready to respond. They will stop messaging several times a day if it doesn’t give them the response they want.

You aren’t their lackey nor their support human. You can be as involved or uninvolved as feels best to you. Give lifts if that works for you but not if it doesn’t. Protect your own wellbeing first.

They weren’t there for you and shirked what little responsibility they had. They don’t get to expect you to play the dutiful daughter now they want something from you.

Lavenderandbrown · 04/01/2025 00:35

I think you were a wonderful daughter and you were there for your mom until her death. That’s enough. It’s time now to build up your own adult life. Get back to those friends hobbies and adventures you would still like to do in your own life with your time. You don’t mention children or spouse/ partner. Maybe these are stillin your future but if not friends are invaluable to your future self.. sharing holidays life events and caring for each other. You actually have already done a lot for your dad by being there for your mom who he left. Nothing is more boring than listening to 2 adults drone on about their health and I say this as a licensed health professional. These 2 will suck all the life and joy out of your present and future and I hope you stop that right now. Visit have dinner or coffee some holidays together but not a carer. You care for you now

LadyGaGasPokerFace · 04/01/2025 00:36

He wasn’t there for you in your hour of need when you were a child, why would you look after him or HIS wife who couldn’t give a toss about you as a child?

I still say ‘swivel’.

5foot5 · 04/01/2025 00:37

"Sorry to hear about your current health problems. I will, of course, stay in touch and come to visit when I can.

"However, I think you should make other day-to-day care arrangements. You were both happy to leave Mum and I to manage with minimal financial or practical help from you when I was a child, so you and your wife cannot reasonably expect a great deal of support and care from me now."

Turophilic · 04/01/2025 00:37

username299 · 04/01/2025 00:33

What are you talking about?

Presumably that he can use Uber, look up Age U.K. and order a Tesco delivery just fine on his own. The OP doesn’t need to do any of that for him!

HoundsOfHelfire · 04/01/2025 00:37

Just text them back a time and day you will be able to phone them back, explain things are really hectic at the moment. Repeat, repeat, repeat. Do things only on days and times which work for you.

Also enable them to source their own help, taxi, gardener, carer and so on. ‘Things are far too hectic for me but here I’ve found a few taxi numbers for you to try’

KittenPause · 04/01/2025 00:38

They just want to use you for free care

username299 · 04/01/2025 00:41

Turophilic · 04/01/2025 00:37

Presumably that he can use Uber, look up Age U.K. and order a Tesco delivery just fine on his own. The OP doesn’t need to do any of that for him!

Who knows what he's capable of? My dad can't text and my mum wouldn't know how to order something from the internet. I meant meal delivery, not supermarket.

My point was to make sure she's got everything covered before leaving them to it. They have everything at their fingertips and there's no reason for the OP to worry.

KittenPause · 04/01/2025 00:41

They're both selfish people

Just ignore their calls and messages

Don't engage

Randomontheinternet25 · 04/01/2025 00:42

Turophilic · 04/01/2025 00:37

Presumably that he can use Uber, look up Age U.K. and order a Tesco delivery just fine on his own. The OP doesn’t need to do any of that for him!

I know lots of ppl in their 70s would could not do any of that .

Volumedelachanel · 04/01/2025 00:42

5foot5 · 04/01/2025 00:37

"Sorry to hear about your current health problems. I will, of course, stay in touch and come to visit when I can.

"However, I think you should make other day-to-day care arrangements. You were both happy to leave Mum and I to manage with minimal financial or practical help from you when I was a child, so you and your wife cannot reasonably expect a great deal of support and care from me now."

Agree with sending this message. please do not be guilted into looking after these selfish people. They are treating you like their own personal lackey and it will only get worse. You've been caring for your mum, and now it's YOUR time. I would keep saying, 'sorry I'm not available to do xyz' to every request and pull back completely. They've probably got enough to pay for care, and even if they don't, it's not your problem.

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