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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:
lightsandtunnels · 12/01/2025 14:46

You should decide what you are prepared to do for them, or what you are able to do, and tell them.
A once a week visit perhaps and take some shopping maybe. Perhaps a sit down with them to organise the admin of sorting out home care for them.
You owe him nothing OP. Don't let them bully you.

Neveragain8102 · 12/01/2025 14:51

Ops father and wife weren't particularly human leaving a child in poverty whilst they hid their income as an excuse to not financially support her.

Pupinskipops · 12/01/2025 15:01

thepariscrimefiles · 12/01/2025 13:56

You are defending the indefensible (OP's dad's and step mum's behaviour) and being really rude to @borrowingtime

In your opinion 🤷🏼‍♀️. I find your position indefensible and your comment irrelevant (which is why I didn't bother responding to your previous comments), but hey - don't let me stop you being very, very certain that there is no possible point of view except your own.

LaurieFairyCake · 12/01/2025 15:16

Do they not have other children? Is it just you?

borrowingtime · 12/01/2025 15:29

@thepariscrimefiles thanks. There was no need to resort to rudeness at all was there!

FartyPants9 · 12/01/2025 19:07

FractalBob · 12/01/2025 07:32

Relationships here in France (I'm an expat American living in France almost 6 years now) between children and their parents are a whole lot different than in the States. In the US, kids often leave home at 18, for college, jobs or the military, and often have little to do with their parents except on holidays, whereas the French, at least from what I've observed, take the approach that Mom and Dad took care of me when I was little so it's my turn now to give back. I see lots of old people accompanying really old people on weekend outings. My French girlfriend calls her mother every day and brings her over for holidays and birthdays. Mom lives about two and a half hours away from the rest of the family, so when she comes over, she usually stays for a few days. Mom is a vigorous and healthy 92 years old.

Your situation seems a lot different, both by your parents' behavior as well as yours. Did you try to keep in touch with them after you grew up, spend time with them on weekends, help with shopping or little tasks around the house? Or did they prefer to be left alone to do their thing and now want help from you? I'm trying to understand the family dynamic before your stepmom came into the picture and suggest you reflect on that. Maybe it's possible that they got signals from you that you just wanted to do your thing and be left alone.

Edited

Why should OP keep in contact with the father who abandoned her and his mistress?

IsawwhatIsaw · 12/01/2025 19:29

Op has only posted once , that was a week ago…

CRCGran · 13/01/2025 10:29

OP.... you really must insist that her own children step up and help. She's not your responsibility at all. I notice you said you got more of a relationship with your father after your mother died but you don't mention getting any closer to the wife. How was she towards you? Did your father ever apologise for his actions? But regardless, they are using you. Plain and simple. They know you looked after your mother so well and are now seeing a carer for themselves. Please don't allow it to happen. I know it's hard but you have to get used to simply saying No !! No I can't come over. No I can't take you/her to appointment. No explanation, just no !!! You don't ever have to explain to anyone. Don't answer calls or texts right away. Put out the message that you're not readily available. And remind them that she has family of her own and suggest she contacts them. Please don't feel guilty. If your father genuinely wanted a relationship with you and not just a carer he would accept your boundaries and never try to guilt you.

CRCGran · 13/01/2025 10:30

Also OP, do you have an update for us? Are you trying any of these suggestions?

DenimPlayer · 14/01/2025 19:29

Iam going through a simular to you with my father. He can be very selfish but i would try and help them get help either with care or just living. We have one day a week we go and help with washing and will take him to appointments if we can but he will tell us about his journey if he has to go on his own My husband is recovering from cancer and he has had to be told alot of times he is not my priority good luck and stay strong

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