Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Elderly parents

How to draw lines in the sand re: help and support

77 replies

SmaugMum · 26/04/2021 11:36

I’ll try to keep this as brief as possible. I’m a totally lone parent to two children, one of whom has a physical disability and significant emotional issues. In the last nine months I’ve become the default carer to my elderly parents, both of whom are physically frail with severely restricted mobility, and with the added complication that my mum is in very obvious cognitive decline (appointment with a Memory Clinic doctor in a fortnight to determine more).

Anyway, like many of you here, I’m run ragged trying to maintain two homes, keep two households going, doing all the transporting to the multitude of doctor and hospital appointments, and I’m starting to feel resentful.

I have a sibling who lives solo 200 miles away (who is in denial about mum’s cognitive decline) and maintains the prodigal child status by phoning my parents twice a day. But that’s pretty much it. I’ve been asking (well, in several heated discussions that have turned the air blue) for said sibling to organise a supermarket delivery service for my parents. Weeks later, and I’m still doing the shopping. My parents are old school and have never had a new-fangled shopping delivery; they prefer me to pick up the orange-stickered reduced items they’ve been used to buying all their adult lives.

They are effectively living in one bedsit-style room with a kettle, toaster and microwave. My suggestion of installing a stair lift to enable them to access their downstairs kitchen and maintain some semblance of independence was met with ridicule, like I’d suggested blowing all their savings on a trip to Vegas.

It will probably not surprise anyone here to learn that between my sibling and I, only one of us has a vagina!

I’m so stretched, my children are fed up because all of our weekends are consumed by helping their grandparents. I’d like to know how other people in a similar situation have managed to draw effective lines in the sand in terms of what they are prepared to do and not do?

For example, my sibling doesn’t have a car (no need in Zone 1 London) so is visiting my parents by train next week; my request that taxis are booked to transport my mum and dad to their various hospital appointments has been met with radio silence. And every discussion I try to start about new ways of doing things ie shopping home delivery is shut down with the implication that I’m being deliberately awkward.

OP posts:
mrshoho · 29/04/2021 16:32

I truly can empathise being the only sibling of three with a vagina and surprise surprise have ended up as the person left to sort out care, health, finances, house cleaning, maintenance, transport and shopping. Mums easy going and will go along with whatever I suggest but my father is a nightmare and argues and refuses to cooperate. He's so unpredictable and unreasonable with his denands that I dread each time I go round. Meeting tomorrow to get care in place for my mum as a first priority and once this is up and running I will not be neglecting my own kids every sodding day.

Zolrets · 29/04/2021 22:25

@IrmaFayLear that’s a very fair and balanced response. I would add though that part of the load is the mental load of organising the care even. When you have a sibling who doesn’t pitch in you carry the responsibility alone.

I’m here to be the exception that proves the rule as my sibling who has no balls either metaphorically or literally, hasn’t visited in a year as the covid rules prevent it apparently Confused I’ve pretty much cut contact off as I’ve laid it on the line about the stress I’ve been under home educating a young child and coping with tasks that are hard to farm out (paper work, house maintenance, legal issues from a parent’s death) or need effort to farm them out in the first instance (cleaning, gardening) so I can only conclude she doesn’t give a hoot about my well-being never mind that of the remaining parent despite having spent long periods of time with them when her own children were small. I can do without the tales of weekend trips and jollies and home and garden improvements. I have no comparable jollies to chit chat about what with being the only carer and I could really use the time to do some of my own life laundry so I don’t bother any more. Easier to pretend she doesn’t exist.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread