Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Elderly parents

How do I manage?

28 replies

NewMum9494 · 24/11/2022 22:00

Long story short, my dad died earlier this year. My mum and dad were together for over 60 years. I am in my late twenties (adopted) and I am a first time mum with a young baby.

I am struggling. I feel on the edge of a nervous breakdown at times. My mental health is fragile and I am on antidepressants for OCD.

My mum relies on my sister a lot to go shopping, doctors appointments, the vets etc as my mum doesn’t drive. My sister wasn’t working for some time due to an injury but she is due to start a new job soon and will be working from 11-3.

I am trying to encourage my mum to join groups for social activities, she won’t saying it’s not her thing.

My sister and I have been sorting out mums finances, council tax, broadband and tv etc as it was all in dads name. I feel like every time I visit my mum; usually at least twice a week, she asks me to do something/ sorry something out. I absolutely love my mum, but finding it more and more difficult.

I am so worried my mum will depend on me more when my sister starts work and I don’t know how I’ll cope. I feel like as I’m adopted I’ve always “owed” them and often feel guilty.

When I have tried to explain things to my mum she gets defensive and upset and tells me not to start. For example, I don’t trust her dog and I don’t want the dog around my baby. She was telling me that it’s fine and the dog only needs to smell my babies foot. I have said multiple times I don’t want her around my baby and she seems to disregard my boundary setting.

This year has been a rollercoaster. I just don’t know what to do with myself.

OP posts:
Snnowflake · 26/11/2022 16:40

A knife next to her bed - ???? - I always reassure myself that the only stuff worth pinching are a couple of bracelets that I have hidden away and DH’s tools (chainsaw, hedge cutter, log splitter etc) and they’re all in the shed.
So there is no point anyone breaking in. So I feel pretty safe.

ItsButters · 26/11/2022 17:12

cptartapp · 26/11/2022 08:25

Of course not. But I think if we expect to routinely live into our 80's, 90's and beyond now in our millions, we should come to expect this is exactly what has to happen unless we are very lucky. We can't afford sentiment anymore. We all know the funding rules. And if so against them then there's always the option of drip feeding monies away to family over the years.
I hope I'll be unselfish enough to be ready to spend savings on care than allow my DC to risk their mental health and sacrifice the best and most productive years of their lives when at the end of mine.
I would think very differently of any parent that allowed otherwise.

Excellent post.

MereDintofPandiculation · 26/11/2022 19:39

I read more and more on the news about older people being mugged and I just worry a lot about her! You’re reading it the news because it is News, and uncommon.

She sleeps with a knife next to her bed because she’s worried someone will break in. That puts her at more danger because the person who breaks in will wrest it off her if sh tries to use it.

doesn’t matter what age Yes, imagine caring for a nonagenarian when there’s only 25 years between you.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page