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Elderly parents

I think my mum is lying

86 replies

HettyMeg · 04/10/2025 09:26

My mum is 70 so not "elderly" but wasn't sure where to put this. She lives a few hours away and recently our relationship has not been great. Too much history to explain in a short post but she is emotionally immature and despite being independent in other ways is reliant on me to support her emotionally e.g. leaning on me for advice, being a confidante, etc. This has taken a toll and I'm withdrawing a bit as I don't get the same support in return and I'm fed up of the moods and silent treatment I get if I've wronged her somehow (in her eyes)

Recently I'm pretty sure she's also lying to me on a semi regular basis. Eg she was meant to be coming to see us but then told me was getting repair work done (after visit was arranged) and can't come or change it - bit of a pattern there of making plans then cancelling eg saying she is ill and can't come has happened lots of times. This morning she's saying her power is out because of the storm but I checked energy firm website to get an update and it said there was no power outage in her postcode.

How would you respond to this? I think some of it is exaggeration / embellishment of the truth rather than outright lies but I'm the type of person who hates lying / bullshitting and I'm just so fed up of it. Do I address it directly?

OP posts:
MaurineWayBack · 05/10/2025 18:04

HettyMeg · 05/10/2025 09:46

OK I appreciate people on the thread don't know my mum but the reason I stated that I feel she is not "elderly" is because she herself wouldn't categorise herself in that way, it's not me failing to show empathy (!!). She works, sees friends, volunteers in the community, is involved in local groups, drives daily, albeit not long distances, and has no major health issues.

It's not really about whether or not she wants to drive, it's more about the lying which was the point of the post and it's coming across to people as if I'm some heartless person with no empathy for the woman who brought me into the world when the reality is a lot more complicated when you have been relied upon emotionally since being a teenager and I am genuinely concerned because I don't live nearby so can't just go and pop in to check on her. I already travel to see her as much as I can with a full time job and young family.

Then you step back.
You have a complex history with your mum. Your mum will have a lot to do with that. It’s not just all,on you u.
She is getting older but is still very active. Certainly doesn’t act or live as if she needs a career/support etc…

So let her be.
She is not your responsibility.
You dint have to know all the ins and outs to smooth things over for her all the time or to pre empt possible issues. Your issue is that you’re worrying for her and wondering where you stand because you think she is lying/embellishing etc… Whixh she might be. But that’s only a worry of yu see your role as her protector. You fully responsible for her well-being.
The thing is youre not. She has capacity. She is responsible for her well-being. I’d step way back and wait to see what help she is asking for instead.

As for how much to do, I feel your ire taking things the wrong way around. You’re putting her and visiting her first and trying to fit your family around. And then you right at the bottom.
Maybe it would be better to put yourself first. See how much tu can do wo being burntout. Then your family, then your mum.

Yes it’s fair enough to make accommodation for her. Yes it’s fair to go and see her etc… but it shouodnt come at your detriment.
And I very much feel that ‘ not knowing if your mum really needs you’ is adding an extra layer of stress/imposing that you could do wo.

MaurineWayBack · 05/10/2025 18:06

EmotionalBlackmail · 05/10/2025 17:23

Genuine question, but how do people
have the time to do this? I’m at a distance from my one surviving parent and see her 3-4 times a year. Which has been the case for decades. I work full time, so if I used my annual leave to visit every school holiday and half term I’d have no time left to spend just with DH and our kids, on our own holiday, getting things done at home, covering ill
children off school etc? And that’s without in-laws at a similar distance in the opposite direction!

I don’t and never have.

Unfortunately, living away means seen people less.
Which can be a worry or a relief depending on you’re talking about.

But I don’t think organising you whole life around your parents is fair.

Platypusdiver · 05/10/2025 18:28

Honestly: i haven't read the whole thread, except OPs updates (and the first page).

I have had a very similar situation. I have a 72 year old mother who is to all appearances perfectly cognitively health. But I caught her out in a lie.

I have known that she has memory lapses and says what she would have assumed that she would expect herself to do rather than what she did do and can't remember.

She told me a blatant lie last week. Evidence in text etc. No big deal, but she deliberately told me a mistruth. I would have had serious words with dc for such.

I am like the OP. I hate lies. But reading some of these responses, I am realising that it may be not that easy. I might be wrong, but I think that one of the first signs of cognitive decline (dementia, but I don't want to go that far) is losing social graces. And those disappear faster with family.

I have no answer or advice rather than humour her and punch a pillow. There is nothing you can really do now. (Other than monitor sleep, eating and exercise to limit further cognitive decline. And how do you change the habits of someone that age?)

It could be worse. My mum remembers me as an child (undiagnosed with adhd and autism) and calls me stupid, when she asks for my help. I am struggling with what to do.

gallivantsaregood · 05/10/2025 18:31

MaurineWayBack · 05/10/2025 18:04

Then you step back.
You have a complex history with your mum. Your mum will have a lot to do with that. It’s not just all,on you u.
She is getting older but is still very active. Certainly doesn’t act or live as if she needs a career/support etc…

So let her be.
She is not your responsibility.
You dint have to know all the ins and outs to smooth things over for her all the time or to pre empt possible issues. Your issue is that you’re worrying for her and wondering where you stand because you think she is lying/embellishing etc… Whixh she might be. But that’s only a worry of yu see your role as her protector. You fully responsible for her well-being.
The thing is youre not. She has capacity. She is responsible for her well-being. I’d step way back and wait to see what help she is asking for instead.

As for how much to do, I feel your ire taking things the wrong way around. You’re putting her and visiting her first and trying to fit your family around. And then you right at the bottom.
Maybe it would be better to put yourself first. See how much tu can do wo being burntout. Then your family, then your mum.

Yes it’s fair enough to make accommodation for her. Yes it’s fair to go and see her etc… but it shouodnt come at your detriment.
And I very much feel that ‘ not knowing if your mum really needs you’ is adding an extra layer of stress/imposing that you could do wo.

100% this!

Wishmyhousewasbigger · 05/10/2025 18:51

Ageing varies hugely, I'm 77 and DH is 87, we are both reasonably active, been into London today to an exhibition and had lunch. I think because we use public transport so much we don't worry about train journeys. DH can't drive so I have to drive quite often to see his family who live in deepest Devon, I hate the tiny lanes. His other children live in Londin and are accessible by public transport. My DS lives in York, I always go by train, much less stressful. I'm lucky as my DD and family live about 40 minutes away down the M3, I feel its up to me to visit them as they have busy lives.

Summertimesadnessishere · 05/10/2025 18:54

StormingAmy · 04/10/2025 17:11

It's meant to give a perspective, not be smug @ginasevern

MN is very ageist on everything.

Yes, of course, some people have limiting health conditions.
But I know far more people in their 60s and 70s - friends and family- who do drive long distances and always have.

I know a friend of my Mum who is mid 80s and drives a 3 hour round trip to her daughter.

I have a friend living in Europe who drives alone across 3 countries and takes a ferry to the UK to see her elderly family. She's almost 70.

The thing with driving is use it or lose it. If you only drive a few miles and never do, or have done, long distance driving it can be daunting. But the minute you stop (unless forced to with medical issues) you lose confidence and never get it back.

I don't do motorway driving at night because I find that harder, but I plan trips to avoid that.

Edited

Its not ‘ageist’ to accept that people who are elderly have different needs and can be affected differently by life, health etc.
It’s ageist to discriminate against someone based on age eg deny a qualified and competent person a job as they are too old. This is not the same thing. People who are giving a different perspective to OP are acknowledging that not all old people are the same in terms of ability. It’s being stated that we all age differently. That’s not saying that someone of 95 can’t still play golf. It’s recognising that someone of 70 may have a health condition by then which makes them unable to. Or in the case of OP's mum , 70 is an age whereby its not unusual ti feel more anxious about driving longer distances.

There is now also clear research that shows the risks for dementia can now be spotted much earlier and a change in driving habits which can be typified by more anxiety starts early eg from 50’s. This might explain some of the cases why people start to feel more anxious driving the older they get. ( not the ONLY) reason.

FiatLuxAdAstra · 05/10/2025 19:23

StormingAmy · 04/10/2025 16:53

I am 70.

I drive 5 hours on my own to see my mum who's late 90s.
I've done the same trip for 50 years.

Plenty of my friends drive long distances .

I have a friend who's almost 90 who travels 3 hours by train. She books assisted travel.

I'm actually shocked at some posts here from younger women who won't drive far or even take the train.

Edited

We all have anecdotes about ourselves or people we know. The reality is that it is possible that OP’s mother can no longer drive 3hrs each way in stormy weather. The fact that many, including you, still can at her age or older is likely a source shame for her and why she is lying to OP. It’s like she can’t do it, but if she admitted to it, then OP would have to make a fuss but she doesn’t want any fuss.

StormingAmy · 05/10/2025 19:37

@FiatLuxAdAstra To be honest, this thread is not really about her mum's physical health and what she can or can't do. The comments have become focused on that when it's not the main point at all. I don't want to be singled out as someone who does XYZ because it's not the point any more of the thread.

The travelling is a red herring.
The OP has come back and said that herself. Her mum is not frail or 'elderly' in that sense. It's more about her demands and reliance on OP for emotional support but not giving anything back in return. Nothing to do with travelling.

OP has had a lot of issues with her Mum for years (as she's mentioned here) and it would appear her Mum has some MH issues which are at the root of the current situation. It's really not about driving, travelling or being physically unable to do something.

I mentioned before that she may want to think about some kind of counselling to try to come to terms with their relationship and that's what I'd still suggest.

MyMiniMetro · 05/10/2025 19:52

And? You seem very socially naive? People who don’t want to do things will make a polite, socially acceptable lie.

You know it’s a lie, they know you know it’s a lie, but everyone gets on with life. Why is it a big deal?

Ireallywantadoughnut36 · 06/10/2025 11:11

I wonder if she's a bit anxious, if you've a complex relationship, maybe she feels she wants to protect what you've got/she worries about how she might behave and as a result it's easier to just not come. My parents at 65-70 also really started to feel like driving far was too difficult, and won't drive in the dark, or bad weather - they feel embarrassed about this a bit, and make some odd comments like "nobody drives in the dark unless they have to", which patently isn't true and doesn't reflect how they were 10 years ago,but I don't push it as maybe it is what they need to tell themselves.
I also wonder if she's tired, working at 70 is quite hard and she might be exhausted.
I'd try and see the lies as a kindness, she doesn't want to say "I'm not up to seeing you/I don't want to meet you" she wants you to think there's a different reason, she cares about not hurting you. Yes it's annoying setting time aside, but when I think about times I've made excuses for things, it's always been about not wanting the other person to feel let down.
Can you find a way of seeing her that works better for her, but still works for you?

FiatLuxAdAstra · 08/10/2025 19:27

StormingAmy · 05/10/2025 19:37

@FiatLuxAdAstra To be honest, this thread is not really about her mum's physical health and what she can or can't do. The comments have become focused on that when it's not the main point at all. I don't want to be singled out as someone who does XYZ because it's not the point any more of the thread.

The travelling is a red herring.
The OP has come back and said that herself. Her mum is not frail or 'elderly' in that sense. It's more about her demands and reliance on OP for emotional support but not giving anything back in return. Nothing to do with travelling.

OP has had a lot of issues with her Mum for years (as she's mentioned here) and it would appear her Mum has some MH issues which are at the root of the current situation. It's really not about driving, travelling or being physically unable to do something.

I mentioned before that she may want to think about some kind of counselling to try to come to terms with their relationship and that's what I'd still suggest.

Edited

Sorry, but there are MH and invisible physical conditions that make one unsafe to drive. It’s not all about seeming frail or elderly. OP for example, doesn’t know if her mum’s eyesight or hearing is too bad to drive, or whether her mum has developed an anxiety disorder that makes her reluctant to leave the house and travel. All these can worsen gradually over time and yes emotional reliance can be part of it.

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