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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Partner taking over my mother?

37 replies

Libby18 · 30/03/2018 12:19

My partner is spending more and more time with my 94-year-old mother, who lives alone in her flat and is increasingly in need of care. Though she is very good for age (takes no medications, just hard of hearing and with slight cognitive impairment and memory loss) she is declining and getting frail. I have arranged a carer who comes in three or four times a week for a couple of hours to make sure she eats and look after other things. My partner has taken to doing much of her shopping, phones her regularly, takes her out for walks and to hospital appointments and is even helping her do some baking which she is unable to do unaided. He also insists on taking her with us on weekends away, and pays for a hotel room for her and looks after everything. He often sits all day in her flat with her, watching TV and reading and she is very glad of the company, which I can't give her because I am working, and he is around more often than not even when the carer is there. Of course all of this sounds fantastic and I know I should be very grateful. But I feel terrible because I am increasingly uncomfortable about this. Not because I fear there is any abuse - though he often raises his voice to her, however she does take this in good part and doesn't mind at all ('men are just like that, I take no notice and neither should you,' she says). No, it's more to do with the fact that he is himself a domineering character, and can be very bullying and controlling, also verbally abusive - between being an absolute paragon and the perfect partner. As indeed he is proving himself to be in relation to my mother. He has quarrelled with most of his family and has been thrown out of the house by both his brothers in law, and his father (also 94) lives abroad. He visits him regularly, staying in his own small flat in a care home, and takes control of him and his finances as he always has done. Suffice to say that I have and always have had problems with this side of him (we have been together for 18 years though not lived together until the last few months, when he came to live in my house against my better judgement). My feeling is of gradually having my life taken over and the relationship with my mother is the nail in the coffin - but I don't know whether this is jealousy on my part (both she and he tell me it is). They do get on very well, and the trouble is that I find her highly irritating to be with and have never really had a good relationship with her due to a whole variety of issues in the past. She thinks the sun shines out of his backside and can't imagine why I have trouble with him, and constantly calls on him rather than me to do things for her. He seems to get involved in any kind of decision-making for her, but I feel this is a displacement from organising his own life (he doesn't work and hasn't for 30 years, citing having had to look after his own parents) and a replacement for his own mother who died five years ago. I also get the feeling that he is owed something from it - she has already let him fill her garage with belongings from when he moved out of his parents' house and he has taken over more and more of my own small house with his stuff. Everyone agrees that he is an aggressive character who insists on having his own way and becomes highly volatile when he does not get it. I feel the whole situation and my life is getting increasingly chaotic and out of my own control. I am an only child so there are no other relatives to intervene.
Please help - am I reading the situation wrongly and over-reacting and being an absolute bitch? is this just jealousy and feeling left out? should I leave them to get on with it and be grateful? and if not, what on earth do I do because I cannot devote the time to my mother that she needs or I would go insane! - which I feel I am with both of them anyway. I would be so grateful for advice!

OP posts:
Aprilmightmemynewname · 30/03/2018 18:48

Install a nanny cam ASAP.

eggcellent · 30/03/2018 18:49

I don't think his relationship with your mother is an issue, if she's said herself she's happy with it and enjoys his company. However, I'm struggling to understand why you are with this man OP?!

user1499333856 · 30/03/2018 19:29

OP - as mercenary as this may sound, in order to get him out then you will have to step up. At least in the interim.

Swallow this for now because you need to get him out of your life. You don't really want to be with him and staying with him for your mother's sake is also nonsense. If he takes advantage of her then he is harming her too.

NotTheFordType · 30/03/2018 20:05

Jesus I just can't.

trojanpony · 02/04/2018 10:33

I think you can’t see the wood for the trees.
With abuse and control it’s not like guys like this rock up and stake their claim from day 1. It’s a slow creep with different lines in the sand being crossed every day and the next thing you know you have a controlling man living in your house and installing his stuff in your mothers house.

The situation sounds quite toxic in terms of there being this triangular relationship with him chastising you for your behaviour with your mother.

As a question:
You don’t sound like you want him living with you - do you want to break up with him/ have him move out?
Would your mother want to maintain a relationship with him if you broke up?

I ask as you can control who you live with, but you may not be able to control who your mother sees - the fact your mother may want contact shouldn’t influence decisions you make for your life.

Bluetrews25 · 02/04/2018 11:44

He is grooming you and your DMum so that you will take the path of least resistance and let him take over everything, including financial stuff. You said yourself she has some cognitive issues. Keep hold of that POA and do not let him get POA too - point out the cognitive issues to DMum's solicitor, if need be.
Get her more carers, and get him out, pronto.

Pannacott · 03/04/2018 01:20

Erm yes I think you should be more anxious about this, not less. Has your mother got much money? Would it bother you if she gave it all to him? They might both see it as a fair exchange, his attention and company for her inheritance :/

Bluebelle38 · 03/04/2018 07:18

Financial abuse is sadly very common among the elderly. This over-investment is beyond strange behaviour. I really think he's robbing her blind.

ChickenMom · 03/04/2018 07:54

This is very worrying. Firstly, you need to get him out of your house. Second, get a carer in every day to your mother so you don’t worry about the impact of losing him. Speak to age concern. Speak to social services. Speak to a solicitor and see if you can take out an injunction against him. You could also move your mother into a residential facility so that he can’t just move in with her? This is very not ok. Get rid OP!

PsychedelicSheep · 03/04/2018 09:25

I think he’s doing this more to have control over you than for nefarious financial reasons. I think he’s trying to make himself indispensable so you won’t dump him. But you should definitely dump him.

Aprilmightmemynewname · 03/04/2018 14:34

Maybe he intends to apply for Carers Allowance?

Libby18 · 05/04/2018 00:09

Wow I can"t thank all of you supportive people enough - for the wise and caring comments that come to more or less the same conclusion...esp re my relationship with him and that being a separate issue. I must say I don' t think it's a matter of him getting financial reward from mum - more as has been suggested getting a sense of control and needing people to be dependant on him, which is subtle and confusing - after all as many people say, how lucky I am to have a partner who takes such care of my mother! I do feel at this point that we may have to think of residential care - but the trouble is the cost (would wipe out any savings and the sale value of her small flat) and also people do go downhill fast in such places. Home carers also hugely expensive - she is not wealthy but above the cut-off for Gvmt funding. And in any case she is resistant to anyone else helping but has no qualms about calling on him day and night about anything from running out of butter to the washing machine not working!!

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