Follow
Share

My mom is 64. I'm 40. She wants to live with me and my family “because she is lonely, sick and old”. She reminds me that she is sick and old every single day and thinks she is going to die soon and will never “live the life she always wanted”. (She survived breast cancer 15 years ago, and has a mild artritis.) She wants to be with us at our home and follows us everywhere: when we go to a boardwalk, playground, movies, restaurant or just visit our friends etc. When I try to “escape”, she gets offended and cries and says she is not needed and unwanted and she is a “burden”. She starts having fake heart attacks, claims she is about to die and so on. I feel guilty when she does that. My husband is there for me but he gets pissed occasionally. We let her live for 3-6 months with us here and there and then gently make her leave. It never goes easy since she gets so much offended and complaints to all my friends and tells stories about me and my husband. She travels like this between her home and our home since she was 50 and my father passed away. She has very negative view of life and people surrounding her, and expresses her negative opinions nonstop. She teaches me life and how I should upbring my little kids. When she lives with us she wants us to pay her expenses. She interferes with my chores and everything I want to do around my house. When I try to set the boundaries, she makes me feel very guilty and emotionally drained. I feel unhappy, and claustrophobic and I don't want to go home after work. I started using laxapro and xanox to fight my depression but the meds do not help the situation completely. I feel like I live in prison all these years and I cannot escape from it. What can I do?

Hi! I’m 76, with some reasonably serious health issues. Your mother at 64 is NOT old and she is NOT sick. You need to tell her so. If she is lonely, she needs to take charge of her life and find some company, not yours. Be blunt. Tell her that it’s quite true that “she is not needed and unwanted and she is a “burden”. She’s guessed it, confirm it.

While you miss the point, this will keep on going. For heaven’s sake, it’s been going on for years! You need to take charge of your OWN life. Do you want to live your life as stupidly as she does?
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to MargaretMcKen
Report
MargaretMcKen Jul 7, 2024
I think that this is a scam. My experience is that people who can spell and write are rarely this ridiculous. Just a funny joke!
(0)
Report
See 3 more replies
.
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to AlwaysGuilty03
Report

Do not ever move your mother into your house. Ever.

She is already making you miserable with her Eeyore personality and her living with you will magnify that 1000%.

She could live another 40 or more years. Dont do this to yourself and your family.

And please stop moving her into your house for 3 - 6 months at a time because one day you might not be able to get her to leave. Why would you continue doing this when it makes you miserable and feels like you are in a prison?

If she is lonely encourage her to go to the senior center to interact with people. You are not required to entertain her.

When she starts with her fake dying act then call 911 and let the emergency room deal with her. It is sickening that your mother is so manipulative. Time to toughen up and stop allowing her to play these silly games.
Helpful Answer (8)
Reply to sp196902
Report

AwaysGuilty, I'm sorry you find yourself in this unreasonable situation.

Start to break the cycle by going to therapy.

Encourage your mother to see a doctor for evaluation and treatment of her depression.

You can say to mom (on the phone)
"Mom, I'm sorry you're so unhappy, but you're unhappy even when you're with me. Please get some help for your unhappiness. I can't fix that--only you can."
Helpful Answer (9)
Reply to BarbBrooklyn
Report

What can you do? You stop playing this silly and damaging(to you and your family)game with your young mom.
Yes your mom is very young at the age of 64, and apparently never grew up or matured properly, and now wants to make you feel guilty for that and her unhappiness.
People like your mom will NEVER be happy and will(as you already know)suck the life right out of you. If she's lonely, well that is on her. There are many opportunities for her to socialize with folks her own age through volunteering, church, senior center and the like. You and your family are NOT her entertainment committee.
So now it's you that must put your big girl panties on and tell your mom that she no longer will be able to come live with you. Period. End of sentence.
If you still want her to visit occasionally, make sure that you put a time limit on these visits, but I wouldn't allow her in your home for more than a week or two tops.
You honestly don't owe your mom anything, but apparently she has made you to feel as if you owe her your life, which you don't. You owe your husband, marriage and children your life, not your mom. Again...period. End of sentence.

I am a young 64 year old(almost 65)like your mom as well, and a widow of almost 4 years now, and I would NEVER do to my children what your mom is doing to you.
My children deserve to have their own lives and it is up to me to make my life what I want it to be, not my children. And I stay very busy volunteering at several different places, going to church, and hanging out with my friends.

Perhaps it would be best that your mom now move into either an independent or assisted living facility where she will be around folks closer to her age and older(which since she acts older, she'll fit right in)where she can be as social as she wants as they typically have lots of activities going on.
And best of all she'll be out of your hair.
I wish you the very best in setting the much needed boundaries with your mom that should have been set many years ago. But better late than never!!
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to funkygrandma59
Report
AlwaysGuilty03 Jul 7, 2024
Thank you very much for your reply. It made me feel stronger. Thank you!
(1)
Report
Always guilt, well I have a lot to say, that was my life 20 years ago now I'm 60.

Not that my mother wanted to move in, but her and my father gradually consumed my life. It was so gradually I didn't even realize it was happening.

It started during baseball, they went to every game, became friends with my friends, even did things with them. Complained to me if my sons white pants had Grass stains on them complained if the younger ones where dirty (at a dirt filled baseball game) . Mom would care a wet washcloth with her and wash there faces, when I wasn't looking.
After baseball it was soccer. My family became there happiness. Which was a way for her to control me. It was awful!!!

Please don't do what I did and not do anything, it totally ruined my life, and didn't help my marriage. Which is a whole other story, I had mom controlling , my ex-husband controlling me and them 2 silently working together to control me.

Don't make my mistakes, there will no doubt be a day that you are going to have to stick up for yourself, NOW is the day , not ten years from now after you completely mentally loose it.

Think about your family you are trying to build, think about your children your husband.

I advice you to get therapy now, to learn to deal with the guilt, now
Instead of latter.

Read Melody Beattys book "codependency no more"really helped me.

Best of luck, learn through others that have been there and listen to all the good advice

You didn't ask to be born, you didn't sign up for this, you where groomed from a young age to be what you are right now
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to Anxietynacy
Report
AlwaysGuilty03 Jul 7, 2024
Thank you for your kind words. I needed them very much 🙏
(2)
Report
See 1 more reply
It sounds like you mother never developed as an individual and is using being a mother as her only means of manipulation.

Some women subconsciously have a job for their children when they are born and that is to make mom happy. It's called old age insurance.

Set some boundaries. Manipulative people never like boundaries, but trust and believe, if the shoe were on the other foot, they would have no problem cutting us off. They manipulate and do these things because it works.

Was your mother always like this or did this behavior begin after your dad died?

I was widowed at age fifty nine. I grieved for months and my daughter never knew how miserable I was. I still live alone and work part time when I can. It hasn't been an easy journey but it was doable. I am surviving. I had others in my life to talk to.
I went to grief therapy and had a counselor who helped me navigate through these hurdles. Some raw emotions were just to heavy to place on my friends and some relatives.

Unfortunately, when I signed up for Medicare, my therapist didn't take this insurance even though I still had my other insurance.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Scampie1
Report
BurntCaregiver Jul 7, 2024
Right on, Scampie. Good for you not dumping on your daughter. You must really love and respect her. I say ALL the time about the old age insurance policy. A parent (s) will guilt-trip and manipulate (usually just one of their children) basically from birth to be the one who "takes care of them" in their old age.

Part of this is the senior parents refuse to do any kind of estate planning. The thinking is that if they do nothing to protect their assets, their family will keep them out of a "home" or they lose any potential inheritance. They end up getting placed anyway.

There was a novel I read years ago called, 'Like Water For Chocolate'. It took place around the early 1900's in Mexico. Anyway the matriarch was a nasty, vicious, violent woman who singled out one of her daughters to bear the most abuse.

The youngest daughter was never going to be allowed to marry or have any kind of life because she was expected to take care of the abusive mother in her old age until she died.

Hence, the old-age insurance policy.

I don't remember if the daughter actually ended up killing the mother or not. I have to read that book again.
(1)
Report
See 3 more replies
What can you do?

Learn about FOG, which means Fear, Obligation, and Guilt. From your post, it looks like your mother is trying to manipulate you using the FOG technique. The antidote to FOG is learning how to create boundaries. This is a good description:
https://outofthefog.website/toolbox-1/2015/11/17/fog-fear-obligation-guilt
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Dogwood63
Report
Anxietynacy Jul 7, 2024
Yes, I keep forgetting to tell people about that book
(0)
Report
As others have advised, you must never let her live with you, even temporarily. As you describe her, she sounds mentally ill. Your husband and family are your priority. She doesn't seem to see or care about your boundaries. She is manipulative and lacks empathy. She will do nothing but create drama, resentment and bring damage to your marriage and life.

You are not obligated to becomer her PoA. When things get bad for her you can connect her with social services. She can be assigned a court-appointed guardian who will take care of paying for all her needs and manage everything without your intervention. This worked great with my jerk of a SFIL. He got what he needed and his wife could visit him whenever she wanted (he had Parkinsons).

The FOG effect is an issue you must deal with. I agree with therapy for you. May you receive clarity, strength, courage, wisdom and peace in your heart as you set and defend boundaries with her.
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to Geaton777
Report
AlwaysGuilty03 Jul 9, 2024
Thank you very much for your kind words and wishes. Have a wonderful day today.
(0)
Report
NO is a complete sentence.
You do not have to give a reason.
You do not have to explain.
"Sorry mom but you can't live WITH us."
"If you like we can find an apartment or condo that will be a bit closer to us" (notice I said "a bit closer" not closer" )

She should get involved in activities. Many Independent Living facilities organize trips, have activities she can get involved with. (a friend of mine moved into one and it is like a cruise ship on land, activities, buffet breakfast, lunch, dinner, there is always something going on)

If you do continue to let mom live with you for 6 months she should pay her own way. Tell her that ALL expenses will be split (if you have 2 kids then all expenses are split and she pays 1/5. And when I say ALL expenses she pays 1/5 the mortgage, house insurance, property taxes, gas, electric, garbage, sewer, water, food and anything else. AND she does her own laundry and cleans. Since you are working and probably paying for childcare during the time she is with you she can take over childcare. (I bet she won't stay long or often)

Having her with you is not good for your health you know that. You need to pull up your big girl pants and tell her. Easier said than done.
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to Grandma1954
Report

The next time you bring her, she might refuse to leave as she gets tenants rights within 30 days. As this hasn’t happened yet, you need to send her back, after which visits drastically change. Maybe rent an Airbnb or a hotel near her for a week.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to PeggySue2020
Report

OP, clearly some responders don’t agree with me that this is ‘made up’, and if it’s not, I apologise for being unhelpful. But it really is a bizarre situation. Your M is not behaving ‘normally’, and for that matter neither are you. You are putting up with far too much.

I’m thinking that your best bet is to go for counseling yourself. If you can toughen up, and recognise FOG for what it is, you should be able to deal with this a lot better. You may not “want to make anyone pissed” but you need to stiffen your spine, no matter how M feels about it. (By the wording where I am would be ‘make anyone pissed OFF”; being pissed means here ‘under the influence of alcohol’, which is confusing). You cannot change your situation without upsetting M, so stiffen up the sinews, summon up the blood, as Will Shakespeare wrote long ago. Get ready, because there may be few options until she turns 65. Good luck!!
Helpful Answer (0)
Reply to MargaretMcKen
Report
Anxietynacy Jul 7, 2024
Margaret, it happens, but I've had so much crazy in my life I try to always believe people. I've got lots of stories people wouldnt believe. When I tell people them , I'm like people are going to think I the crazy one.

Which I would guess a few on this forum do. 😂
(0)
Report
Just say NO to her histrionic manipulation. It only works if you play the game so stop. NO to living with you, NO to overnight stays. Don’t tell her your family plans. She can only interfere if you allow it. Please get some professional counseling to help you get stronger. You and your family deserve to live a good life together. Blessings to you…
Helpful Answer (6)
Reply to RLWG54
Report

Wow. I guess people who think it's spam can't believe a mother could possibly be that way. There is a word for that behavior. But she also could have not dealt with the emotions of being a widow. Whatever the case, there is help. Social worker, senior services, therapist, counselors, doctors and nurses. There are so many silently going through this it's time to sound the alarm. Just because it's your mom doesn't mean you are being disrespectful by setting your mental boundaries to keep yourself sane. Mom needs to find activities outside of family and develop friendships while she herself goes to counseling to navigate her own emotional feelings. Family counseling would also be a wise choice in addition to personal counseling. It's okay to say no. Don't let anyone make you feel guilty because you said no. You don't even have to give a reason why either. It's hard to do when you lived through trauma but it's not being mean or unloving. It's boundaries.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to Umokay
Report

First of all, you being on LexaPro and Xanax will not fix your family dynamic with your mother. Don't take these drugs unless you have actual clinical depression that will not clear up on it's own if your mother stops pulling her crap.

What mom needs is a metaphorical good, swift kick in the a$$. So give her one for her own good. My mother is exactly like you describe your mother only much older and has been this way since I was a little kid. The negativity, the neediness, the opinions, and all of the above. For many years I felt guilty like you do because I'd knock myself out and nothing was ever good enough or pleased her in any way.

I got married on Friday evening in a lovely ceremony at my home. My mother was not in attendance and not even told. Know why? She would have ruined it with a performance like my first wedding over 30 years ago. Best case scenario, she would instigate discord among the guests by starting with politics. Or there would be a staged "fall" or a fabricated health crisis where she'd have to go to the ER. Probably by ambulance for enhanced dramatic effect. Yes, she is old and has some health problems but this has been going on for half her life and certainly all of my life.

I don't a moment of guilt for not inviting her because I know what she does.

You know what your mother does too.

You and your family are not her caregivers. Nor do you have to be her entertainment committee. You cannot treat her "gently" because clearly she doesn't get the message. So you have to treat her bluntly. You and your husband as a united front (as mine and I had to do) tell her plainly that under no circumstances will she be living with you. Also, if she wants to be in your life and your family's then she better knock it off with the unsolicited opinions, advice, 'performances' (the fake heart attacks and other false health crises), and negativity or she will not see you or her grandchildren again. Then stick to it. This will put the brakes on her nonsense quick.

No more letting her visit for 3 and 6 months at a time. That is way too long. If she's coming from the other side of the world, then one month once or twice a year is more than enough visiting.

If you struggle with feeling guilty, find a therapist to work it out with but stop letting your mother hjack your life and your family's.
Helpful Answer (9)
Reply to BurntCaregiver
Report
AlwaysGuilty03 Jul 9, 2024
Thank you very much for your response.
(0)
Report
Luckily your problem is very easy to solve. You have not made the mistake so many have made and already allowed her to move in. I would cut out these long visits though. How far away does she live that she needs to stay for so long?

Just say no. The world will not come to an end. She will be mad and throw a fit...so what? Did you give into every demand your child made? Why is this different?

A previous poster was right, mom never matured into being herself, she identifies as being a wife and mother. By living with you she gets to be back in the mother role and BE IN CHARGE. That is not how it should work in YOUR house. When she does visit you need to make it clear that she is a guest, not a voting member of the household. Again she gets mad, so what? You are the one with the power. You have something she wants, not the other way around. She is counting on you being too afraid or too nice to stand up to her. If she accuses you of thinking she is a burden, own it. "Yes mom right now you are being a burden". She is counting on you to back down and give in. She won't know how to respond. She is counting on you being weak and giving in. That is not fair to your husband or child.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to lkdrymom
Report
AlwaysGuilty03 Jul 9, 2024
Thank you for this. You are 100% right.
(0)
Report
Your Mom is not old. When Dad died she should have found herself a life. No parent should rely on a child to entertain her.

My Aunts mother used to visit her and one visit she got sick and never left. Those 3 to 6 month visits should stop. If you need to take medication because of Mom than stand up to the problem. When children leave the nest we as parents are no longer #1 in their lives. It's a new chapter in ours. You may need to be blunt to Mom. You love her but you cannot be all she has in life. She needs to make her own.
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to JoAnn29
Report

From what you describe this arrangement will not work long term. Say no, do not cave in out of guilt. Your mother is too young to be insisting on this sort of arrangement. And you have a marriage and a young family to raise.

After my father went into a NH, my 95 yo mother was alone in the house. She had three daughters, none of us offered for her to come live with us because she was a very difficult person to be around for a great length of time. The three of us felt a guilty about it but we knew that it simply would not work. We pursued other alternatives.

We felt this way about an elderly person with a single digit life expectancy. You could be looking at 30 years of dealing with this.
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to Hothouseflower
Report

My friend's husband literally fried his brain by taking antidepressants with Xanax for years, combined with booze. He now has brain damage in all 4 lobes of his brain and the equivalent of stage 6 dementia. He's a vegetable, at 54 years old.

Use the word NO with your mother or face the possibility of being a vegetable like my friends husband, and a giant burden to YOUR children.
#Wake Up Call
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to lealonnie1
Report
BurntCaregiver Jul 7, 2024
Booze and benzoes. That will certainly do it, lealonnie.
(2)
Report
See 1 more reply
Hi AlwaysGuilty - what your mother needs is a new "mindset and attitude." She claims that she is"lonely, sick and old.” Well, fortunately, based on your profile, she's not sick - and 64 isn't old - and she may be lonely, but that's an opportunity for her to open up her world and try new ways to meet people, make friends, etc so she has her OWN life - and not hang on to yours.

If she's lonely, would she ever consider trying internet dating? Maybe she needs to focus on her mind, body and spirit - taking an exercise class, spa treatment, hair salon - a makeover? She needs to feel better about herself and take next steps. Is she active in the church - or can she volunteer - or pick up a hobby to meet people. She should move to a 55 plus community - she'd meet other people and get a social life.

What she's doing now is a formula to remain stuck and miserable - she needs to do the work and make a new life for herself. The longer she stays at your house, the harder it will be for her to cut the cord...I'd say give her some encouragement to get out there and do the opposite of what she's currently doing - which is just complaining!

Tell her that you're doing her a big favor by not allowing her to live with you - in the long run she'll have a life of her own and she'll be happier!
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to Hopeforhelp22
Report

Your mother is miserable. She is miserable when she’s there and miserable when she’s not. Her misery is not yours to fix. It’s really that simple. And I’m writing from the perspective of someone who, like you, was groomed to be responsible for my mother’s happiness. Like you, I was not allowed to set boundaries. Until I did. It wasn’t easy but necessary.

Tell your mother “No, it is not convenient for you to visit us this year.” Practice saying it. Sure, she’ll blow. But you are not responsible for how she reacts. She is. Once she senses your boundaries are not negotiable, be vigilant. She may up her game. Arrive unannounced and refuse to leave. Create a crisis for herself, forcing you to get involved. (mine tried to kill herself for attention)

What have you got to lose? You have so much to gain by standing up for yourself and establishing boundaries. If she chooses to stay miserable, that is on her. But she is not entitled to ruin your life. Do this for your husband, your children and yourself. Your children may be little, but don’t kid yourself. They sense the tension and misery too. Mine did. Stand up to her and save your family.

Oh, and she’s old and lonely? One of the teams in our hockey league needs another player. She’d even meet some nice men. My husband (#2 - I was widowed younger than she was) has a herniated disc and I’m to have both knees replaced yet we’re still going strong. We’re about her age. Too old indeed!
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Anabanana2
Report

64 is not old. I'm 63 and still work. My boyfriend is 68 and still working. Many seniors work in their 60's and 70's.

I'd suggest Mom get a job.
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to brandee
Report
ElizabethAR37 Jul 8, 2024
True. I worked until six days before turning 78. I'm 87 now and miss my job (and my 60s and 70s!) still.
(0)
Report
OMG! 64 is relatively young! She needs to get out and make her life. IT will be very, very difficult, but she possibly has many years ahead of her. And she was very young when your father passed away. Spending several months with you may be okay if she pays her way, but to expect you to take on her expenses is delusional. Why isn't she doing something out of the home? She needs a distraction. There's nothing worse than an empty house...a situation which I'm dreading facing when my mother passes soon (she seems to be transitioning now). I have no kids, no spouse, no sibs and have been caregiving for years. She is my whole world, but I realize I will have to find a way to stay alive. So too your mom.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Tynagh
Report

In Do not let her guilt you into this!

You can’t fix her issues. She wants you as a savior, and you can’t be that. No one can. Remind her she isn’t old and needs to reach out to help loneliness.

Why would you feel guilty for her acting like she’s helpless and hurt? She is CHOOSING to act childish. You have nothing to do with how she tries to act.

She will throw a pity party, accuse you of not caring about her, etc. Tell her you love her enough to not let her rot away in your house.

But HOLD YOUR GROUND. The answer is NO!
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to LoopyLoo
Report

You need to cut this person out of your life and stop associating yourself with emotionally abusive individuals.

Never let her enter your home for an overnight stay, especially.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to ZippyZee
Report

Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter