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So hang in there. I also prayed a lot still do and have prayer line i resort to regulary. What done is done. you just move on from her. Try and start with estabishing some financial security for yourself. Also tell her about her self. That helps me because they seem to think you dont see their ugly. sometimes it works for me and my mother quites down some. i feel bad ; sometimes it doesnt and i feel stupid for trying to be logical and expect reasson when it was never there. They cant say or admit they need you or ever did. Lot of pride and self centered stuff.
Anyways wish you the best. hope this input helps. just sharing what has worked for my crazy head. im still at it. Im growing it gets better, i get stronger. Still hurts evry now and then.
Wish the best.
Now my choice is to find her help, get a job and move on ..living from a distance.
You knew what your mother was like but you voluntarily moved back there.
You were in an abusive marriage, but you did get out.
Do you see the beginning, or an existing pattern here?
Have you thought about some therapy?
Denial of dementia is not uncommon. Even if your mom will not allow you to accompany her to her doctor's appointment, you may still send him information about her condition, so he can know what he's dealing with. Perhaps, he can't provide you with info, but he can accept it from you.
Also, if you mom's driving is dangerous, you can file a Request for Driver License Review with the DMV of CA. You can request that it be kept confidential and they will not inform your mom who made the requests. Sometimes the doctor does this. I think the form is DS-699. It can be found, along with instructions online. I would encourage you to be proactive about that, since she could end up hurting herself or innocent victims on the highway.
It sounds as if you do have your hands full with your mother. You say that she has been diagnosed with dementia. I might read a lot about this condition, in order to learn about how her behavior is not really something that she has control over. It's quite common for people who have dementia to be unruly, resistant and even hostile. I've seen it before with my loved one. She was very nasty acting and we couldn't figure it out. It was later determined to be dementia. It is very challenging to care for a person under those circumstances.
Have you discussed her condition with her doctor? Sometimes medications for depression and/or anxiety can help their mood and make them happier.
I have read that with dementia patients, we have to let go of the idea that it is manipulation. Their brain is damaged and though it may seem that they are trying to push our buttons, they are ill and we have to understand that. If you feel that your mom is abusive and you are not able to stop that, then I would explore what other options you have. Is there anyone else who could take her? There are also Memory Care facilities and nursing homes that may be available.
Considering how upset you sound, I would certainly seek respite care for her immediately, so that you can take some time away for your own peace of mind. Have you been able to do that? Everyone needs a break under those circumstances. I wish you all the best.
Here's a link to an article about your topic that was previously published on this site. I hope it helps.
https://www.agingcare.com/articles/dementia-behavior-manipulation-154554.htm
That is a wise choice. At least you recognize the trigger of her making you angry produces the knee jerk desire from that pain to want to shake some truth into her as well as vent it out. I wonder if there is another way to direct that energy or defuse that bottom some? That's a timeless question.
My wife has used something called mindfulness which is something like when she feels triggered she diverts her mind to some already chosen pleasant memory and thinks about being there instead of where she is. I had a therapist who tired to teach me this. I had no trouble thinking of a very peaceful place to be, but I could never go there in my mind like my wife is able to do. I don't have that therapist anymore. I got the feeling hat she was trying to teach me something that is helpful but was not confident in how to teach it.
This may be an old, already tried idea, but have you ever written a letter to your mom after any of these times of your anger being triggered? I found writing a letter to my mother to be helpful which I burned after going over with my therapist. The sad thing about letters that you write and then burn up or tear up is that when you hit another layer, it's time for another letter. I'm just wondering if there may be some ways to redirect stuff for your own benefit when you hit those times when emotionally you just feel like giving your mom one of those eye opening moments of truth.
What about art? Some find drawing, coloring or both helpful. I think I'll stop thinking for the moment.
You are both strong. Keep up the fight to be addiction free. Keep up the battle to survive this deeply flawed world world we live in for giving up such a good fight is not a good option for us or for others.
Take care and do something nice for yourself today or at least this weekend.
Sexual abuse is very sinister, extremely destructive and very likely way under reported.
I am sorry that you had to grow up in and with such a hell on earth plus seeing your mother bullied by him, which probably part of his strategy to keep her clueless, and yet resulted also in her becoming like him in some ways. I just have to wonder given how sharp a mother's perception is, if on some gut level she didn't know something was wrong, but she couldn't put her finger on it and his bullying kept her so terrified that she froze? We will never know. So, my asking that question is probably pointless.
The idea of wanting someone to see the truth that they have been living in another world trying to stay away from might make us feel better, but then I have to ask myself what good is knowing that now going to do now?
Some think that a person's whole life flashes before them right before they die. I don't know. But, I do think that people will know the truth at least right after they die. .
There are some anonymous support groups online for victims of child abuse which can be very helpful and supportive.
My wife and her sister were abused by their mother and her weak father was powerless to do anything. My wife shared with me about one day when he told them in private, "I see what you are going through, but I can't do anything" The poor man was as much a victim of his wife's abuse as his daughters were of his wife's abuse. Yet, I found myself marrying into that abusive family system. My MIL in her late 80s now talks about how mean her parents were to her, but she has no self-insight into her past abusiveness nor her present and they only reason she misses her dead husband is that he's not around to do for her which is her view of what men are for. I goes without saying that she does not like me, never has and yet use to demand that I call her mother for to her she was my mother now that I'd married her daughter. Over mom's final years, I finally began to come to terms with things about my own mom. In the process, my wife opened up and shared some shocking history that she had never told me before about how her mother abused her.
My wife has fought long and hard in individual therapy and group therapy to get where she is today and still is in therapy. This is why I encourage her that for our own sanity, we can't have much contact with the land of Oz, emotionally speaking, where her borderline queen mother is also the wicked witch of the west and poor Dorothy, my wife's twin sister, is so deeply enmeshed that's she's quit counseling, but maybe one day she's discover the way home to Kansas like Dorothy did in the wizard of Oz.
I wish you the very best in your own journey toward detoxing from the toxicity of your past and its continuing lingering in the present.
Take care!
my father abused my younger sister and I when we were young pre teens and teens. It was wretched. My sister blamed me years later, saying, why didn't you help me. I told her that I was just as scared as she and didn't know what to do to help myself or help her. We suffered terribly. And both of us have lived with the psychological aftermath of this trauma. My mother was clueless. He bullied the crap out of her, he was mean.he died in 2001. My sister did not go to the funeral. I didn't have the guts to do that. But anyway all these years later those secrets still reverberate. I look at my mother and resent that she did not save us. To this day she speaks of him and Zi cringe. Other siblings don't know what occurred. They speak of him with fond memories. He became a church elder and they all talk about him glowingly. If only they knew. So you see it's all a big heap of crap. I have suffered so much and now here I am still stuck in it all as a result of what he has done. So unfair, so twisted, so perverse. If I were to leave, I don't know what would happen. She has no money, he made sure to leave her with so much debt including an 80,000 second mortgage, minimal life insurance. She makes it monthly but just barely. So she couldn't even pay for a NH/ assisted living, doesn't qualify for medical assistance.
So when she gets nasty with me it really pisses me off. None of this is my doing. I just happened to be here when she started going downhill. My kids are on their own, I have no pressing issues not to be here to take care of her. I've often thought, what would she do if she knew the truth, the agony he put us through. But I envision her falling into a heap of old skinny bones and completely destructing. But I would love her to know the truth.
I suspect this behavior really has existed for years - it doesn't just happen overnight since this is more of a control and manipulation than dementia issue, although it could be compounded by the dementia.
Perhaps it wasn't realized or it's become more profound now that caregiving roles have entered the picture, as Joanie herself kind of speculated.
Joanie's mother also has fertile ground in that nurses are predisposed to care for people. So Joanie, you're primed to be used by her.
I did some research on caring to the extent that it falls in the realm of being pathological, which unfortunately sounds so ominous. The research was done about 10 years ago; I can't find the links to the good articles I read at that time.
But the gist of it was that generally people in nursing and care professions are predisposed to caring to a higher level than nonmedical people - that's generally why they chose that profession But it can pass a boundary and become a greater need if not compulsion, especially if it turns into a situation that the carer can't extricate herself because of the need to continue caring, even in a toxic environment.
And that can happen to adult children who aren't in the medical profession; the research just suggested that some in the profession might be predisposed to it. However, I certainly don't think it's the norm but that family dynamics factor into the situation as well.
The obligation to care transcends the need to escape and be true to one's self; the caregiver stays in the situation despite wanting to extricate herself. And with a manipulative parent, it becomes even more toxic.
Joanie, it's pretty clear that you're unhappy if not miserable. I think it's also clear that your mother isn't going to change, so your options are (a) change your attitude (b) get out of the situation by making other arrangements. and you've already started on plan (a), so you're taking a first step.
Don't let her guilt you into relaxing your determination; this could become a battle of wills.
As a nurse you must know what this kind of long term emotional stress will do to you.
I think it's also important to recognize that you owe your mother the responsibility of finding care for her, whether it's you or in a facility, but you don't owe her the responsibility or obligation of martyrdom.
I hope you can keep the courage to move forward before the situation destroys you. Good luck!
I'm glad you found us and that you know that you are not alone. Keep returning to vent and update us on your progress. Feel free to tell the secrets. That helps them lose their power. I don't think anyone has lost an ear from listening to dysfunctional family stuff. That is particularly true on the dysfunctional thread.
If I push back she will be very angry and then as a writer said, she will crumple, cry and become poor poor pitiful me as the song goes. I will definitely not feel guilt when she is gone. I will be relieved. The stupid, mean, manipulative dysfunction will come to an end and I will be free. I know In reality I would never just go. I am not that irresponsible even though with every ounce of me I would like to. I was feeling pretty hopeless last night when I wrote that. I have a very strong recently realized faith. I feel very strongly that I will be ok better than ok. There has been suffering( dysfunctional family stuff that would curl your ears). And the suffering is over, now it's making up for all those years of depression, shame, anxiety, substance abuse. It's over now and she is NOT going to stand in my way or try to keep me down any longer.
Thank you all for listening. No more hidden secrets.
1. I am her only child
2. I was raised to be responsible...no matter what the cost is to me
3. We live states away from any family
4. I finally realized that she has never made me feel like I measure up
5. If I put her in a NH? then I am a failure as a daughter/person
6. I don't want to see her hurt/unhappy
7. I learned co-dependency from her growing up
8. I have not completely broken my own co-dep cycle
9. I feel sorry for her
10. She is my mother, I do love her, and I have no choice...that I could live with
Yes, her brain is being physically changed which causes allot of odd behavior, but some of this stuff, I do believe, she could do differently if she really wanted to. She claims that she "can't help it", tells me that I 'will just have to be patient with her", and all the talk in the world will never convince her otherwise.
The only way a narcissist can survive is with a slave plugged in. That just shows how dependent and weak they are despite all of the smoke and mirror shows of power. They do want to hoover us back in, but we don't have to dance with them again.
I've glad you are taking care of your own health and that the NH is taking care of your mother's safety and food needs.
It's all about control and narcissistic supply. Once you cut off the supply and pushing buttons doesn't work any more they fall apart, get weepy and threatening, anything just to get back at you for forgetting to put up and shut up, jump through hoops, that you're worthless, nothing more than a servant who can't do anything right to be used and abused at will.
Took me over 60 years to realize it. These days I ensure she has all she needs at the NH and that her bills are paid but, other than that, I've pretty much walked away for the sake of my own health.