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And what is this about demands? That is abusive. Sorry! I am being more reactionary than helpful
I walked in on my Mom screeming at my Dad. He had pushed the wrong button. Dad was about 77. He had been disabled for heart for 25yrs. He must have asked Mom for something he could perfectly do and she, 76, asked him "When do I get to be retired" Dad said "never". She went balistic. She had been his Caregiver those 25 yrs. Even before, waited on him hand and foot. I will bet he never apologized.
Care with a loving firm hand and they will get past their issues
Whoever has his DPOA needs to make that decision for his and your well-being.
No is a one word sentence. You won't do it anymore. Someone is going to get hurt and it won't be you. You don't even sit down to eat dinner with him. So taking it to him would be no different, really. Also, when you say No, your not responsible for the reaction you get.
I hope your father's ordeal is over soon. This is no way to live.
Is your Dad on any meds for his anxiety/agitation? He is probably Sundowning when he is calling you.
I agree with others that he probably now has dementia, which means you aren't obligated to do anything he demands since it is not reasonable or considerate. Distract or redirect the conversation. Even tell him a therapeutic fib that his doctor says he cannot safely use anything but an ADA bathroom and residence and must have a qualified aid and you can't go against his doctor's orders. But there won't be any reasoning with him anymore.
That being said, sad these have to end. In a way, he probably realizes this too, but won't admit it
You are the person making decisions for dad now. You'll be happy to bring him some homemade food on Sunday at his place, or dine with him in the dining room. But you'll no longer be picking him up to take him to your apartment or to restaurants. It's too hard on your back and you can't handle it anymore, period. If he has meltdowns, he'll live thru them. Trust me on that.
We cannot always accommodate our parents every wish when they're old and infirm, nor should we try to. And please leave guilt out of this. You've done it for 2 years and that's plenty. I had to stop picking my mother up and taking her to my house or to restaurants when she became wheelchair bound with dementia too. It was just too much.
Best of luck to you.
Your going to have to say No , that's really all there is to it. There is nothing more you can do. I know it's hard, and it's hard for you to. Hard to not have your dad be able to come to your home, and hard to watch him eat.
I get it, every thing is starting to feel like , the last, and you don't want it to be and neither does dad. Your morning those last , and it feels a little like guilt.
Tell him, it's just not safe, your sorry he is aging , and aging just really bites!
Best of luck
Just keep saying no. No dad we are not able to take you out to dinner or to our apartment anymore, but we would love to have dinner with you at your facility.
He will throw a temper tantrum but just like a child you will have to stand your ground and not do it anymore. You and your sister could really injure yourselves trying to bring his wheel chair up the stairs, not to mention the bathroom incident your described with holding his weight like that.
Back injuries are nothing to sneeze at and could debilitate you for life from just one injury.