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No where is it written that you or anyone else HAS to continue to support this bad behavior. And certainly your son should not be exposed to this toxic behavior.
Time to stand up and be counted, walk away from these bullies.
You cannot resolve their issues, focus on your family and healing their souls.
Your family is suffering and for no reason if you would just back away and let the chips fall where they may.
Good Luck!
You could send a message/note to her doctor, explaining her behavior so that next time she does go to the doctor, he will have some info on hand and can try to test her and hopefully refer her to someone for further assessment.
Best of luck.
It is titled Never Simple and is a memoir by Liz Scheier.
It is about her attempts life long to deal with her mentally ill mother, along with the help of the social services of the city and state of New York.
All to no avail.
I doubt very much that you can get her evaluated, and even if you do, being mentally ill is, as the law says, not against the law in our country. Your father is her next of kin. He seems to have satisfied himself that he is helpless in this matter, and he is correct.
You cannot change things. You didn't cause them and you cannot cure them. Many mentally challenged people never had children, and there are therefore not children or grandchildren to intervene. It is best you act in that manner and call APS to report an adult at risk for assessment. Tell APS that you do not wish to be involved in care, nor to act as POA or guardian, and that you request gaurdianship of the state. That will likely not happen. I would not attempt to intervene. I think it an exercise in absolutely futility.
How would it help if she is “evaluated”? Many borderline mental illnesses are difficult to distinguish from just being mean, lacking self control, being badly brought up etc etc. There are arguments between professionals about what constitutes a mental illness, or a particular mental illness, and the rules change from time to time. No-one is likely to come and take her away to be cared for, whatever the evaluation says. The people involved (including you) quite possibly won’t accept the verdict, other than to add it to arguments. You could perhaps let her off the hook by blaming everything on a mental illness, but you may find that it doesn’t make it any more tolerable.
You might do better by just accepting that’s the way your parents are, and deciding how to deal with it. This site is full of people with difficult parents, working out boundaries with them, deciding when to cut off connections. It can give you lots of ideas that might be more practical help.
Have a google search on *co-dependant*. It can happen different ways, but they both get their needs met & can function together.
I've seen this dynamic a few times now, where one is moody or volitile & the other learns to bend & adjust to avoid the drama, meaness or tandrum. You wonder why they put up with it.. but they have their reasons.
It is awful watching people put up with abuse. Would Dad be open to some councelling himself? To skill HIM up with strategies to deal with his situation? If not, that is his choice.
That Grandma said the wrong thing, maybe she is not well in her brain, but hopefully she will see a Doctor - or whatever age appropriate explanation works for you.
I would state very clearly to BOTH parents that I will not tolerate my children being spoken to in such a way.
That's the line. If it's crossed again, their grandchildren will not be brought to visit them. (I say them unless it is possible to visit only Dad)
This behaviour may or may not be within your Mom's control. So you will have to decide whether you stay as involved or step back.
Suggest they visit their Doctor for Mom to have a checkup.
You suggest.
They decide.
The consequences are theirs.
I am sorry that you went through that as a child. Your father is the type who sweeps things under the rug which never works.
I don’t think you will be able to change your dad’s behavior. As difficult as this situation is, you will have to make peace with accepting it.
Your dad is in the driver’s seat and he’s not concerned about getting your mom any help. I’m so sorry.
Wishing you peace during this difficult time. Protect your children. Do the opposite of what your father did when you were young.
Your dad goes along to get along and that won’t change either. I will never understand how mean, angry women manage to marry men that cater to their every whim.
So, all you can do is keep your kids away from her. They shouldn’t have to endure her verbal abuse. Even if the kids know grandma is insane, there’s no excuse for being her verbal punching bags.
My dad was afraid of my mom until the day he died. He put up with her abuse for 60 years. I remember begging him as a kid to divorce her, and he never would. He figured it was cheaper to keep her, and that she would make his life a living hell and clean him out financially if they ever divorced. Instead, they blew through all their money, including their house, with reckless abandon at the end and had absolutely nothing to show for it (My dad had a horrendous gambling addiction).
My mom is now finally in a nursing home where she belongs and people are being paid to deal with her, (and I never have to see her again if I don't want to) and my dad is at rest and finally free from his Hell on Earth. I would suggest getting good therapy, it has done wonders for me to help process and understand that all of this is not my fault.
I would keep the children away from the grandmother is she's making nasty comments. My mom did that to my adult son, and he gave it right back to her. She deserved it fully and had it coming. Sometimes you have to stay away to make a point come across.
I wish you the best of luck, this is not easy to deal with. I basically went no contact with my mom. She's a defcon level 5 narcissist and a master manipulator, so I have to keep her at arm's length to protect my sanity.
Perhaps you can check with your local department on aging/seniors Adult Protective Services, they may be able to be of some assistance.
Just remember that your sanity and your health are the most important factors in your life. Good luck.
It won't help and she won't get better. Just trust me on this.
My mom had chronic depression and just suffered along with it. She was really never "ok" until she started having a little dementia. As a family with 6 kids, 5 of hers were on antidepressants/antianxiety meds for much of our adult lives.
My MIL is in Hospice now and she has zero filter on her. We don't have a label as to WHY she's so awful and IDK if it would even help if we had one. At 93? The kids just say 'she's crazy' and that covers it. AT 93 she isn't going to embrace therapy or even taking an AD.
Sorry--this just wouldn't work out. Something that you have to deal with--and cannot change.
Fast forward to mom at 88 and dad at 91. Mom now has dementia, as most mentally unbalanced people tend to develop later in life imo, and has become even MEANER and more abusive to dad. They lived in AL and she'd treat the staff like royalty, and the rest of us like trash. Now dad started fighting back because he had a brain tumor and his days were numbered. Many times dh and I were called over there to break up their ugly fights. Yet dad STILL stuck up for her if we said anything about her nasty behavior! 😑
At that juncture, work it out yourselves folks. We're damned if we do and damned if we don't.
The dynamics of a dysfunctional marriage is not something the children can or should get involved in. My folks were married for 68 years and if either were THAT miserable, they'd have divorced.
I'd keep my kids away from the dysfunction of your parents relationship, unless it's something they're interested in subjecting themselves to. My mother was harsh with my kids and they chose to back off more and more as time went on.
My mother WAS diagnosed with dementia later in life which accomplished nothing anyway. What would have helped was if she'd asked for and gotten help earlier on in life when she was a raging lunatic and I was a scared 6 year old growing up in a crazy house.
My MIL was an only child and most certainly took after her dad who was a very kind soul.
I am convinced that my husband’s grandmother had mental illness.
Of course, when it was suggested that she see someone and go on meds, she would say that everyone else had a problem! She never viewed herself as someone with issues.
Not once in her life did she ever apologize to anyone for anything.
She was oblivious to everything! She was an incredible artist. Her husband had blue eyes. She painted his portrait with brown eyes!
He looked at the portrait when it was finished and said to her, “Honey, look into my eyes. What color are they? I have blue eyes, not brown.” She just shrugged it off.
You might get some good direction on this as far as the children are concerned by consulting with a " Child life Counselor". A pediatrician can refer you or you can contact a hospital to get some names or they may be listed in yellow pages.
For your own adult self care,
1. Limit your visits ,space out how frequently you visit and keep the visits short. Explain ahead of time to your parents that you will be doing this under the present unhealthy circumstances experience with your mother. And that if you come and she begins the unhealthy verbal attacks, you will leave. If your mother and father are mentally capable at all of understanding, this might be a beginning.
2. Who is the POA? Is your father of sound mind to be POA and make safe decisions for your mother and himself??? Determine if you need to acquire POA status for both of them.
3. Confer with their PCP IF you are listed by them on their records as being permitted to talk with their PCP. If you are not, you need to discuss this.
4. Confer with an Elder Law Attorney about the present situation and get the input re the who what where when how whys of " elder care".
5. Get support for yourself from a licensed counselor.
6. If you feel or observe, or deem the situation as " unsafe" in the home with regards to your mother or your father's inability or unwillingness to get help, you can call APS ( Adult Protective Services) and report, anonymously,( if you want) the home concerns and APS can go to the home and assess/ follow through with their recommendations. You may want to tell your father ahead of time that if he continues to refuse to get your mother assessed and help, that for everyone's safety andvwell being that you will call APS. THIS might or might not get him to understand the gravity of the situation.
Or, you can choose not to tell him, and just follow through.
7. If you are in the home and observe mother' s behaviors escalate or any change you deem unsafe, you should call 911 and have her transported to ER. You and your father can then go from there consult with hospital staff and options for mother 's care. Expect her to fight not being taken. This is why you or someone capable needs to have POA status. Again consult about this with Elder Law Attorney.
Or, you can delete all of the above and, walk away from the home, tell your father and mother that unless and until they are willing to allow proper medical care, that you cannot and will not be involved any longer.
Then call APS, report the unhealthy situation in the home and let APS take over
Sounds harsh, but sometimes continuing to be in a situation actually enabled the wrong situation to continue. Removing oneself and turning it over to other professionals, may force your father and mother to get the help they both need but for perhaps pride reasons, fear, control etc etc reasons will not.
Blessings....put self care at the top of the list.
Do you think that if you approached your father and ask him to take your mother for an evaluation to a Geriatric Neuro-psy doctor that could be a good opener. Perhaps, if you present it as, "I want to make sure Mom doesn't have the onslaught of Dementia of some sort". I'll take her and go out for lunch afterwards.
The doctors can run different tests for spatial and memory. Sometimes an MRI, Cat Scan can also be given and compared after 6 months. Did mother have a TIA, a seizure of some sought or a mini stroke?
I think if you presented it as a visit to a Neurologist you may have better luck. That's if you can even get an official diagnosis.
A blood work panel for electrodes--potassium, iron, etc. can tell a lot. Is there an infection, UTI of some sought. Again, all of these things can mimic a change in behavior.
In all honesty, the men doesn't always know what to do. They just use avoidance and don't deal with the issue at hand. I would keep a log of any "unusual" behavior or changes in behavior.
Mid 70's is still young in this day an age. I would hate to see you live like this for the next 20 years when perhaps maybe with the right medication things can improve for all of you.
I am a firm believer in exercise and socialization. By that I mean a simple good pair of walking shoes, fresh air, nature, flowers on the table and the Church people visit on a Sunday.
Keep tv to a minimum. There's a lot going on now all over the world but do we really need to know everything in every single City. What about music...the older people music of their era makes them happy and is good for their memory.
Sometimes people have the attitude, well things have always been like this. It is what it is. But maybe, just maybe there is answer out there that could give your mother a better quality of life.
Some doctors after an initial visit will do Telehealth appointments.
A structured routine, good meals, always have something to look forward to. Today my mother has our neighbor bringing homemade Baklava from the Church. It's Mom's favorite dessert. We are helping our neighbor by buying some and mother is happy! It's a treat for her on a Sunday.
It's doesn't have to be a million $$$ experience but your everyday quality of life.
I am coming from the Lewy Body Dementia diagnosis so oftentimes these Dementia's can mimic what you think is mental illness. You know your mother best but I just wanted to give you some info that maybe "some" of it would be of help in your mother's situation. But again, you know her well and her history.
We try to share our resources and experiences on this platform and you take what you need from it and hopefully we are all helping one another.
You sound like a really good person that wishes things would get better but you can't get the support.
What you CAN do is call and let dad know that you and your family will not tolerate any more verbal or emotional abuse from her. You will love them from a distance until her mental health issues are addressed. You respect her choice to refuse treatment and his choice to endorse that refusal.
They, in turn, will be forced to respect your choice not to expose yourself and your family to verbal and emotional abuse.
Healthy boundaries are so important in situations such as this.
Family therapy would help your children understand mental illness and how you have endured the wrath of your mother and the shameful behavior your father displayed in his lack of courage to protect the children.
Hopefully, APS will evaluate for placement. A Geriatric Psychiatrist could intervene with medications while you and your family redirect to other relatives or friends to visit.
Personally distance might be a good idea. Just don't go over. Let Dad deal with her. Maybe she will be a good girl if you just don't go there awhile. Spread out your visits too. Like once every 6 months for your own sanity.
Good luck!
Good luck to you.
I don’t know if it is mental illness or just a miserable personality.