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Back story, my newlywed wife of 6 months has been taking care of her 88 year old Chinese dad with dementia for last 8 months (beginning of April)…
Besides caregiving her dad which I assist with here and there, she rescues dogs and particularly those with health problems. We have 3 dogs on top on caregiving responsibilities (2 of the dogs have epileptic seizures randomly)… Be it all the responsibilities we have, I feel we as a newlywed couple have taken a back seat. I feel me and particularly our relationship have taken a noise dive- are a distant 3rd priority.
I’m also concerned as my wife has been professionally and medically diagnosed with bi- polar disorder, severe depression and anxiety over 30 years. She is on 4 different physiatric medications for all this on top of hormone replacement therapy. It’s caused her to stay up real late (like falling asleep until 6am-sleeping well into the day… getting up well into the day well after 3pm) and racing to fight the day… focus on caregiving-entertaining her dad. It’s gotten to the point her dad ends up roaming around out front of the house, pacing and looking confused. A couple times, I’ve been so concerned, I was worried if he locked himself out of the house as he would literally stand out front just staring into the front windows of the house and front door while at work or handling responsibilities that take me away from the house (we have a home security camera system)… that I also had to drop everything I’m doing, even almost asking to leave work as my wife was asleep-didn’t answer her phone.
It’s just become beyond overwhelming, beyond emotionally stressful that I’m seeking individual counseling and beyond resentful. We are in marriage counseling. My wife says changes will be made, but still hesitant and sometimes back peddles on wanting to get a full time professional caregiver or consider assisted living. She feels her priorities and responsibilities with her dad, the dogs come first… while acknowledging we do need to make us a priority and marriage.
To top it off, her brother who lives over seas, makes all the executor decisions financially and they have a relationship that’s very toxic.
I’m exhausted, overwhelmed, and scared our relationship is doomed unless I conform to the demands of ultimate my wife’s family-everyone else’s needs! I desperately want US to work but I think severe changes need to be made for her dad’s safety, the dogs safety and ultimately US together and individually.
Am I being a narcissist, insensitive or a “martyr” for feeling this way? I don’t know what to do. Nothing seems to be ultimately clicking when I talk to her. She gets overwhelmed, angry and wants to separate into different rooms-half communication whenever we get into a deep discussion about all this.
Thank you for any and all input…

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Speak to a divorce lawyer about an annulment. Clearly, you were deceived and her mental illness is a piece of evidence.
Sooner or later APS will be called about inadequate care of FIL
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Reply to MACinCT
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This is unlikely to change particularly if she shuts your attempts to communicate down. I suggest a marriage counsellor. If that doesn’t help, you may have to re-evaluate your commitment to the relationship.

Your needs are reasonable.
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Reply to Danielle123
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You're not being insensitive. You married your wife. You did not marry her needy father with dementia who needs round-the-clock care. You did not marry dogs that need rescuing and fostering either. If anything, it is your wife who is being the martyr here not you.

I've been married three times (twice to my second husband), so I know a little bit about marriage dynamics. If your wife refuses to have a real discussion about the situation and will not make any meaningful changes, marriage to you is simply not a priority to her. If she gets angry and overwhelmed and storms off into another room when you bring it up, she's gaslighting you. She wants the situation like it is. You maintain the stats quo and stay in the place she's put you in.

Let me ask a couple questions. Do you also pay all the bills? How does your wife caregive for her father with dementia and foster rescue dogs if she sleeps all day?

It's time to lay down the law in your own house, my friend. Your wife needs to get her act together for starters. Many people manage mental illness and are still productive members of society. So it's time for your wife to get a swift (metaphorical) kick in the tokhes from you. Then your FIL goes into memory care. If the brother overseas in charge of the FIL's money andd decisions, he needs to make some pans for the father with his sister and you and get it done.

Make your wife listen. Don't let her avoid discussion because she throws a tantrum and huffs off to another room. If she will not be reasonable, pack your bags and leave because she's not interested in having a husband and being married. If she will not consider you and your needs all she's looking for is a bill-payer who will take care of her and her family. You deserve better.
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Reply to BurntCaregiver
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You do not sound insensitive to me.
Your concerns are very reasonable. And you are overwhelmed. It sounds like you (and your wife) are so caught up in the daily chaos, it's hard for you to see the path forward.
I'm sorry to say, even if you work out a solution for your Father-in-Law's care, you married a woman who doesn't sound very emotionally stable. Diagnosed with bi- polar disorder, severe depression and anxiety, and on 4 different psychiatric medications, on top of hormone replacement therapy? Her sleep patterns are erratic and inconsistent, and she's rescuing dogs with health issues?
You are in for a lifetime of chaos. If it's not her father, it will be more dogs - or something unexpected. I'm particularly concerned about your efforts to communicate with your wife. It doesn't sound like you two are making much progress.
Your needs count as much as hers. If you really want to make the marriage relationship work, continue seeing a marriage counselor, and give yourselves both some time to learn to communicate effectively and make decisions together which prioritize your relationship.
When you say she feels her priorities are for her father's care, and the dogs;
You are last. I think she has already spoken, and you are hoping to change her.
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Reply to CaringWifeAZ
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Wow. This situation is unsustainable. Was your wife living with her father before you married? Forgive my blunt observation but this will likely spiral even more down hill. Honestly. I'd cut my losses and walk away. I'm sorry you're going through this.
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Reply to JeanLouise
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This situation needs drastic action. Your wife can't leave her father with dementia wandering around the house or outside while she sleeps through the day. Call Adult Protective Services and tell them that you can't take care of your FIL because you are at work, and your wife can't take care of him because of her illness. Give them the brother's contact information so they can work with him on placing your FIL where he will be adequately cared for.

Maybe this will jolt your wife into getting back on her meds and getting herself together. Maybe it won't. You can make decisions about you life going forward from there.
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CaringWifeAZ Nov 12, 2025
MG8522, this is the best answer I've seen.
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"My wife is 56 years old and I’m 42 years old". W has lots of problems. Why did you marry?
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JeanLouise Nov 12, 2025
My thoughts exactly
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"My wife is 56 years old and I’m 42 years old". Why did you marry?
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There are many people with bipolar disorder who are fine on the right for them meds. You all were not together long enough to know each other. Most Asian people have different expectations for their children and their elders than people from "the west", so you'll have to deal with that if you stay married. So, you got married too fast, and you didn't do research into her cultural differences. That's what happened here. You have to start thinking about what is, not what you hoped it would be. I wish you luck. But I think it's really a mistake to assume that her condition has to remain untreated, as I know many people who are doing well and are stable on the right for them meds. You've got to unwind a lot of this stuff and figure out if you're equipped to handle this. Keep in mind, her dad won't live forever. And definitely get her to the doctor, which means get her recertification papers in for Medicaid. You can't do jack with an untreated bipolar mind, so she needs to get that taken care of first.
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lealonnie1 Nov 12, 2025
A huge percentage of bipolar folks refuse to be, or stay, medicated, like my stepdaughter for instance. That is the problem, in a nutshell, for many mentally ill people.
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I have a bipolar sister and an uncle with schizophenia. In my experience it is difficult to have compromise/therapy with someone who is bipolar. In general the mania drives their lives.
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It is quite interesting that, knowing all of this, this is the woman you chose to marry.

If you now choose not to stay married, then it is best you discuss all of this with a divorce attorney.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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I’m sorry for your situation. With untreated bipolar running her life, you’ll never have a successful relationship and she’ll never be good as a caregiver. She’s overwhelmed and manic, alternating with depression. Unless and until she accepts consistent treatment, she won’t change and you’ll be miserable, rightfully so. Her dad needs another caregiver, she’s not up to the very hard task with her mental health as it is. Consider carefully if you want to stay in this. I wish you wisdom and peace
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Reply to Daughterof1930
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You didn’t really know your wife when you married her. She immediately became a ‘passenger’ in your marriage, complete with rescue epilectic dogs, a difficult father and a mental illness. If she sleeps all day, she will never contribute to a shared partner income. Apart from the total impact on you, you would be very negligent to have children who would be subject to this,

Many of us fell in love with people where it didn’t last, either in a relationship or in a marriage. The sooner you bring this to a close, the sooner you can both move on.
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lealonnie1 Nov 11, 2025
The wife, being 56, means children won't be forthcoming Margaret
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Well. All this and her filial responsibilities as dictated by Chinese culture too. You're in a bad place, and I sympathize.

I'm mentioning the cultural expectations because to me it is so obvious. I have knowledge of Chinese culture. A lot of knowledge about it, in fact. And I have many Chinese and Chinese-American friends. I will tell you this - if you throw out the bi-polar problem, the dog problem, the marriage problems, and every other problem you've mentioned, you will still have this: She and her dad (and he's now a big part of this) will cling to that culture no matter what else is available. It is deeply ingrained. It will prevail and you will never win.

To me, since you seem to be from my culture, which I, like everyone else in the world, think is the best, everything you say you want does make sense. To wife and father, it does not and will not. People stay true to their cultures of origin most of the time. Especially if they're Chinese.

You're not being a narc or insensitive. You are being true to your culture. During the courtship, you couldn't have picked up on all the cultural issues, mental health issues, etc. etc., and she may have hidden a lot from you on purpose because she realized you weren't ready for it. Sneaky! No wonder you're resentful.

Looking at what's ahead for you, I vote for annulment or divorce. I don't see you being happy in this marriage because there's too much resentment, and she's controlling the whole situation. That's not likely to change.

As for dad, he needs to go to memory care. He's not safe at home alone. She won't allow him to go, though, I'm sure about that. Filial responsibility is a HUGE thing in that culture.

You can either go now or waste another — years of your life trying to bend to wife's demands. You decide, but I wouldn't do it if I were you. There are many more fish in the sea! Get out before it's too late.
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Reply to Fawnby
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My wife is 56 years old and I’m 42 years old. Her dad is an American citizen-has dual citizenship as my wife and her brother were born-raised in the United States.

We dated for 9 months before getting married. I didn’t know quite the extent of her situation with emotional issues until a couple months within the marriage. Plus we didn’t live together fully until getting married. When we dated prior to her dad moving in with her, she was a completely different person and I miss that. I love her and deep down has the most amazing heart of gold.

I think though with everything on the plate, her brother and just getting emotionally exhausted… I’m going to write something that I want to share in couples therapy with her tomorrow . Everyone is right about establishing boundaries and at this point we do need benchmarks. I try to be sympathetic and truly want all this to work! But I can’t and not looking to save someone that doesn’t want us fully and also take into consideration what’s best for her dad… and dogs as well!

She let her Medicaid lapse and have been on her to renew. Hopefully she can regain her health insurance asap to seek better medicine management as I think everything she is all on, is not good or right for her situation.

Just for the record, i’m not trying to slam her…. I’m open for self improvement as well and if I’m not being a great supportive husband, then I want to make improvements to change that.

Thank you kindly!
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Reply to ecm1915
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Your wife is collapsing under the weight of caring for her dad. You have every right to be concerned.

My sister is unmedicated bipolar and I suspect your wife is unmedicated because she is absolutely on a manic right now.

You need get your wife to the doctor and possibly have her committed because she is a danger to others, her dad.

You can’t let your wife’s mental illness run your life because as you are experiencing, it only results in chaos.

If I were you, I’d cut my losses and divorce her or get an annulment. I don’t say that often around here.

Get out now while you are still sane.
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Reply to Bulldog54321
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I'm so sorry for this distressing situation.

I'm not certain that counseling helps someone whose BPD is not under "control". Counseling requires us to be our rational selves, otherwise it is an exercise in futility.

Not sure how much money you want to throw into the counseling, but maybe it's a reasonable idea to give her benchmarks before you decide to take an action: 3 months/12 counseling sessions with no improvement means you decide to exit the marriage.

Is her Dad an American citizen? If not, his ability have access to social safetynets like Medicaid might be blocked. As he needs more and more care, the cost of the care increase dramatically. Where will this effort/money come from?

I don't think you're being a narcissist but I do think you don't have clear boundaries or a trigger for an exit plan. You didn't cause her BPD and you can't fix it, no matter how much you care for her. Sometimes staying with such a person really amounts to enabling. You may be in for a very very chaotic and bank-draining relationship with her.

My friend's son just divorced his wife whose BPD has finally reached a point of reckoning. He didn't really want to divorce her but the devastion she created was more than he could handle. They were married way longer than you. And he finally had to admit it was completely beyond his control, with no end in sight.

I'm not trying to judge you, but how long did you know her before you got married? How old is she? How old are you? More information gives more context for better suggestions.
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Bulldog54321 Nov 11, 2025
Exactly correct. Therapy does not help with people who are bipolar. It just never works. It’s a waste of time and money.
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Why did you marry this woman, I have to ask you that?? Knowing she's as dysfunctional as she is, taking in dogs, a father with dementia, staying up all night and sleeping all day, being bi polar, etc etc? She's putting her father at great risk, the dogs, your marriage, yet you're asking if YOU are a narcissist, insensitive or a martyr? No. But I do wonder if you married this woman thinking you'd change her and be the hero?

I have a bi polar step daughter who's SO impossible and unreachable, it's insanity even trying to deal with her. She's now cut off her father 100% and hasn't spoken to either of us in 2 yrs. We get no contact with our granddaughters either, bc mommy is also very spiteful. It's actually been a relief NOT dealing with this woman anymore. Truth.

I don't know what you CAN do unless your new wife agrees to therapy and medication. If she's shut down to that, you're facing a life of chaos as you're seeing now. Nerves of steel can't even manage to deal with such people. Nothing clicks with them.

Best of luck to you.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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Bulldog54321 Nov 11, 2025
Exactly. OP’s wife’s insanity is running this show and he is just a player in her game. He doesn’t know this yet.

The sex was probably incredible and mind blowing while they had it. That is how a bipolar woman on a manic hooks a husband.
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