My aunt is bedridden and my mom has neuropathy and is limited to what she can do for herself and for my aunt. The two of them argue daily like 2 little kids and every day for the last few years my aunt runs to me and complains about my mom and about what she cant do or wont do for her in the house. If it was just simple complaining I would listen and let it go. However, every call consists of the same word for word message. “ Your mother is a nasty (explicitive) and you have to get her out of here tomorrow!" There are complaints concerning grocery deliveries, complaints regarding the person who gives my aunt personal care and interaction between her & my mom, things concerning my mom changing my aunts colostomy bag, things concerning breakfast lunch & dinner and my mom bringing it to my aunt, etc., etc. And then after the complaints she tells me that I have to get my mother out of her house. Now if it were that easy I surely would. In fact this year that was my plan however, my husband became ill and I have had to make him my #1 focus. My mom & aunt have all the things they need to live their lives. It's not that I have totally ignored my mom. They have food, a comfortable place to live, tv, etc. I do what I can when they need it. Truthfully I am very overwhelmed. I had to take a leave of absence from my job so I could take my husband to doctor appointments, therapies, etc. I'm doing the things I used to do daily like housework and cooking in addition to the house chores my husband did but cannot do right now. After a long tiring day outside I get a phone call from my aunt, not in support but complaining. It just drains whatever juice I have left in me right out. What can I do? I'm an only child and my aunt is a widow with no children.
I am not your aging care hotline.
I am not your nursing home.
I could go on.
Thank u for taking the time to answer
So as Maragaret says, do they want to try to make this work longer? If so.. Ladies you need to talk to EACH OTHER & work it out.
Or it's time for change. Mom quits. Mom finds new accomodation.
Aunt finds herself new care arrangements &/or new accomodation.
I mean, how is that working out for you answering their excessive and non stop BS calls? No one told you that you had to answer the calls.
And hire yourself a housekeeper so you can catch a break.
What are you thinking about doing with your mom? AL? SNF? Whatever it is, is she able to do any of the legwork or will this all be on you? If it's on you, I would find some time and get it done! I know your husband comes first but it sounds like getting your mom out of aunties is also a priority. Once you find her a place, that facility can help your mom and you keep helping hubby.
Your aunt? You need to cut those complaining phone calls down to just about zero!!! Do not answer if she is making multiple calls in the same day. When she starts ranting, as she will, tell her that since this is not an emergency, you are not available to listen to all her complaints anymore. You ARE not the complaint department! Tell her that she is stressing you out and you are not OK with it. Maybe call her and tell her how things are going to be. Auntie, please do not call me anymore to complain, especially about my mom. I do not appreciate it and am done with it, etc. Keep it short, to the point. Tell her you'll hang up on her when it starts and then do so. Tell her you are making plans to move mom out and until then she will just have to deal with it.
I actually got a little chuckle out of your description of 2 sisters arguing all the time. Not terribly surprising but annoying at this age!
Set those boundaries, get mom moved and hopefully things will become a little less stressful.
Best of luck.
I see you beat me to it!!
However, with both being in such dire condition, and things on their way to getting much worse, not better, I think that both of them need intervention.
You tell us that your husband needs you.
I think that now needs to be honestly discussed with Mom and Aunt.
Tell them you cannot continue to do what you have been doing for them, and that they must go now to hired help or placement if they cannot any longer rely on one another (which of course, they cannot).
Let them know exactly what you CAN do.
For instance, write them a chart.
I will call you for wellness check every a.m.
I will shop with you once a week and put groceries away.
I will come to your home for a few hours every Saturday to check on things you were not able to handle on your own (light bulbs, what have you).
All else must be hired out.
I will go over bills with you once monthly on last day of the month.
The number for medical emergencies is: ________________.
You are going to need to report to APS them as elders in need of care, I suspect. I encourage you NOT to take on POA for either of them. You cannot handle these two women and an ill hubby. Your obligation is to your husband. Enlist all the public aid you can.
With your moving more into their lives their needs will become more and more dreadful.
I am totally unconcerned with their bickering and would TELL them so. They are simply doing what they have always done, and it's of little concern in the large scheme of what's going on here.
You know the old saying, 'making a mountain out of a molehill'? Well, this was invented for elderly people.
After you have investigated a bit, you tell your aunt that she is not to call you with any complaints about your mother. Make it very plain to her that whatever problems she has with your mother are her problems not yours and that you will stop taking her calls entirely if the complaining and sniping about your mother does not stop.
Trust me, this will put the brakes on these phone calls.
After you've told her this offer to have a meeting where you lay out how you're willing to help and in what terms.
Your mother needs to move out and NOT into your house. You can help her find a place. This would be a good idea because really she's too old to be a servant to her invalid sister.
Next, tell your aunt that if she can pick up a phone and call you to snipe about your mother, she can also call a homecare agency and arrange for a live-in to move to her home. Or you will help her find a live-in through care.com or some agency.
Then you make this happen.
It may turn out that really your mother and aunt want to stay together and just want to complain and snipe.
Seriously though, if your aunt calls you again to complain and snipe about your mother, hang up on her and stop taking her calls.
DO NOT give the complaining and sniping one more moment of your attention. Do not give your aunt an ear who will listen to it. Giving any attention to this kind of thing is like throwing gasoline on a fire. It never actually helps anything in a situation. What it does do is make the person complaining and sniping stronger in their convictions. They think that because someone is listening to them that they are also agreeing with them and taking their side.
Don't take anybody's side. Offer what you can offer. Do not take on more than you can handle. Your husband is your first priority. Not mom and not aunt. Make sure they know this.
Sadly, they didn't. Help them the best you can to find a facility where they'll have 24/7 care. This isn't working for them and it's not working for you, so a place where professionals can care for them is the obvious necessity. Two places would be better so they can't fight with each other.
It seems as if your mom and your aunt may have some cognitive decline going on, in which case they're going to get worse. Clue in your mom's doctor, who may have some recommendations about where she should be. As for aunt, stop taking her calls or limit them.
You need to stick to your plan of taking care of your husband. That means you can't focus on mom and aunt. You can't be all things to all people. If you don't take care of yourself and you become ill from the stress, who would take care of husband? He needs you.
"Oh, but mom and aunt need me too!"
Maybe so, but you're not going to be as available anymore, so they'll have to figure out another plan.
Good luck.
I appreciate you taking time to answer.
Your mom moved in to caregive, and no longer can do what aunt needs. does your mom have the financial capacity to leave?.
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