Follow
Share

My MIL has been living with us now for nearly 4 years. She has a history of pretending to be sick to get attention and has gone as far as telling doctors that she has symptoms of various illnesses, heart, stomach, etc. only to have tests run and everything is fine. She has had legit issues with her heart and stomach but they were taken care of with no further issues. Ex. Pacemaker and surgery for a bleed out in her colon. She has made excuses for herself for not being able to do simple everyday self help areas. When she came to live with us she expected me to bathe her and she could actually do this herself.
Recently, she has gone as far as talking to people who are not there and having conversations with them. My husband had asked the doctor for an MIR of her brain. Results came back fine, no significant findings indicating Alzheimer’s or severe dementia, she can be very manipulative to get her own way. Her behavior is toxic and has brought a lot of frustration in caring for her, my husband has lost it several times with her but she is not moved by his words. Her actions speak loudly to me that “I don’t care”
we definitely have burnout, she has been like this for years even before coming to live with us. My poor father in law was exhausted when he died trying to take care of her, he was sick and she still felt she was sicker than him. He would often tell her, you are no sicker than me…. She just sat
After observing her for these past 4 years up and close, her behavior is not normal. I always thought there was a screw loose somewhere. Who pretends to be sick for attention and lies all the time? I told my husband she’s the great pretender!
I’ve often told my husband she’s been seeing the wrong doctors all these years, she needs a psychiatrist or psychologist and the longer she’s here I’m going to need one of these myself.
My 91 year old momma who lives with my sister has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and doesn’t act like this.
Im at my ropes end, any suggestions?I know many of you might say skilled nursing home but she does not have the money for that nor does she qualify for Medicaid.

Find Care & Housing
Call 911 and ask the EMTs to rush her to the hospital to the PSYCH WARD for a full evaluation next time she starts talking to invisible people.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to lealonnie1
Report

Remind her of the story about the boy who cried "Wolf!" one too many times! My sister was a lot like that, as was my paternal grandmother. When my sister actually got sick, everyone just shrugged it off. While she was in the hospital, she made the statement that "this isn't much fun ". She died within two weeks. (She died from receiving a drug to which she had an allergic reaction. )
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to MTNester1
Report

Your MIL is looking for attention and she doesn't care if it's Negative or Positive. She's looking for the attention from her son and she's looking for attention from you, because you "Replaced" her.

How does she tolerate medical tests? Some people love to have the attention of a doctor/nurse/etc. Next time she fakes being sick have a conversation about her behavior with the doctor and see if they will recommend some truly invasive tests to find her illness, the more expensive and painful the better and have the doctor really pitch the pain levels to your MIL. If the Doctor calls her bluff, odds are she will balk at these tests and drop the fake illness.

You need to have a conversation with your husband about reacting to her. She wants him to react to her. The calmer your husband remains the better. If he takes her to the Doctor he needs to be flat and passive on the trip to the office, during the visit and after. She wants him to be reactive so she will get attention. The more passive and flat he is when she acts like this the better. He needs to learn to grey rock her so that she can not manipulate his emotions.

Next time she starts talking to people that aren't there, just let her. Carry about as normal and when she stops and talks to you or your husband tell her something like this.

"I can never tell if you are talking to the imaginary people or me or my husband if you want to ask me a question, say my name first so I know you are talking to me"
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Jhalldenton
Report
MTNester1 1 hour ago
Love it!
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
Doesn’t sound like she qualifies for SNF level of care . She doesn’t seem to require any skilled care . And I’m assuming she is not wheelchair bound or bedbound .
If she could afford a small family run board and care home , they usually run cheaper than assisted livings. She’d get her meals made for her , housekeeping , activities etc .
Did she not sell a home when she moved in with you ? If so does she have any of that money left , or any savings to use ?
Another option is adult day care , give you a break from her.

Also you getting out of the house at times is in order , meet a friend for lunch , a yoga class , volunteer , book club , anything you would like to do . You did not say if you work outside the home. Go on a vacation too .
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to waytomisery
Report

Look into low-income senior housing in your area. Even if there is a waiting list, put her on it; sometimes it moves more quickly than you expect because the people ahead die or go to to other facilities such as SNFs or memory care. Do the same for Section 8 housing. There will be paperwork for both, and that will show your husband and your MIL that you are not willing to tolerate her toxicity any more.

If you husband doesn't get the message or refuses to accept it, go on a vacation without him for at least a week, maybe two. Leave him to deal 100% with her demands and expectations, without you. If you're working or have other obligations there, stay at a hotel or inexpensive Airbnb locally, but don't tell them where you are.

I have a friend whose hobby seems to be going to medical appointments. She does have a lot of issues which she is not making up, but I think some could be resolved through the patient portal or a video call, but she loves her doctors and their staffs and it seems to be kind of a social thing for her.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to MG8522
Report

I would see if there are any Board and Care around you. These are usually private homes that are licenced by the State to take people in. They may just except what Mom gets Social Security wise and pension if she receives it.

Your FIL did you no favor is babying MIL. This is now ingrained in her. If your Mom is 91 I will assume MIL is close in age. You just set your boundaries. She will push them but stand firm. You will not be doing for her what your FIL did. She needs to do for herself. Remind her, you too are a Senior. Call her bluff, tell her if she does not do for herself, you will have her evaluated for care in a Nursing Home.

I would follow up with that evaluation, at least. Talk to her doctor about getting Physical therapy in to determine what she can do for herself. Then you have a baseline and you know where her strengths and weaknesses are.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to JoAnn29
Report

Tell your husband he needs to find another place for her to live now. What is her financial situation?
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to MG8522
Report

I'm guessing she doesn't qualify for Medicaid for the medical part (needing LTC). Dementia is often diagnosed by discounting all other causes. Many dementias do not show up in imaging.

Not sure what state you are in (because rules and laws can vary) but maybe start an eviction process (since your home is legally her home). The goal would be to get her into Section 8 housing, which has sliding scale rent. Or, you call to discuss the situation with social services. Is your husband her PoA? If not, does she even have one? If you can legally get her out of your house, then APS can become involved if she flounders. Then she may be in line for a court-assigned 3rd party legal guardian and they will solve this problem for you.

Of course nothing will happen if your husband isn't on board with any changes. You 2 need to consult with an elder law attorney for the best guidance that can be enacted in your home state.
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to Geaton777
Report

Everyone qualifies for nursing home care once their assets have been used to pay for their care. Only if she’s not a US citizen would this not be true. This living arrangement isn’t working for MIL or you. Burned out caregivers aren’t good for anyone, no judgment, just a fact. Time for her to move where others can provide care.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Daughterof1930
Report
Geaton777 11 hours ago
"Everyone qualifies for nursing home care once their assets have been used to pay for their care" is unfortunately not true: Medicaid has 2 qualifications: financial and medical (assessed as requiring nursing home level of care or LTC) ie, daily medical care, not just custodial care.
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter