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Elderly Mother in Law

(97 Posts)
Piperly Mon 25-Jul-22 12:34:19

As I'm writing this I'm feeling guilty ? however I'm feeling as if I need someone's else's opinion please. Me and dh are in our 50s and married 7 years ago, second marriage for both of us. We both work hard and have children now all grown up from our 1st marriages and we all get on well. However my dh's Mum is becoming increasingly dependent on him for all aspects of care. My dh is one of 3 brothers/sons and they are not helping out at all. My dh says it is because Mum only wants him there. Now it's got to the point that I'm hardly seeing him at the weekends and when I do he's knackered with working long hours too. We had a horrid row at the weekend over this. I've suggested carers not all the time but just to give him some help but Mum will not entertain this. My dh says he wants to help his Mum while she is still here, and while I really admire him for doing this, this situation is really affecting us as a couple. I feel very alone and just like his carer really as he is asleep most nights by 8pm, up at 5am for work the next day. Weekends are spent shopping for her, cleaning her flat and other chores. Everything at our home is being left to me. Sorry for the rant but I just don't know what to do without causing an argument. I so miss him. Your advice would be so appreciated, thank you

Ktsmum Tue 10-Sept-24 13:35:55

Insist she has the carers you have suggested, or that she does without some of the help you give. My mum was like this, insisted she didn't want carers and that we could look after her, which we could not do full time. You need to draw some boundaries for all of you, before everyone ends up exhausted

eazybee Tue 10-Sept-24 13:44:19

Two year old thread and a poster who never had the courtesy to reply. I would be interested to know what happened but I suspect mother-in-law maintained her iron grip.

Fae1 Tue 10-Sept-24 14:01:53

I am an elderly parent with mobile issues and have an adult son. I can see both sides of the coin as I fear my daughter in law and son are the selfish ones. I brought him up singlehandedly and have helped out as much as I can as most parents do, having often sacrificed my own own needs for his benefit. To date, I have seen them for one day this year, while they were on their way to somewhere else to visit friends 🙄! I am in my late 70s now and have learned to live with it.

knspol Tue 10-Sept-24 14:08:16

I think your DH deserves a medal for looking after his mum but I also think he's being manipulated by mil to do so. Tell him quietly how much you miss your life together and how alone you feel and how worried you are about his health. Take the advice of others and go with him to MIL and hopefully you will see exactly what needs doing and how often. Then you need another conversation with DH and MIL and suggest a hired help of some kind so that your DH has free weekends and if MIL is adamant she will not allow that then tell her your DH needs some breaks and his siblings will have to come over when he doesn't. Present it as a fait accompli ( having discussed with DH and siblings first of course) and leave it at that. Good luck.

HiMay Tue 10-Sept-24 15:13:19

This too will pass. If it were me, I’d share the chores with him and make it a joint venture. The idea of having a nice meal out together afterwards is a good one too. Shame the other brothers aren’t taking part in the situation though

Ali08 Tue 10-Sept-24 15:38:55

This was from 2022.
But, are things OK now, Piperly?

Cateq Tue 10-Sept-24 16:01:03

I’m sorry all work has landed on your DH shoulders. That’s a common problem one member of the family will be left to be the carer, I know it was in my family when gran and my aunt needed looking after, I was the only granddaughter , the youngest with no children so everything was left to me to take care off. The same thing happened when my DMiL was diagnosed with cancer, my DH immediately went on compassionate leave to care for her whilst his brother made about 3 short visits before she died, he then left it to my DH and DS’s to deal with empty the house and keeping the house and garden looked after until it was sold. He wasn’t slow to take money mind you. It’s hard to keep quiet, and your DH needs to speak to his siblings and get them involved.

queenofsaanich69 Tue 10-Sept-24 17:13:00

She might not want him as much if you go Every time,worth a try & make you look really good,I think it might work.

sunglow12 Tue 10-Sept-24 18:26:10

Poor you . Reading this makes me feel I never end up needing so much help but sadly often there is not a choice . Must go and declutter more stuff while I can .

BigBopper Tue 10-Sept-24 18:34:25

When we first married in the 1960's, my husband's parents had died so my husband was looking after his grandma, doing jobs for her but I was always with him, going to see her with my husband after work, going at weekends to do the shopping and gardening, we were joined at the hip and he was so grateful that he didn't have to do it alone.

After she died my dad died so we were then looking after my mum, we were a team right up until she died, it seems as if my husband and I spent most of our married life looking after someone as well as raising children. Sadly he died a few years ago.

BigBopper Tue 10-Sept-24 18:36:06

By the way, I would not change a thing. We had a wonderful life together.

RosiesMaw2 Tue 10-Sept-24 19:46:09

Ali08

This was from 2022.
But, are things OK now, Piperly?

I thought this sounded familiar then spotted too that the thread is TWO years old
I wonder if OP is still around and whether the situation resolved itself?

Freshair Wed 11-Sept-24 09:39:09

We have this situation with a very nasty FiL who is demanding, angry and tight fisted with his money. My partner pays for lots of things for him and never gets his money back. FiL pretends to forget it's owed. My partner is fed up with his dad but is dutiful and responsive. We know this won't go on forever so put up with it. If he was more appreciative, it would be more palatable but there us resentment at his demands. Partner and I support/console each other at the situation and that's how we cope.

Caleo Wed 11-Sept-24 11:03:06

Why did you marry him if you are unwilling to share in his care for his mother? Few individuals have no social baggage .

Davida1968 Wed 11-Sept-24 11:14:12

American finance expert Alvin Hall says that: "the best inheritance that parents can leave to their kids, is not to be a burden".
(So true, IMO. ) Piperly, I think you need to have a long, hard, truthful talk with your DH. (If it was me, my marriage would be looking very shaky indeed....) Perhaps a weekend away, so you're on "neutral ground" for a real discussion. Good luck.

Caleo Wed 11-Sept-24 11:18:16

Piperly, an idea may be that you ring up the other sons and invite them to visit the old lady at the same time then have a family reunion at her place.
You would have to make sure it was all restful enough for her, supply the sandwiches and drinks etc. And wash up, and do any outstanding chores as were needful.

If the old lady is unaware of your husband's being
over -worked she deserves to be gently informed, and at least given the chance to be more cooperative in future.

I speak as a 93 year old whose sons, and occasionally one daughter in law, are her only carers and whose welfare is of great concern to me. I frequently ring to say just checking in, am fine so please feel free not to come today.

RosiesMaw2 Wed 11-Sept-24 11:45:19

What makes anybody think that Piperly is still with us on GN or indeed that the elderly MIL is still with us at all?
(My apologies if anybody knows otherwise)

sazz1 Wed 11-Sept-24 13:34:32

Sounds very much to me that she's lonely at the weekends and needs him for company.
It's a sad situation when an elderly person to totally control their adult child's free time. Perhaps the husband is afraid of losing her and wants to spend as much time as possible there.
OP sit down with your husband and make a firm plan of times and days he will go there that suits you both. If he won't agree perhaps marriage counselling will help.

mabon1 Sun 15-Sept-24 16:40:12

Your husband and Ma-in-law are unreasonable, you need to have a life of your own Clearly, you will need to discuss this otherwise the bitterness will explode. I am 83 , have three sons, I ask very little of them,live in a three-bedroomwidw home with large gardens which I look after myself.

Barmeyoldbat Sun 15-Sept-24 20:24:51

If it was me I would go with him, then after about two weeks I would also take along a carer and let her help. Following week let the carer do the work while you and husband spend quality time with mil. She probably doesn’t want a carer because she then won’t see so much of her son.

RosiesMaw2 Sun 15-Sept-24 22:16:18

JULY 2022