Follow
Share

I am a 35 year old mother of a 1 year old daughter who lives with my husband in Texas. We recently moved my mother in because she had nowhere to go. She had a double mastectomy's in 2022 no chemo no radiation and started declining in health shortly after. We are sure depression has something to do with the decline but she is since been on meds. She's a long time diabetic due to pancreas not functioning, very underweight, and does not ambulate well (uses a walker and falls 1-2 times a week). She is a very stubborn mean woman and has always been avoidant of doctors and never quit eating sugar after diabetes diagnosis. She has been in and out of the hospital the past year for various issues including sepsis, bone infection due to bed sores, mostly for her sugars being off then she can't walk. She has been stuck in a cycle of hospital for emergency then rehab. Once rehab gets her able to ambulate she is dismissed to home where she does not take care of her insulin needs, other needs then declines follow up visits. She was tested 6 months ago and does not have cancer or dementia/Alzheimer's. The only diagnosis she gets is that she needs to eat more. We tried to get her help during the past year but she refused and did not let us help. APS or Lawyers could not intervene because she is considered competent. Her husband has divorced her because he cannot watch her not take care of herself and she didn't represent herself during the divorce so all she gets is half the sale of the house when it sells roughly 50-60k. She has no retirement savings or any assets. She is only 64 so does not qualify for medicare. She hasn't worked in 20 years so she does not qualify for disability money. She gets around 900 a month. She also does not participate at the doctors visits or want to go to them. I am trying to figure out what to do. I know I can't force someone to take care of themselves but I am also struggling turning my back on her because I truly don't know where she would go. I have been helping her with her insulin which keeps her somewhat level and eating. I am having trouble drawing the line where I do and do not intervene. We also have no idea when the house will sell so we are trying to pay for everything until she can use her money and spend it down on care until Medicaid can take over. I am just at a loss at what my responsibilities are and how to balance that she isn't interested in getting better or figuring out what is wrong.

Find Care & Housing
I have no advice but I do offer my sympathy for your situation. I am at the opposite end of the problem. My daughter just turned 63 and has been living with me for 25 years due to a Work Comp accident that was not addressed immediately. Her health has gone downhill with many problems. At this point she is unable and unwilling to take care of her business, can do very little for herself physically, and is very depressed and anxious. She has been in and out of the hospital for the past six months and I finally got her into a nursing home. She wants to come back, sit in a chair and watch TV, while I run around doing everything.

I have to tell you I am 91, almost 92, and she does not recognize what I do or how difficult it is for me. She is a hoarder, turned my house into a place to sleep. It is no longer a home. I am telling you this because you have to extract yourself from this situation. Your life is just beginning and you need to live it. Mine is almost over and I will need to deal with the legal and medical issues. I have two other children who have no interest in helping so I am it. Save yourself and your family, and bless you for caring enough to try to help, but enough is enough.
Helpful Answer (22)
Reply to Chauncy
Report
LoniG1 Aug 20, 2024
Oh my goodness you are the best. Just remember you do not have to bring her home it is an unsafe discharge. Dont let anyone tell you different. Thank you for being you.
(5)
Report
Next time she falls , call EMS to take her to the ER . Hopefully Mom won’t refuse . Say she is weak, has not been herself , she may have a UTI and she’s diabetic . Say these things so EMS will take Mom ( if she lets them ) .

Once there talk to doctor about a psych hold. Tell doc what has been going on . They can hold Mom at a psych unit and try to get her on some meds and counseling.

Do not take her home anymore either , let her become a ward of the state and let them place her in a facility . If you have POA , once Mom is out of your house go to a lawyer to formally give up POA .
Helpful Answer (17)
Reply to waytomisery
Report
AllibTexas Aug 14, 2024
She does usually pass psych evals or has in the past. There was only one time where she was so sick she didn't so that is why we were able to run all the tests to rule out anything "serious" in November. Thank you for the advice, it is truly appreciated.
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
“She is a very stubborn mean woman …”

This is so common on this forum: conscientious, caring adult children or grandchildren basically upending their own lives to take care of mean, thoughtless and presumably abusive parents or grandparents. Your marriage and your precious little child are more important than this woman who seems unwilling to make a positive contribution to her own situation. (And seems to be mentally competent and not suffering from a condition causing cognitive impairment.)

Thinking of you and hoping that you can get your little one away from a mean person.
Helpful Answer (14)
Reply to SnoopyLove
Report
AllibTexas Aug 14, 2024
Thank you so much for the honest words, I appreciate it very much.
(4)
Report
I have no answer, but as a 61 year old I'm very unhappy that anyone my age would do this to there children, and how sorry I am.

As I would tell my kids , please enjoy your life and don't let your mom do this to you and your family. This is your time!
Helpful Answer (14)
Reply to Anxietynacy
Report
AllibTexas Aug 14, 2024
Yes it's a very hard situation. It would be hard even if she was a nice supportive person but that is not the case. Thank you for your kind words, they truly help.
(4)
Report
How very sad that your very young mother has let her health deteriorate so.
I am a young 64 year old with no health issues and it saddens me for you to have a mother that doesn't care about herself.
The way you describe her you would think that she was 94 instead of 64.
You won't be able to change your mother but you can change the way you react to her and the choices she makes.
I would start with the next time she ends up in rehab, you let the rehab social worker know that you no longer can care for your mother in your home as she is an unsafe discharge, and that she will need to be placed in the appropriate facility. And yes, she'll have to apply for Medicaid to be able to pay for it.
Her care is now more than you and your husband should have to deal with.
You, your husband and your marriage deserve SO much better, and it so very unhealthy for you, your husband, and your marriage to continue to let her live with you.
I hope you'll be strong enough to get your mother out of your home and into a facility where she will receive the care she requires, as you sure don't want her living with you for the next 30+ years now do you?
Helpful Answer (12)
Reply to funkygrandma59
Report
AllibTexas Aug 14, 2024
You are right. I appreciate your advice and input. I am going to work on finding the strength to not enable and do the right thing for myself and my family.
(7)
Report
It’s a great pity that you moved your mother in with you. It sounds as though you are quite right, she is “unwilling’ to take care of herself, not “unable”. She is 64, not eligible for benefits, and is competent mentally (even if stupid, stubborn and mean). You have no obligation to house her or care for her. She ‘had nowhere else to go’ – what a surprise.

Perhaps what you need to do is to find ‘somewhere else’ for her to go, take her there and drop her off. If she goes to a shelter, they will probably take over sorting her out. Do it ASAP, before the ‘recent move in’ turns into her establishing a right to live with you. If her diet refusals mean she goes into hospital again, remove her belongings and refuse to take her back into your house.

This is going to require real firmness with the hospital/rehab social workers. You will have to blame her ‘impossible behaviors’, refusal of medical care, the stress to you, and the ‘damage to your marriage and child’. As soon as she is gone, remove the bed she slept in and set up the room for a different function. Be firm. Forget FOG (fear obligation and guilt). If you don't, you can see the next 20 or 30 years stretching in front of you, so make up your mind and don't change it.
Helpful Answer (11)
Reply to MargaretMcKen
Report
AllibTexas Aug 14, 2024
Thank you so much Margaret. This is helpful and true. I know she's in bad shape now but she has been this way her whole life so it will not change. I need to stop enabling her this way. Right now she is getting everything she wants and not having to take any responsibility.
(6)
Report
See 1 more reply
35 with a baby... I don't think anyone should have to go through this, but it is particularly worse when this should be one of the best times of your life.
I wouldn't know what to do, but as I have read some say, next time she falls call an ambulance. I think your only shot is to first get her out of your home and then try and get help through the hospital. Insist that you cannot take her home. I really hope you figure away through this.
Helpful Answer (11)
Reply to FarFarAway
Report

Please believe exactly what your mother has shown so clearly about who she is, and what she will not do. Sad as it is, she’s not changing. Her patterns and choices are well established. It’s kind of you to want to help and want it to all be better, but unfortunately, it will not. Accept this for your own well being and don’t let the situation mess up your home and marriage. Find mom a low income apartment, in my area there are charities who operate these for her age group. Move her out of your home as soon as possible. Then you can choose how to best help. Maybe you can take her healthy foods and meals when it’s convenient for you. You can encourage her. She needs therapy to address her depression and lack of motivation, but that’s on her to attend. Know that you need to guard your marriage, health, and finances first before anything for mom. She’s blessed that you care
Helpful Answer (9)
Reply to Daughterof1930
Report
MargaretMcKen Aug 13, 2024
My understanding is that most 'low income seniors apartments' have a waiting list of at least a couple of years. Forget about 'how best to help' HER. She is very good at 'helping herself' at your expense. She is not 'blessed', she is a user.
(7)
Report
See 2 more replies
Oh Alli… dear, please establish boundaries! Would you consider social services and see if she qualifies for benefits such as subsidized senior housing? This burden with continue to escalate and overwhelm your growing family. It’s just not fair to you. Move her into her own 55+ apartment. You can’t save someone who refuses to save themselves.
Helpful Answer (9)
Reply to JeanLouise
Report

You need to make an appointment at Social Services and see what Mom is entitled to. As of 65 she cannot get SS disability anyway. It takes a year or more to get it. Seems she is already collecting SS. She may be able to get Supplimental income. HUD does have apts that charge 30% of your income. She could get food stamps.

Your Mom could have gotten so much more from that divorce. 50% of assets. Half of his pension. Better mske sure the house is selling at Market Value.
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to JoAnn29
Report
AllibTexas Aug 14, 2024
That is a good idea. Thank you, I will look into these types of apartments. Yes the divorce situation is terrible. She would not accept help or live in any sort of reality that it was happening.
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
See All Answers
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter