Follow
Share

I imagine that this does not happen in normal healthy relationships, where you have a lifetime of mutual love and caring to fall back on when you need patience and compassion.


But for those that didn't have that, does anyone else get physical anxiety symptoms and overwhelming feelings of dread? If so what do you do?


I was able to hold my mom off for two days so no way I'm getting out of seeing her later this afternoon and eve. I'm so tired of her digs and questions about how I spend my time. The implication being I'm not spending enough time with her. The weather is cloudy today so I know she will complain about it non-stop and her usual negativity. I'm dreading this to the point that I actually feel sick to my stomach.


I absolutely hate that I have this visceral reaction to my own mother.


I don't always do this but after I finish a couple chores I'm going to have a big glass of wine and force myself out of this dreadful mood. It's not fair to anyone for me to be this way. I was part of the decision making in moving her here and I need to suck it up until she is ready for a facility. I just hope I can do it and not go crazy. I really underestimated how difficult this would be so my coping skills still need a lot of work.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Piper, I understand your anxiety. I have long-term enmeshment issues with a mentally ill mother who was totally unequipped for motherhood. Even though I cut my contact with Mom waaaaaay back and quit making phone calls, several days before I expect to visit I get anxious and depressed. I don't drink or smoke but I have engaged in "anxious eating" which resulted in a weight gain of 13 pounds...... from slender to pudgy within a few short months. Right now I'm trying to lose it, and at 60-something it ain't easy.

I quit obsessing about Mom's dementia and endless complaints. I fulfill her needs. Attempting to fulfill the wants is a bottomless vortex.

Mom is mentally ill with a diseased brain and will never get well. I can practice self-care by doing things that relax and engage my mind, exercise, and practice healthy eating habits. I refuse to go down with her.

May I suggest going low contact? Though I can't say it eliminated my anxiety, it certainly helped. Your mom undoubtedly expects daily contact but that isn't healthy for you. Your health and peace of mind matter, too!
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Yes - on the phone, in person, yes, yes, yes! My mom and I used to be buddies, now she is an awful stranger.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Oh Yes! Sometimes just seeing her number come up in caller ID is enough to make me say #@!$%. and feel my pulse jump up, I'm sure my BP is elevated. Then I feel bad when I get off the phone and say to myself jeez don't be such a #$@!&! She's actually very sweet but it wears you down.

I am leaving shortly to go to her AL to take her to bingo. Bingo at this AL is sorta awful. There is a hierarchy or clique-ey bunch of women that rule it. It's like seventh grade lunch table all over again. Mean girls never grow up they just grow old.

You better bet when I get back from there I will reward myself somehow.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
lealonnie1 Jan 2020
Omg the bingo hounds in AL are dreadful.....sore losers and over the top with the snide remarks and stuff. Poker is similar too.....whoever wins is The Bad Guy!!!
(0)
Report
I think it's worse when we have a fear of the "known" than a fear of the "unknown." When you have to walk on eggshells because you already know the response you're going to get, it's a horrible feeling. I've learned (too late) over the last few years that I need to live my life on my terms and not worry about pleasing people who will never be pleased anyway.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Before my mom went to assisted living, going home or hearing the phone ring, the anxiety of the every day dread of what would be the next complaint, suspicion, demand, really affected my heart condition to the point that I sometimes had trouble breathing. One of my sons was in trouble during this same time, so I had a grandson to finish raising. I had weekly appointments with the chiropractor just to keep my body from falling apart. AND I was teaching full time and exhibiting my work. I look back at all that and wonder how I'm still alive. And my mom is actually very easy to deal with compared to other stories I read here. She is grateful most of the time for what I do for her. Really, she is lovely, so then I wonder what's wrong with me that I felt that way for so long about caring for her. Lately, what is the most difficult is to listen to her say that she is of no use to anyone, so wants to just die. She is physically healthy at 90, just can't remember anything.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Yesterday at the hospital with mom another woman calling her loved ones to report on her mom’s condition said,”We wanted her to live to 100, but I guess that is what I wanted.” So important to realize that it’s out of our hands.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Yea! But I try not to dwell on it. I set an alarm for when to wake, when to sleep, when to eat and when to fast. I’m too busy worrying about when I get to eat to let the anxiety get to me. Then I take a heart pumping walk up the stairs or around the block and wonder why I’m breathing so hard.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I feel your pain. I don't have any answers for you as I am going through the same thing, but know you're not alone. I am literally looking at applying for Section 8 housing because I don't know how much longer I can live in this situation. Hang in there!
Helpful Answer (6)
Report
ExhaustedPiper Jan 2020
Thank you. Please keep us posted on your Section 8 and moving forward. Did you apply yet? If not do it ASAP!
(1)
Report
I must say, a lot of people have brilliant advice. I am thankful every day for finding this forum. There are a lot of great people on here. I never want to see anyone leave on here.,Everyone has so much to contribute!!!
Helpful Answer (7)
Report
ExhaustedPiper Jan 2020
I agree Elaine. I am so thankful for this forum and the people here. Finding it was a game changer for me, in a way I very much needed.
(1)
Report
Thank you golden 23 for your advice!!!! I will post that one on my refrigerator so I never forget it!!!!!!
Helpful Answer (3)
Report
golden23 Jan 2020
You're welcome, elaine I am glad if I can be helpful, I have had many years to figure this out. Mother died Dec 2018 aged 106. I was 81 at the time. I had to make changes as I grew up to survive. Now, since then,, I am healing from life long abuse. It takes some work but I am worth it, as is everyone here. 😀
(4)
Report
Yes I used to get very anxious and stressed so I limited contact to a few times a year. When phone calls were bad I limited them or didn't answer. You will never please her so do what is right for you, You have at least an equal responsibility to yourself as you do to her. It is not just about what she wants or needs it is also about what you want and need. Her wanting more time with you and to verbally abuse you is not a need of hers. It is a want. Your desire to be away from the verbal abuse is a need. A little alcohol is OK for most people but a reliance on it to manage your life is not good

It is horrible feeling this way about one's mother, but don't hate yourself for that. You didn't break this relationship - she did and is. Care for yourself, look after yourself. while you look after your mother's needs but not her wants necessarily, Don't allow the situation to break you.
Helpful Answer (11)
Report
lealonnie1 Jan 2020
" Her wanting more time with you and to verbally abuse you is not a need of hers. It is a want. Your desire to be away from the verbal abuse is a need." PERFECTLY said Golden!!!! I shall use that thought myself moving forward! Excellent advice.
(7)
Report
See 2 more replies
My mother passed away a little over three years ago.

My stomach still clenches up every frickin’ time the phone rings. Still.

Then there’s the intense feeling of dread - even though I know she’s long gone - when I come home from being out a few hours, when I look at the landline to check to see if there are any “missed calls”.

I keep wondering when this phone phobia is going to go away. I keep wondering if it’s EVER going to
go away...
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
ExhaustedPiper Jan 2020
Oh wow, it's like a form of PTSD.

I'm sorry Rainmom. Do you still have the same phone? If so I wonder if getting a new phone that looks different would help? The sight of the phone itself might be a trigger, so maybe that wouldn't happen with a new one?
(1)
Report
EP, mine is showing signs, has been for awhile. Normal conversations are only about him and his needs (always an emergency) and since he’s a highly intelligent man it’s going to be a cool minute or an accident before he will get tested/diagnosed. Hearing the decline in his voice, utter disregard to anyone’s situation, and even lying on top of dropping off to complete silence in the middle of a sentence....
yes, I already have anxiety but since we’re in the Hide-n-watch stage... it’s worse wondering when $hit is gonna hit!
If you consider utter dread blanketing over me and going completely fetal position “anxiety”, oh I’ve got it.
As advised I set forth to hire help, meal delivery, life alert and he’s cancelled it all. He seems much worse when I am around as far as being needy but he can’t hide the mental decline much longer. In my case I was told to stay away as much as possible because he was losing mobility FAST. Truth is he just wants me to do everything. I’m sorry but you’re going to need to consider how much longer you’ll endure this torturing of yourself. I guess I got lucky being told to stay away by multiple medical professionals and many caregivers here. I did, but he’s cancelled all the help.
im not positive when but he will eventually require placement and I will handle it all from a distance, probably fooling myself that I’ll get to be the good guy during visits and such once he is placed. I’d guess if yours is pulling the guilt card, you are already in the THICK OF IT😢
You’re not alone and this invisible disease of anxiety is no joke.
If you have to blame your Dr do it. You getting worse probably doesn’t matter a bit to her (maybe not even her fault) but that’ll get worse. Start seeking help for you both before you find yourself on heavy medications as some of us here already are! You can’t fix her, you can help yourself and if you don’t you will be of no help for her, THATS A REALITY!
I’m so sorry...
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
ExhaustedPiper Jan 2020
Hide and watch stage, yes, that's very similar to what I feel like I am doing! Avoiding as much as I can and being available in an emergency.

And I don't know when the next turn for the worst will come either. It's a very unsettling feeling.

My mom, although I feel she's always had some kind of personality disorder, was also very smart. Her neurologist told me people who are intelligent can hide dementia for a long time. But as you are seeing, the cracks eventually start to show, and it gets harder and harder for them.

My mom can still fool people for short periods. I've been able to identify some of her coping loops. She has about five. The appropriate laugh when I know she has no clue, The "Oooooooh, I see" when she still has no clue but is trying to buy time or change the subject, and a few others.

I don't know what comes next.

I made a decision awhile back to get my mother's doctors more involved. Mainly her primary care doctor and he has gotten more involved, and he is communicating with her other doctors including the neurologist who diagnosed her. When they tell me she is no longer safe to live alone then I will be able to place her into care because I will be adamant that I am not available.

You can do the same from afar. Keep us posted about your dad.
(1)
Report
I totally sympathize with you. I am pretty much in the same boat. Either we're both horrible or this is pretty normal? Please let it be normal, though pretty awful at the same time!
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

When I am going to see my Mom my blood pressure goes sky high even though I am on three different BP meds. I often get heart palpitations and feel dizzy. I never know what I am going to walk into. When I get home I often have a headache which is not something I have ever been prone to have. So yes, you are not alone.

I have made a few changes recently that seem to help. I stay less time, 45 minutes is enough. I go three days a week but will soon be cutting down to two. I also have begun limiting phone conversations to just a few each week. Mom is usually pretty nasty on the phone.

If you have lived your whole life trying to please someone, hoping to prevent them from abusing you, then coping skills might not be enough. You might need to consider limiting contact. There is no shame in that.
Helpful Answer (13)
Report
againx100 Jan 2020
Good for you for setting boundaries and cutting back on the things that are bothering you!
(2)
Report
See 2 more replies
I agree with everything lealonnie said!!! I am going through the same thing. Her answer is my answer!!! Ditto over here!! Enough is enough and don’t feel guilty.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Oh, Piper!

I had an okay relationship with my mom; not great, not what I have with my daughters, but okay. No major drama and my mom, even with dementia, was pretty reasonable. By which I guess I mean I could get her to do what I needed her to. My siblings and siblings in law all agreed about mom's care so no drama there either.

Nonetheless, as mom's cognitive decline started, going to see her became more and more painful. I just NEVER knew what I was going to find. I had lost my "good enough mother".

I recognized that what was happening was that I was grieving, in a very real and visceral way, the person who taught me a lot of useful stuff. How to read labels, how to say "no", how to be a good mother in law.

As her MCI advanced to dementia, she would argue with me about the appropriateness of an "anti itch" cream based on its name, not its ingredients. She would claim that she was being required to manage her own medications in rehab...when the nurse had just given them to her! She started imagining slights from relatives that weren't happening.

I can only imagine how, with a lifetime of "not" a good relationship with your mom, these problems are exacerbated. I should have gone back into therapy when this started, but I didn't, and I'm left with some very bad habits that I wish I didn't have.

Piper, what you are feeling is totally expect-able. Mindfulness meditation helps.

When my internist, whose MIL was living with him at the time, inquired into my weight gain, I told him honestly that I attributed it to the very good local ice cream near my mom's NH and a lot of white wine upon getting home.

He sighed and said "bourbon is better".

Please take care of yourself.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report
lealonnie1 Jan 2020
Ha.......yeah.......not enough bourbon or ice cream in the world to pacify this gal I'm afraid. Sad but true, isn't it?
(7)
Report
See 3 more replies
I thought it was just me, and that maybe I was imagining it!

When I drive the 3 miles to my MIL's house - as I get within about a mile, I feel my adrenaline go crazy - - full on "Fight or Flight" mode!

I think it is the stress of not knowing what I'll walk into - will she be calm and compliant, will she be on the floor from a fall, will she be worked up over a fight she picked with other family members?? What will I find?? I just don't know.

Thank you for this topic, if only to see that I might not be crazy or imagining this!!
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

EP, I so get this. I've been living these anxiety feelings for a year+ and am hopefully going to be free from it soon. I have thought about how, what you said, is what I will be dealing with. The phone calls can be damaging as well.
It is like you're dam*ed if you do and dam*ed if you don't.
I like what Tothill wrote-a lot, and I'm going to use that advice when my Mom moves back to her apartment.
Take care.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
ExhaustedPiper Jan 2020
Yes I have been following your story and I am so happy that you will soon have your home back to yourself!

I agree Tothill gave good advice and I have to take it too.

In your case please take all the time you need to heal.

I have this sticker on an old box that says- When one door closes, sometimes you want to get a hammer and nails and make sure that bitch stays shut!

Hugs
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
Yes, I sometimes get the same feelings of physical anxiety & dread as you do when visiting my mother. Which is why I LIMIT my visits to once a week at best. I do call her every evening at 8:10 pm, but I'm not going to tonight; I've asked my husband to call her instead. Know why? She's been carrying on like a maniac for the past two nights during the phone conversations and I'm DONE. I need a break from the histrionics so I'm not going to speak to her tonight. She is ALWAYS on her best behavior when speaking to anybody but me, so let DH handle her tonight. And, if she keeps up this toxic BS behavior, we will NOT go see her tomorrow afternoon for our weekly obligatory visit.

Enough is enough.

Boundaries MUST be set down with these women or our entire LIVES will be destroyed. I already have a weight issue, a drinking issue, a smoking issue and all sorts of other hang ups, thanks to all the BS I've suffered my whole life. It's taken me decades to get those issues under control, yet EVERY time I see my mother or speak to her, the FIRST thing I want is a drink, a cigarette and a candy bar. Gee, I wonder why?

Figure out what suits YOU as to when you will visit the woman. Make a schedule of X time(s) per week and then stick to it like glue. If she doesn't like it, she can lump it.

Sorry for being blunt. I'm just sick and tired of being sick and tired, if you know what I mean.

Good luck Piper. And may God help you make some decisions in YOUR best interest.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report
ExhaustedPiper Jan 2020
Oh yes Lea, I do know what you mean.

Time for me to bring up scheduling time with her, again. Another difficult conversation because she doesn't think boundaries should apply between mother and children, or something.

One time in my early 20's I stopped by my parents with a date. My dad had refinished their basement and made a gorgeous huge bar that was great for socializing. My dad was great, but my mom got sloppy drunk and fell asleep right at the bar. I can't remember where my dad was but I was so embarrassed I coaxed my mom up and to her bedroom (stopping to put her on the toilet first so she didn't pee the bed). The next day I had to stop over there and told her to please not do that because I was embarrassed I had to take her to bed in front of a guy I just met. Her response to me: "You should be HONORED to help me to bed".... No lie. That is exactly what she said and it's burned in my brain. There are other stories but you get the point.

I just have to constantly push back until I can place her, it's all I can do right now.

It seems like your husband is a good buffer for you. Mine is too, and I feel lucky to have that because I don't think I'd be as patient as he is. He too will answer the phone or door when I am just NOT up for it. I also rarely see her unless he is with me because when we are alone she is the most nasty.

And the bad habits, I get that too. I'm honest with my doctor about my drinking and get my physicals and blood work. I know to never mix with xanax or drive. But right now I can not see a time when I will not want to have a drink before and directly after dealing with my mother. The freaking anxiety is REAL, and in some ways I think that heightened state is worse for the body than a few drinks. I noticed over the summer when she was at her cottage I drank very little, except for when she was fighting with me on the phone over the driving BS.

Let us know how your visit goes today. Cheers!
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
Piper, why do you have to see her this afternoon? And if there is some task that needs doing, why will it take you into the evening? Is there no possibility of someone else going whatever it is?

Please protect yourself. Your feelings are your body's way of telling you to avoid the harm your mother will cause.

It is not a matter of you needing better coping skills, it is a matter of avoiding your trigger, which is your mother.
Helpful Answer (11)
Report
lealonnie1 Jan 2020
It's kind of like keeping one's hand OFF the stove because we KNOW it will burn us, isn't it? :(
(5)
Report
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter