I feel I am being forced to be a care giver by my husband. It is his epectation that I do much of their care. I resent this and it is very negatively effecting every aspect of my life including my physcial and mental health. I am becoming bitter and angry. I do not want to do this anymore. My husband will say that I am not responsible but then almost daily either a caregiver does not show up or he is busy and I am told to fill in as of course he cannot leave them alone. I am considering leaving as my only way out but it is hard after a 33 year marriage that was good up until this situation.
To the point of the person above who says a lot more must be wrong, he/she is correct. They ARE his parents. I suspect that if you felt he'd do the same for you (in caring for parents or any other thing) you would be much less resentful.
I am now married, and have been, for ten years to a totally different kind of man. A real man, a man who loves me with his whole heart and to whom my wellbeing and happiness is paramount. And his, to me. If I were taking care of his mother, or him, mine, and anything got to be too much something would change immediately. Unfortunately, unless you DO take that month long vacation and let him see what he'd be facing if you weren't around, probably nothing will change, particularly if you have been at this for a long time. By the way, I did discover that my ex could do the following: compliment me on what I cooked or how I looked, buy me flowers spontaneously, fix his own sandwich, call his own mother (or not), etc. But it came when I finally could not take it another minute. My depression had grown so deep (and my five year old told me that it seemed like 'you love Daddy a lot more than he loves you') and my resentment so overwhelming at his cold shoulder that I knew it would kill me to stay another minute. Oddly, once he only did those things in order to keep me I felt more angry than ever, knowing he'd had it in him all that time and he could see me dying on the vine and never once tried to be there for me until he realized his gravy boat could be permanently empty. It all felt manipulative. I don't know about your husband and his motivations. But I do understand your feelings. Get a good counselor, ask him to come with you (so you can both hear each other) but if he doesn't, then go alone. And - drop the ball with things that he needs to attend to. He will not know you are serious if you have always threatened and never acted. God bless.
Taking care of your in-laws is a heavy workout, and I guess he assumes that since you're home (don't know if you work) it's your responsibility to take care of them. He's mistaken.
Please do not let the this situation ruin your marriage.
Maybe you can let him know you will fill in on 1 or 2 days a week but you should make sure you have a backup caregiver or 2 even. My sister in law uses her children's babysitter to also watch my mother in law when they are gone.
Or you could have 2 caregivers who rotate days and then it might give you an extra person to back up the situation if one can't make it.
Also there are alot of other services to help (meals on wheels, driving services, etc.) Maybe they have a good neighbor who could look in on them if one of the aides doesnt show up....
Keep thinking of back ups that you can call in instead of running in there yourself.
Don't let a temporary situation ruin what you have worked so hard to acheive.
A 33 year marriage in these times is something to work and fight for!!
If your inlaws cannot afford the caregivers (your husband shoud take over their financial needs as well as get a Power of Attorney), reach out to the Agency for the Aging in your area and hire an elder law attorney. You will save your marriage and your sanity. If I have read correctly, I believe that you've already done caregiving for them. Do they live with you? Be honest and firm with your husband and tell him that you love him dearly, but HE needs to find the solution or you will have to leave even though you HATE the thought. Best of luck , honey. You are in my prayers. Please let us know how it's going. Corinne Sending a hug!
Why ?
Mitt Romney & Paul Ryan love to get in the White House !
if Mitt Romney get in the office,
You don't have to cares for your in_law
Mitt Romney will put a stop to the aid for the old
ps
me Mum has Alzheimer, and me Three Sisters kill her for Money, as me Mum has Over $2 Million !
it took me Sisters 6 years to tell me that me Mum pass away
Thank you for your time
You are talking about what "should be" but I sense this situation doesn't live up to that ideal. Marriage counselling seems like a good bet here, to me.
And as for it being "temporary," yes, it will end someday ... but without knowing FIL's age, that could be 5 or 10 or 15 years from now. The man is not in hospice care.
Wow some very different advice! I understand the father in law is not your father but he is your husband's father. I am sure your husband is a good son trying to earn a living and care for his dad. There appears to be home health aides with your father in law so you may be called upon when the aides fail to show or the errands your father in law can no longer do for himself.
I would try to :
*get a live in home health aide.
* get back up aides if you are having aides on a hourly basis.
* get any "blood" relatives to help your husband if you can't help or refuse to help.
* if you have adult (18+ yrs) children try to get them to assist their father in the care for their grandfather. It will be good for them and you. When you age, your children will know it is expected that they care for you and your husband.
Try not to lose an otherwise good marriage over this situation as it is a temporary thing. Your father in law is not going to live forever. Your husband will appreciate your help with his dad. I know how he feels because it is very stressful to know you must have a caregiver with your parent 24/7. I did it alone with no---absolutely no help except the paid help I hired so I could work. However, I wanted my parent to live with his dignity all the days of his life and he did so.
I did not see my duty as a burden but an opportunity to enjoy my father.
Elizabeth
My suggestion to you is to document how much your actually doing so your husband realizes how big this really is. I would sit him down and tell him that it stops and a solution will be put in place. Have that solution figured out, ie: home health care, senior apartments etc. I would tell him how crappy this whole thing is that has been dumped on you without your consent and then take that suggested vacation immediately to give him time to think about all this. When you come back if he has not wised up I would leave permanently.
People get this weird notion in their heads sometimes that caregiving is a mandatory part of being female that you simply must do it or are naturally "wired" to do it. That is just sexist and not the reality of who people are. Just dumping such things on a spouse is really crappy.
Talking and listening to each other goes far to work towards a solution.
second, the opposite of resentful is grateful. whenever you are resentful count your blessings. you will immediately feel better and will keep yourself from going insane.
third. remember, if you love someone set them free. if they return it is love. if you are feeling trapped ask your husband to set you free. let him know that if you return it will show your love. if you don't, then you will KNOW that you are in the wrong place.