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Hi guys, my mom is alone this morning in her apartment while my dad went to the doctor with my husband. Don't say it, why is my sick husband taking my dad. Anyway, I'm avoiding going up to pacify her. She just called me and said, if you come up, call me first because the door is unlocked, and I'll get scared when you come in. First, I have the key, 2nd of all, why is the door not locked, and 3rd they have a dog and 4th there's a concierge in the building. In Florida, there was no concierge, and every courier can enter without a key fob and when she was alone, they left the door unlocked in case EMS had to get in and she was alone because snowbirds weren't there. What is her problem? I should know the answer - I'm 8 floors down from her. Her mother was so much more independent. I'm like my grandmother, independent and loves to putter. My mother was the most independent woman in the world; owned businesses, entertained, traveled etc. until my dad retired. Then she sat in the car and let him go supermarket shopping, etc. Then she got both knees operated on and never did therapy and used a walker because she was afraid of falling. She made herself depend on other people. That's why I'm not going upstairs right now. Plus, she once again sounds moody (she's already upset that I didn't run up there). She has been "pouty" all her life. So once again, please tell me I'm doing the right thing until I see a therapist?

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Let us know when you've scheduled a therapy appointment, Romeo.
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Reply to BarbBrooklyn
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So, when is your therapy appointment? I think others may be correct, Lisa T's twin.
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AlvaDeer Sep 13, 2024
Romeo's message this a.m. to us makes me think that she badly needs a few good friends. Perhaps MORE than a therapist in all truth, and I say that as someone who often recommends therapy. I think she needs someone to TALK TO just about the daily daily of it all. On her last thread RealyReal made the observation that she should stop listening to all of us and all our opinions of getting parents into care and etc.....that perhaps--just perhaps--her living in the same building with her very aged parents is in some sense WORKING for her.
Today's post DOES make me think that she just really needs to TALK to someone about the day.
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If you want to know why your mom is afraid in her own apartment, why don't you just ask her instead of asking us? Who better to get the response from than the horse's mouth right?
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funkygrandma59 Sep 13, 2024
Looks like AC removed half of my post which started with....Oh Lord, here we go again, and then at the end something to the effect that the OP needs WAY more help than we can provide, but sadly will never get it because she really doesn't want it.

I have no idea what was so bad about what I wrote that AC felt the need to revise it. I was only speaking the truth.
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"Until my Dad retired and she sat in the car and let him go supermarket shopping etc." Well that is mighty nice of her to let dad go into the store by himself while she sat in the car and waited. If that was the case she could have stayed at home by herself while dad went to the store.

Do you see a pattern here with mom? She cannot be alone and sitting in the car doesn't count.

If your mom wants to pout like a 93 year old child then let her pout. Of course she's going to be moody and upset when you STOP doing what you always do. You aren't being the "good" daughter and by "good" daughter that means as long as you are doing what she wants you are fantastic and when you aren't she gets mean and nasty.

I challenge you to stay in your own home and do not go up there today. Feel all the negative feeling associated with being the "bad" daughter and be OK with that for today.

I wonder how your parents helped you and your husband when you were dealing with your cancer treatments. Did they cook for you, grocery shop for you, clean the house? What exactly did they do for you?
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Have you made that therapy appointment yet?
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Romeo13 Sep 16, 2024
Barb, I'm first trying to organize my place because I have neglected my home taking care of them. When everything is done, I will be making appointments. Is she a sick person all of these years? I guess a therapist won't be able to answer that, unless she meets with her. Like I said, I think there were a few relatives that had mental issues. My grandmother started drinking when she left my grandfather, my aunts were crazy, my brother, my uncle - now that I think about it there a lot of things going on.
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In therapy, you will learn how to change YOUR behavior. Which is the only thing that is under your control,

Make an appointment today, please.
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AlvaDeer Sep 17, 2024
I don't think therapy will work whatsoever. I think that OP loves all of this and hasn't the slightest intention of giving it up. Her last post seems almost abusively bickering to me. I feel quite bad for the parents and I doubt OP intends to change in any way. She's a "right-fighter" in that being right is the driver and she comes for sympathy and being told she is right.
This is a way of life in which different costumes are donned dependent on the situation: "Martyr" or "manager". And basically it's about attention, negative or positive doesn't matter--just so the attention's there.
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Romeo, please read and reread AlvaDeer’s latest post. Rarely is she this blunt.

Few of us are interested in this dysfunctional Italian Waltons drama just because it’s so interesting, Furthermore, your “advice seeking” follows a predictive loop in which mommy is mean to you, you then make a face back, and then tell us all about it. You’re even recycling and retelling items. The mistake about them not going into al? The “womb” comment? You’ve said it all before.

At least own it.
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I don't think after all these years your going to change your parents. As my daughter says "you made these monsters". You allowed them to be too much of your life. Once you were an adult and married, they needed to depend on each other not you. Now they are in their 90s you want to back off.

All you need is boundaries for you. They will try to cross them but u stand firm. You should have allowed them to go to an AL.

I think after 100+ replys we have said it all. This is a problem we are not there to help you with.
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AlvaDeer Sep 13, 2024
I love what your daughter said: Just want to add to it. "You made these monsters. Now they live under your bed."
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Romeo:
You tell us this in your last post:

"So we went up there tonight and the minute we walked in she said to my husband - you look so cute and handsome tonight and so good and she said it about 3 times - so, I turned around and couldn't help myself and said - oh - really - that's not what you said an hour ago! Tell him what you really think! She said what do you mean - you're just jealous! What the hell is my mother talking about! I said tell him you called him ugly - and she said quietly to me how dare you say that - I didn't say that and why did you say that I said that and hurt him.
WHAT?????
She didn't like that I said your husband has a big nose. I told her she looked at me and said that's mean. Is she kidding me? She doesn't think what she said about my husband is mean and hurtful? If I bring it up again, she'll turn it around on me and say - you know I was joking and didn't mean that."

It seems to me that you love this bickering. You so often START it. You are always determined to FINISH it. I don't really suggest a therapist anymore. I think you love all this, and are absolutely in your element. I think my sympathy now is completely with your parents. But they aren't writing.

Why not just admit you love to bicker?
My only fear for you is that your parents are aged and will eventually pass; I can't imagine where then you will go for fun.

I won't be reading this particular thread anymore. It's too "stranger than fiction".
I wish you luck. I wish your parents even MORE luck. Take care.
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Romeo:
I hope that the admins will consider removing this new question to the "Discussions" section, and I hope you'll consider that great thread in future. The admins closed your previous question to comments after some 150 or so responses:

https://www.agingcare.com/questions/my-93-year-old-mom-gets-upset-when-i-tell-her-i-need-to-go-downstairs-to-my-apartment-i-feel-like-a--489715.htm

I suspect this closing could be because some of these questions turn to a sort of neighborly chit-chat (which is fine, but more appropriate to "Discussions" imho.)

I think your specific question to us today indicates you're continuing to have trouble making simple decisions for yourself; you've told us a lot about your anxiety, and this is certainly a symptom of anxiety--the inability to make decisions. I think that falls under that "waiting for therapy" you discussed in your last question.
And I think however you choose to handle today's dilemma will work out just fine.

So many of our fears in caregiving surround the fact that they are so elderly (yours in their 90s) that we worry anything could happen at any time. We kind of hover and wait. When folks ask what to expect in caregiving I always say "the unexpected". Your day today started by proving that point.

Sorry Dad is off to get checked again, and mom is anxious. But this is your daily routine more or less. We know how hard it is for you, and you have our sympathy. I hope the day gets better.

I am self-reporting myself so that admins can decide for themselves if you should perhaps consider "Discussions" for this type question now or in future. Take care, Romeo!
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