What is it? its origin? Its effects? How it's defeated by some? Why it's victorious over others?
Many of the lives of caregivers that I have read are struggling with the power of an emotional blackmailer in their life. I think it is a big enough topic to warrant a discussion on it using the questions above.
The following is how I basically see this issue and my hope for all of us who struggle with it.
Emotional blackmailers are powerful for the F.O.G. is strong with them. F.O.G. (Fear, Obligation, Guilt) is the path to the darkside of manipulation. May you find freedom, be free, and stay fee from the power of the F.O.G.
Giving the hairdresser notice that your father had a drink problem? Sounds pretty loopy to me. Do you not think your mother is perhaps struggling to find profound things to say to you, and producing stuff that doesn't make a whole lot of sense?
I know hair is a big emotional issue. Really it is, and not just in a cultural sense but in a mother-daughter context too. Has she always made remarks about your appearance and given you this kind of unsolicited advice, or is this a new departure for her?
I understand the need for pride in our genetic heritage, but that doesn't mean that you should feel shame because your genetic heritage is more European than African. I have a feeling that in 100 years no one will consider it.
I wondered if your mother came to resent your father and if that could be why the white characteristics bother her. It is just strange that she chose your father, but is blaming you for being who you are.
thanks again
I am in a hotel and my laptop power cord has died - seems one thing after another this past day. I will go out and get another one today and be back. (((((((Hugs)))))) I know how hard it is.
My mother is never satisfied with me. I am about the faultiest person in her eyes. I don't know why they do this. It must make them feel better in some way to say bad things to their daughters. Mine has never told me to not come back until I do something, though. That is extreme.
With the critical and apparently a bit mean-minded comments your mother made about the singers: one of the aspects of dementia that can be very hurtful is a loss of inhibition - comments that beforehand, like most people, your mother might have thought privately but would not have been so rude as to say out loud just come tumbling out; plus I found that my mother became dissatisfied with all kinds of things that once she would have liked or enjoyed in a small way - flowers, films, visitors, you name it. She took against daffodils, for some reason. I got her the DVD of West Side Story, which *she* had taken *me* to see in the theatre and I knew she loved it; and ten minutes in she called me back, really upset, and told me "turn it off, I don't like it." Bugsy Malone was deemed 'highly unsuitable.' Old friends who loyally travelled to see her, she was embarrassingly rude about and, worse, to. Even though I knew it was all wrapped up with the degeneration in her thinking, it was still pretty demoralising. You end up just having to think "oh well, I tried!" and let it be, and do your best to explain what's going on to any innocent victims.
One other thing, though, and this is treatable to some extent, is that with some types of dementia comes depression - clinical depression, that is, as distinct from appropriate sadness. That can be expressed as unusual irritability, and you may also see 'flat affect' - for example, you might be doing something she would normally really enjoy but you find that she is not showing any feeling towards it at all, as though she is emotionally just numb.
Ask the care home staff and her GP if you suspect any of this might be happening - it can't hurt to find out, and it's just possible that there are good treatment options that haven't been tried yet.
I do actually know about Philip Kingsley hair products and use the shampoo and conditioner. However my mother uses the elasticiser. I have been told by a black hairdresser that elasticiser is not for me because I do not have the same hair type as my mother
Poster, if you haven't already done so, I suggest also reading several of the earliest posts at the start of this thread. Take good care of you and do something nice for yourself every day.
Hey, she's the one who's in a care home fretting about whether her daughter's warned the hairdresser that her dad had an alcohol problem..! And you're the one who knows that your mother is not well.
Darling girl, you don't *have* to do anything. You can detach as much as you need to. But if you want to do something, if you think you can both benefit your mother's health and wellbeing and feel more at ease yourself, then there are people you can talk to without disrespecting your mother's wishes, or her right to autonomy to use the jargon.
You can ask for a meeting with her named key worker for a general chat about how she is doing, and take it from there. It may not get anywhere, but it can't possibly do any harm and it could be a start.
You can find out if your mother's been referred to a memory clinic.
You can ask if there is a mental health nurse visiting the home, and if so if you could talk to him/her about your mother and get his/her perspective on what's going on.
The point is that you're starting a conversation. You're not divulging private information that your mother has asked you not to share. Moreover, you are right to be concerned that she may need help and you are acting in her best interests if you create the possibility of her getting help.
But you don't *have* to. The primary responsibility for your mother's physical and mental wellbeing lies with her care home's staff, not with you; and that reality is her creation, not yours. Leaving them to do their job is a legitimate option. And if you're not comfortable talking to anyone about her, you can let things be, and take care of yourself by limiting how often you visit her and for how long, and walking away if you begin to feel hurt or upset by her.
Are you talking to anyone about how you feel, and about what's going on? Friends, your own doctor, carers' support groups?