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My mother moved in with me and my wife March 1st, 2023 until August 18th, 2023. She was moving back from SC to KS. My wife and I have been married 15 years and together 18 years. My mom was suppose to stay short term until she found her own place.



On April 10th, 2023 I hung up my social services hat and opened up my life long dream business with my childhood friend. 8 days later my father unexpectedly passed away. (Mom and Dad have been divorced since late 1980s)
So, on my plate I had my mother living with me, opening up a new business, my father passing away, dealing with funeral arrangements, and dealing with the estate and the legalities of that(I’m an only child). My wife and I hired a contractor and from the end of April to August remodeled my fathers home, so my wife and I can move into it and get out of the apartment where we were currently living with my mom.
My mom was suppose to be making arrangements and finding a place to live. My mother works from home processing medical claims and she also sold her home within the first 30 days of being at my house.
We got into a heated argument around May and I thought I made it clear that when the remodel is done and we move, she was not coming with us. This was suppose to be a new chapter in my wife and I’s life. I also told her August 19th is our move date.
On August 18, I was helping her take boxes to her car. She asked me why wasn’t she welcomed to come with us to our new place. My response was “because it’s time Mom”. As were walking to the stairs she said you have helped so many people in your life, I never thought in my life I would be kicked out by my own son!! I got upset and went for a walk to clear my head. As I was out in a walk she packed up the rest of her things and told my wife well you guys will be happier if I’m not around and she left and went and rented a hotel room.
another note, she took medical leave from her at work from home job. She needed to have a small back surgery and said she could august or September. We told her August is not a good month because we are all moving, I have alot going on with the store with the college students coming back, etc.
So, we moved into our new home (my dad’s house) it’s great and we love it. We’re happy to have our home and life back.
my moms back surgery she scheduled for Aug 23rd. I couldn’t take her because of my business. So I helped coordinate a ride to Kansas City for her. She stayed at the hotel for a couple weeks and ended up staying with some life long couple friend outside of town. She has still been guilt tripping me and asking what she did so wrong that I can’t live with her and I just kept saying, I just needed my space back and didn’t want a roommate anymore. I still love her, she is my mother….i just don’t want her to live with me!!!



please give me some feedback!!

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If intending not to be manipulated is "mean" or "cold hearted" then I guess you are; embrace it! Stop apologizing for wanting your own life.
And you are going to have to stop running away from addressing this solidly, openly and completely honest.
As in "Mom, my wife and I have no intention of living with you ever again. That is a fact. You can chalk it up to our limitations. We do not wish to live with our elders. It will not ever happen. We will not argue or explain this issue and do not intend to speak of it again." Period. End of sentence.

You are very lucky you got your mom out of your home. Do not let her in again, and do not discuss reasons "why". They lead to argument. Simply tell her that you do not intend to live with her or with any other relation.

This will mean that your mom will know she will have to get her own living circumstances, whatever they are. Rent a room with someone; get a roommate; buy a condo; go into ALF. Whatever it is make it clear that you care for her and are willing to help her get settled, but that she will not now or ever again be living with you. If she needs a reason WHY tell her that you simple "are not a very nice person". That should do it.

Your Mother is trying to wedge her foot into the door. Please don't let her. You have had a happy escape. It won't be as easy again.
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You’re fine. Your mother is being a mean and cold hearted, self-centred blood-sucker. Thank her for bringing you up to be strong, and tell her to get on with her own life.
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PandabearAUS Sep 2023
Harsh. She’s afraid. She seems to have money from the sale of her home. Downsizing into an over 55’s complex might be what she needs to be with company and community v
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You’re very smart to gain your independence now when it is possible. Congratulations, and good luck in your new home.

As for mom, she’ll have to fend for herself. Once she gets out and about, perhaps she’ll have a social life and won’t obsess about living with you.
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NO you are not being "mean and cold hearted" but instead are being VERY smart in not letting your mom continue to live with you. It was time. Probably past time for her to get on with her life and you with yours.
So don't give it another thought and if she keeps trying to make you feel guilty about it you may have to limit your availability to talk to her, as she can only make you feel guilty if you allow it. So quit allowing it!!!
Best wishes in your newly remodeled house and living and enjoying your life with your wife.
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Your mom is 61?

Has she always been emotionally needy and depressed? Is she getting help with that?
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AlvaDeer Sep 2023
Good questions, Barb. My DAUGHTER is 61. That's VERY YOUNG in these days. At least to me at 81, it is, and I myself am still active and independent.
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Ask mom why she's choosing to play the guilt card on you now, after you both had an UNDERSTANDING she was going to live with you TEMPORARILY, which she did, and that time has now expired? She's changing the terms of the agreement SHE agreed to, then calling you The Bad Guy, meaning she was lying to you the whole time. Her intention was to move in with you permanently and she manipulated you into believing it was for a short period of time.

Nice try mom.

Turn the situation back on her and ask why she lied you in the first place, her very own son??

61 is waaaaaay too young to be living with ones children, for petesake! Perhaps mother needs a good therapist or psychiatrist to help her work thru all of her issues.

Best of luck in your new home and with your new business.
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anonymous1732518 Sep 2023
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You did the right thing. She knew from the get-go that it was temporary, but assumed you’d just let her stay forever. She may have had plans to stop working and hoped you would support her the rest of her life.

She is 61 and I assume in decent health. Way too early for her to ‘retire’ to your home and be waited on hand and foot.

If she knew it was temporary, she has no right to pout and accuse you of being mean. You didn’t pull the rug out from under her.
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anonymous1732518 Sep 2023
Maybe she feels she would have a hard time finding somewhere else to live.
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No, your not cold hearted you are setting boundaries. Mom told you it was going to be temporarily. I don't think you have to be cruel. Just be firm. Tell her your sorry but u found out in the 5 months you lived together it wasn't going to work long-term. That she is only 61 and has money from the sale of her house. She lived alone before, she should not have any problem doing it again. But really, I think you handled it pretty well. Its not ur fault she is not listening. You told her in enough time she needed to look for a new place. The woman is not old! You also need to make it clear, at some point, that living with u will never be an option.

Just keep telling yourself, its Mom not you. Come back with an update.
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I think your mother is afraid of getting older and being alone. It’s likely she is having bouts of anxiety. Could you help her look for an Over 55’s community to move to? That way she will have her home and some money in the bank. I don’t think you want to be cruel. It seems you want to be helpful
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JoAnn29 Sep 2023
The woman is only 61. She has a job and has sold her home. She chose to make the move. If she can pick herself up and move with no problem, she can find an apartment. She was told in May, if not before, that she was not moving in with them in August. Thats 3 months to find a place and ask for help.
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You know what I noticed in this post, you mention your wife only to say you have been married 15 yrs and "This was suppose to be a new chapter in my wife and I’s life." You never make your wife the "fall guy". It seems to me, you have made it clear to Mom that you are all for her not moving in with you that your all for this decision as much as probably the wife, maybe even more so. So if Mom wants to blame anyone, it should be you.

You say nowhere that you helped Mom with the move. So, Mom was able to line up a realtor to sell her house, clean it out, pack it up and move it all, at least 18 hrs away. So Mom is no shrinking violet. She has the proceeds from her house sale and probably makes good money doing Medical claims. No overhead on her part. She can work in her PJs. Doesn't need work wardrobe. No need for extra gas and wear and tear on a car. Next year at 62 she can get 75% of her SS and still make 17k a year doing her claims. 4 yrs Medicare comes in. Mom will be OK.
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2023
@JoAnn

People who work from home can't do it in pajamas. When you're on a Zoom meeting people can see you. Professional people don't work in their pajamas.
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Stick to your guns don't allow her to move back. You need your own life and your families.

Its time for her to be on her own.

Prayers
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You are being smart in establishing what you are and are not willing to do for your mother. Being responsible for an aging parent in your home is more often a bad idea than a good one. It is not necesary to justify your reasons for not wanting your mother to live in your home. You do not want that living situation. You can help yourr mother make other plans, but her choices do not include your home. Do not be manipulated by her guilt-tripping attempts.
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TouchMatters Sep 2023
Well said and thank you.
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"Guilt" is something ..YOU... decide to feel.
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TouchMatters Sep 2023
Yes. No one can be MADE to 'feel' any way without their consent and agreement.

As I say, if you have 20 people in a room dealing with the same situation, you will find 20 different responses - because everyone is different --- has their own life-long / childhood triggers (that go with a person into adulthood until they are dealt w/processed), different family dynamics, different personal situations, and different levels of internal processing / healing.

While the awareness of owning one's feeling of GUILT is or shows psychological and emotional maturity, it still feels 'bad' to most of us. We do not want to feel it as we tell ourselves that we S -H-O-U-L-D feel differently - do something differently (that little nagging voice in our head).

Still by owning how we feel - and the decisions we make (as a result) in life, create our authenticity and wholeness.

Life is messy. Likely not one of us doesn't 'feel' the "Oh, I should have... why didn't I ... I wish I had ... in retrospect. This is life.

We do the best we can in any given moment. Finding healing through awareness and personal responsibility create more inner peace. I've learned over decades that one of the most powerful words - and behaviors - for me is forgiveness. Forgive myself and others. Clear the slate for a new day moving into awe and wonder. Learning along the way.

What else can we do? Appreciate the moment(s) and do the best you can in each one of them. And, love yourself.

Gena / Touch Matters
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I'm going to give you some feedback, but you might not like all of it.

You are right in setting boundaries and being up front and honest with your mother that the three of you are not going to be living together.
The guilt-tripping/martyrdom on your mother's end is ridiculous and I'm glad you and your wife did not let it manipulate you into moving her in with you.

Here's the part you may not like. You or your wife could have taken a day and brought your mother for her back surgery. One of you could have done that. She is after all, your mother.
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fluffy1966 Sep 2023
Agree, BurntCaregiver: Being a permanent resident at the son's home is a separate issue from taking mother to the hospital for her back surgery.
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You don't owe your mother an explanation as to why you choose not to have her live with you. You have done more than most. It is healthier for her to find her own way. She should look into assisted living apartments. My mom found a great place to live. In the assisted living rental apartment scenario. She's loves it! She has game, and movie nights. She's made friends and has a good time living there in the space she made for herself.

Your doing the right thing.
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When your Dad passed, Moms can sometimes make their son a Son-Husband. There’s a lot more information on the internet about it.

They weren’t even together and she’s working the guilt. Your Dads presence probably stopped her taking over sooner.

She’s putting you in the position that you have to say something.

I have a friend that invites himself to every thing, I have to decline his self invitation bc it’s not appropriate he goes to these events. He’s hoping it’ll be too awkward and I won’t say anything lol
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2023
@Mjustice98

Your friend sounds like a very lonely man indeed.
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I would not live with or have a parent live with me unless there is no other option. I think most people really need space. I’m and introvert .. if my parent or my husbands parent lived in our house .. I would never get the recharge my battery time I need.
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Good for you! MIL will be fine. Shame on her for making your life so miserable. I have a narcissistic MIL that is now in a board and care because she is too stubborn to use a cane or walker. My husband, her number one son, has almost killed himself making sure her home with a 400k reverse mortgage was packed up and sold so she has enough money to live and be cared for in luxury. Is she grateful? No! It's our turn. Hubs had open heart surgery 2 years ago. Time is a thief and life is short. Use it!
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Your wife and new career must come 1st...I am certain your mother will do fine...You are NOT abandoning her just going on w/your life...Keep in contact with her and remain "civil' and respect her, but she must respect your life/space. She has friends so it is not like she was left on her on. Best wishes and prayers..
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Your mom is probably mourning her husbands death and the loneliness that comes with it.

Mom, I love you and you have done nothing wrong but I can’t fill dad’s place. You need a retirement community with your own space, access to new friends and social events that fit your lifestyle. Down the road you may need one story living. I can’t give you any of this.

You need a son who can visit and enjoy having lunch with you instead of a harried unavailable frustrated new business owner/caregiver.
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Ireland Sep 2023
Erikka the couple divorced. I originally thought the exact same thing but the couple was not married. The "ex-husband" died.

I was thinking about bereavement too.
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Have you helped her explore independent living at a Continuing Care Retirement Community (CCRC)? Or, any of the senior housing complexes in your area? Both offer camaraderie with her peers. If you and your wife are too busy, connect her with "A Place for Mom." First, connect her with an Elder Law Attorney who can help both of you navigate this chapter of her life and prepare you for your own senior years (married, divorced or widowed).
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No, you are not mean and cold-hearted.

You are the son many of us wish we had had.

I would encourage you to encourage her to get into therapy.

Speak to her in "I" statements, i.e.,
'I hear you saying ... " (this is not agreeing with her statement, it shows you are listening and validating what she says - it is not making any judgment as to right or wrong) - it helps maintain your stance / position of / to set boundaries with her and gives her validation of being heard.

Give yourself credit and validation for what and how you have supported her to this point. Never discount that or question your caring for your mom. And, many of us are FOREVER tested due to another's fears and feelings of neediness / insecurities. Often we need to be tested to realize "I can do this!" - and in the moment when presented with that 'option' (or pushed in a corner to accept it), we learn who we are inside and what we can do.

It sounds like your mom needs a support network (to build one / reaching out to others in the community, church, wherever and whatever) vs leaning on you as she has been. While it won't feel good to her now, in the long run, she will learn she has a strength / and strengths she didn't realize she has. This is something that you 'can't tell her' - she'll need to experience it in real time.

During this transition, give her space to get reacquainted with herself.
She may (or may not) come around over time. Do not have expectations of her / the future. Know and trust that you did / are doing all you can. We cannot 'make' a person change or be the best they can be - that is up to them. It is up to all of us and it is a hard lesson for many of us to learn - that we cannot blame another for who we are. We deal with the deck we are dealt with in life - and some of us had a very hard time changing from how we were raised (I certainly did / do and it is a life-long process). In any case, your mom needs to learn lessons that you cannot teach her; she'll get there ... if she wants to put the work into it / the quality of her life.

You are a lovely person and a wonderful son.

Gena / Touch Matters
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Davenport Sep 2023
I can attest that your words about 'learning you can do it' are true. After 60 years of financial security, I was planning on living in my car--I had enough money to pay for gas, insurance, and registration, and to buy food. It was a few years of pure hell having to contemplate that. I had to go way, way deep inside, walk through fear (terror, actually), no sleep; I knew the stress was affecting my health in a very serious way.

Anyway, miraculously, my situation changed. And I learned that I could reach out, live outside of my comfort zone, and change lifelong behaviors (mostly, forcing myself to get out into a community in a new state and small town, and socialize).

I'm overjoyed that my situation changed, and pinch myself continuously that it's real. And/but I'm equally overjoyed that I did get to a place of modest equanimity, on my own.

I pray the same for Jeremy's mom!
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Of course you love your mother.

You're not cold-hearted to want to live separately from her. I think that's natural and normal.

If your mother were unable to live on her own, then that would be a different story, but I'm gleaning from what you write that she is able. So in my opinion she should find her own home.

I'm 64 and have no desire to live with either of my two children, whom I adore.
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how about having her move to the same State as you and your wife. Help her find a nice small apartment not too far from you guys. That may help.
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You know, Jeremy, what WE think of your actions is neither here nor there. It seems to me what matters here is what YOU think of your actions.

There are thousands of reasons to allow one's elderly LO's to move in with them when the elderly LO reaches a certain point in their life. Just as there are thousands of reasons to NOT allow one's elderly LO's to move in with them when the elderly LO reaches a certain point in life. And each situation has its own unique dynamics, although many parts of that dynamic are similar to each other.

You should be asking yourself this instead: when all is said and done, will you be able to put your head down on your pillow at night and sleep knowing you did what was best ***at the time you made the decision***? Because in life, we can only make the best decision based on the information we have at hand at that moment. None of us are able to tell the future. And sometimes, unfortunately, the only choices we have are bad, worse and worst. If life only presented "good" vs. "bad" choices, life would be so much simpler. But that's not the way life works.

If, at the end of the day, if you can rest easy and tell yourself - honestly - "I did the best I could with what I had" then you did the right thing. It might not seem like it to other people, but you don't have to justify yourself to other people. I think that's a really bad downside of this internet age, this feeling that we are required to justify ourselves to a bunch of anonymous strangers who have no idea about our day-to-day lives. You need to do what will work for you, and that is not necessarily what will work for your mom, and that's ok - but it doesn't mean you have to change your plans. Your mom is not helpless, she is just disappointed. Disappointment is not life threatening.

Good luck!
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My Dad died at 62yrs old. My Mom wanted to live with us but I explained to her that she wouldn't be happy in our quiet town and she needed to network into her community. She found a job she loved and eventually met a partner she traveled with. Your Mom is depending on u for companionship and that's not good for her. Stand your ground and she will eventually meet others her own age.
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Good Afternoon,

I read your plea for help more than once...a few things that need clarification.

*You did not mention, your "father's" house that you moved back into, at one time was this where your mother lived too, when they were married? All as a family at a point back in time?

*You also didn't say how old your mother is?

It's how you word things. "Mother you know we love you. We will help you. Three's Company is not going to work in our situation. But, we will be by your side and help you find a suitable living accommodations that we can check on you and we will still be in the picture".

It's hard when you are an only child. It's not a daughter. I always said it's not the same a mother living with a daughter than a daughter-in-law.

This is important--starting a new business is a gamble. It's a lot of hours, a lot of expenses and you are responsible for everything. If you get sick, basically, when you own a business you do not get sick. I know, I have done it. My so-called dream of owning and operating a business, even with the best plan takes up so much of your time. It's not a 40-hour per week type of job when you leave and go home. It's on your mind 24-7. It's a lot of stress and sacrifice. You can't be running all over the place.

I would stress that with your mother and tell her you want her safe and sound. Honestly, realistically--would it be ok if your mother and your wife spent so much time together while you are getting your business off the ground. From what you write, I don't think so.

You could soften the blow by stating that how about if after a year you all go to SC to visit on a vacation. It's not one thing or the other. It's basically what works, it's not always for the greater good, but what works "at the time".

Tell your mother, you're NOT going to break off ties. No one want to feel rejected or abandoned. The proof is in the pudding--you took her in temporarily until she found her new place. Her age matters too.

I know it's hard but maybe if she knew ahead of time that perhaps, once a week you would all get together. You will call on this day or that day.

The medical situation. You have to take these appointments when you can get them. If they are older there are a lot of specialists. At one time, I took a job Wednesday through Sunday, basically every Monday and Tuesday off so I could accompany mother to doctor's appointments. So, my mother knew, doctor's visits are only on a Monday or a Tuesday, then afterwards we would go out for coffee, etc.

My mother was well aware that she had a "time frame" with me. As I write this my mother is sleeping, she has has Lewy Body Dementia. She is declining. I have been in the trenches here for a while. Her needs demanded more of my time. I know you are an only child but right now my brother is in Spain, I wish he would pitch in or send a check.

My sister informed me, "you are taking care of Mom" and my other brother who is out-of-state was supposed to come up and give me a break but instead, "he loved Alaska so much that he and his wife couldn't pass up the great deal and returned there on vacation".

I'm not crying in my beer (I don't drink beer) but even with siblings don't think I have the perfect scenario. Yesterday, when I was starting to feel sorry for myself and I was working, one of my students (ESL) told me she was from the Ukraine. I immediately forgot about my problems. I know it's hard because it sounds like you are just starting out. This is just the beginning and you will learn along the way and have to make changes as your mother's health changes.

I'm just being honest. I'm talking to you as if you were my brother.

Read everything here on the forum and pick out what works best for your situation and finances.
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newbiewife Sep 2023
Mom is only 61. There are a lot of caregivers on here who are that age and are taking care of others much older. Mom had a job, sold her house and moved all on her own, so it sounds as though it's best for her to stand on her own 2 feet and live on her own now. Granted, she's still mourning the loss of her husband and is lonely, but as others here have pointed out, it's best for her--as well as son and daughter-in-law--that mom start to build her new life and not be dependent on her son. There may come a time when she needs his help more, but now isn't it. I'm 80 and in no way would I want to live with my kids or be dependent on them. I've told them that I am more than willing to go to AL or nursing home when/if the time comes--but I of course want would want visits and treats :-)
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Do onto others what you have them do onto you. Not all families stick together through thick and thin. Some want to live together no matter what, pool their resources and enjoy each others company, which is truly commendable and resembles the mentality of some cultures, where all generations accept it as a norm of life. Wife, husband, grandparents, babies, each embrace the other as a matter of course.
Others, can not, will not, endorse the all in one roof approach. Guilt can only go so far. How many relationships get ruined by her’s or his in-laws moving in. These decisions seldom happen over night, takes a lifetime to establish who is in for the duration in each respective group. Mathematics, emotionalities, but never guilt, for that feeling has a tendency to wear out soon enough and turn into resentment, and who needs or wants to seal their future in such state. On an uplifting note: it’s a great thing to have a good heart to be concerned, but others would not hesitate to say no way Jose!
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MargaretMcKen Sep 2023
Chizzle, I’ve read a lot of history, which has told me that the old “all under one roof” cultures usually happened because “the roof” belonged to the parents. Son was waiting for them to die to inherit the house, and DIL sucked up being an unpaid servant.

Sometimes things are not as ‘nice’ as they look!
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HI Jeremy - much congratulations on your new business. Regarding your mom, she may not see it this way right now, but you actually did her a favor by not taking her in. If you had, she'd become dependent on you and your wife and she's only 61 yrs old and fully capable of being independent. In fact, had you allowed her to move in, you'd be stunting her life and preventing her from expanding her own life. She's actually misguided to expect that she could stay with you indefinitely - and she's not being fair even to herself.

You have nothing to feel guilty about - in fact. you've helped her to continue standing on her own two feet and to make a life of her own.
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Davenport Sep 2023
I agree with you, Hope! The only thing I'd reiterate to Jeremy is to communicate to his mom that she's NOT being emotionally abandoned; if mom refuses his words or chooses not to believe him but digs in her heels, then, as others have said, that's on her, and I hope Jeremy can eventually understand that, and never feels guilty about his mom's choice.
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I’m other countries that I have been to the children all take care of their aging parents and are honored to do so it is ashame the families in this country would rather dump their aging parents because it might infringe on their lifestyle so sad
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anonymous1732518 Sep 2023
I've seen that. There is one place ( maybe a couple more) where the loved one is dug up, dressed, and "honored" on their birthday or other special occasion
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