Social network, vacation partner, handy man. Now I have a family for the last 7 years. I don't really go on dates with my husband because she doesn't want to babysit because she hates staying home alone with my daughter. She wants to come over a few times a week to eat so she is not alone. When we go on vacation, she always wants to go. If we do not take her she automatically thinks we hate her. She is 65. No faith affiliation. No real friends. Only drinks occasionally and it is always a mess. I do have a brother but he never does much to help out. We all live within 5 minutes of her. My family has been the one that has been her social support system for as long as I can remember. Now, my daughter is getting friends and wants to do more things with them. My mom is upset she is not included in all of those things. I tell her she is getting big and we all have to understand that we can't do all of those things. She gets upsets and says we don't want her around. I am very frustrated of how to handle this.
I had the same thing and always complained my siblings were useless and I bore the brunt.
One of my brothers lived closer than I, and he and dad had issues... I am dad's 'favourite', having spent years fighting with dad we eventually found equilibrium (I was his 'rock' during mum's protracted illness, and subsequent death last Sept)
After her death my brother asked if he could help with funeral/legal stuff, but dad just did not teust him, and brushed him off, stating I was doing a great job.
I tried to get my dad to let my brother do tax/financial bits as I am single mum and have a demanding job and live 40 mins away, but I have to say I did not try that hard, because in hindsight I kinda liked being dad's rock. But I was exhausted and quality of my work and homelife spiralled. So I saw a therapist.
It was my therapist that made me realise I liked being the family rock/hero, but I was not allowing my siblings to step up.
I have conciously had to step aside and force my dad to share the load.
I had to learn I am not responsible for him (I admit I quite liked looking after him and the praise dad gave me, affirmation is a heady drug!
I can see my brother's relationship with dad is now improving. Makes me a teeny bit narked because my brother has been nowhere to be seenfor many years, totally self centred... but my mental health and famy and work are more important.
Go speak 1:1 with your brother... don't accuse him of anything, just ask him for his advice, tell him your are broken and ask for his help (once I stopped asking my brother to step up and instead showed him my vulnerability he felt he could be the big brother I had basically never allowed him to be (superwoman!)
Ref your mum draw boundaries, don't molly coddle her (sounds like she is the queen of emotional blackmail, and you are so worried about upsetting her... she is playing you I think.
You don't have to be cruel. You don't have to explain. Just 'we can't do that this weekend mum' should suffice.
Mollycoddling her and worrying about upsetting her is enabling her behaviour.
Set some boundaries now... or this will just get worse!
So, please put the brakes on it NOW. Set boundaries. Good luck.
She needs to be shown some compassion for the mess she's in, but even at 60+, healthy is better than unhealthy..... OR she can lose you altogether. Things can only deteriorate if there's no change.
I think it's wonderful you have come to this realization BEFORE she becomes even more dependent. I would also communicate with the brother how this dynamic has been going on a change is on the horizon. I'm sure he feels her manipulations too...
Please keep in touch!
FIRST - you are not helping her - you are actually HURTING her by enabling unhealthy behavior.
SECOND - you are trying to do what is right and you are suffering. She is taking advantage of you, being lazy, immature and irresponsible, manipulating and controling you with guilt (Emotional Blackmail) and she is not suffering one bit.
THIRD - you must change the circumstances and scenarios to that she suffers and you don't . Simple, but not easy but you can do it. You owe it to yourself, your own family and to your Mother to make these changes.
My 90 year old Dad died this past December and my Mom, (also 90) who was dependent on him, switched her dependency to me. I have compassion but am helping her change her dependence to healthy interdependence.
Make time fr self, husband, family and extended family.....everyone does not have to participate ineverything.....rotate..... When you get to drop off play dates for your daughter, combine that with date night.
But , first, I feel your frustration and pain.
Here is the thing: I am 64.5--almost her age, and I can tell you that her behavior is not "normal" for our age group. It is TOTALLY CODEPENDENT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Your mom is not a bad person; she has some unhealthy expectations. These always lead to disappointment and resentment--but they can, ultimately, lead to acceptance..
Also, she has been "trained" or "enabled" over the years you are describing to have these expectations. And it is easy for that to happen when children are young. You are mostly at home; the kids don't have a life of their own. Naturally, she became accustomed to your company.
Now, are you sitting down? The person who needs help is you. Not because you are crazy or deficient in some way but because you are the only person in the equation whom you can control. You have no control over your mother's thoughts and feelings. That is her business.
A few years back in the midst of a horrible family experience, I began to see a therapist--with such success that I could only ask myself one question: why did I wait so long? I wish to this day that I had done it when my daughter was the age of your daughter. So, I would say, go see a therapist. You have nothing to lose and the whole family stands to gain.
Or she can check out her local senior center to find lots and lots of activities. Or her local junior college or park district. They have all kinds of continuing education classes that are fun and a way to meet others.
And I agree with all of the boundary suggestions. On other threads, there have been good suggestions for books about setting boundaries, but I don't remember what they are. Maybe someone else can weigh in with some good book titles on the topic. Good luck and keep us posted!
Sounds like you have spoiled her over the years. Maybe your brother not helping very much is his way of maintaining some boundaries. Who knows? I would not worry about him or about your mother getting upset. I'd worry more about you, your well being, your husband, the well being of your marriage and the overall well being of your immediate family.
My wife worried so much about making her mother upset when we stopped letting her invite herself to go on our vacations. However, once that took place, our vacations were much happier.
I agree that you need boundaries in your personal life and in your marriage. I wish you well in dealing with all of this.
Let us know how things are going.
Mom gets upset when she doesn't get her way. So? When your daughter gets upset to you always give in and give her her way? Is that really a healthy way to interact with a family member. Mom is an adult. You are an adult. Why on earth do you think it is your job never to let her get upset?
And she manipulates you with "oh, you don't love me." Nonsense. You know perfectly well that you love your mother even if you don't want her on all of your vacations. Don't let her drag illogical manipulation into your conversations. If the topic is "vacation" don't let her pretend it is "love."
I guess I am endorsing all the earlier posts about boundaries. And also suggesting you take a closer look at your views of appropriate family roles.
You have every right to want to take a vacation with your family without mom tagging along. If you'd like to invite her, great, but you're not obligated to. Same goes with family outings. You're allowed to go on family outings without your mom and your daughter is certainly allowed to do things with her friends without her grandma along for the ride.
It's up to you to maintain boundaries. It can be very challenging and uncomfortable but you are not responsible for your mom's entertainment. That you invite her over for dinner a few times a week is enough.