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My husband is 84 and suffers from dementia. I am 74. We have had a beautiful 38 year marriage. we have sailed and traveled many long distance adventures. His condition has been gradual for the past 9 years, but now he can't be left alone. I am using some companion services a few hours a week, but it is very expensive and confusing to him. I do not have a good relationship with his 2 children, and have to almost beg them to give me an occasional break. I am still healthy and adventurous .I feel so TRAPPED and so lonely.

You live and plan as though both of you are childless, just like many others who are truly childless must. Get your legal ducks in a row and then place your DH in a memory care facility, there you can be his wife and advocate instead of his caregiver.
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Reply to cwillie
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You might as well forget about his kids. I have found, at 75, we tend to expect people to be a certain way and when they aren't we get upset. It is so much better not to expect, actually makes life easier to deal with. Stop begging. A good child would ask, what can I do. I had my Mom in daycare 3x a week. Monday/Wed/Friday. They picked her up at 8 and dropped her off at 3pm. It was so nice getting a shower and not have to worry about her. Run errands and not have to worry about her. They gave her PT and bathed her for me.
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BurntCaregiver Nov 19, 2024
@JoAnn

It's not about who's a "good" child and who isn't. A good adult child who asks what they can do to help had a good parent. If they didn't why should they take on caregiving for that parent? Being elderly and needy are not good enough reasons.

You get what you give in life. The OP and her husband had 38 years to build a relationship with his kids and they didn't.
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Place him in Memory Care. It is not his children’s responsibility to be his caregiver.
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Reply to ZippyZee
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Lots of times some stepchildren consider the step mom an evil witch for no valid reason. Other times the step mom has done something to deserve the title. None of us here know the details of YOUR life or marriage, nor is it relevant to the issue at hand. What is relevant is that you cannot make a person give a flying fig about another person, even when that other person is a sick father.

Use your resources to either hire in home aides to care for your husband or place him in Memory Care Assisted Living if you don't want to be "trapped" as a caregiver. His children are not beholden to care for him. Its your job as his wife of 38 years to figure out his care, either by you, by paid caregivers or in managed care. As it would be his job to figure out, after 38 years, if you were struck down with dementia or another terminal illness.

Good luck to you.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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Geaton777 Nov 19, 2024
My 14-yr old grandson is a fabulous kid. His parents share custody. His Mom is bitter towards my son so basically poisons his thinking towards my son's very nice and capable girlfriend/partner who tries really hard to figure out her role, constantly walking on eggshells. I've had many conversations with my grandson, and he often will passively reject any parenting she attempts to do when my son is not in the home, among other things.

In a perfect world people should do this and that, and "love covers over a multitude of sins" sounds great but the reality is that people are broken, communications can be misunderstood, and out of their hurt and disappointments they can become petty, vengeful beings because they cannot control the situation or regain what was lost.

Of course this isn't all or even most children and adult children of divorce, thankfully. It's definitely complicated, though.
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Unfortunately, you can’t make people give care. You can maybe keep trying as you have been to get breaks, but you are either going to have to hire people to help you or you will need to start looking for a nice facility. His condition is only going to continue to deteriorate, so you may as well start looking now as you will probably need to face this eventually.
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Reply to southernwave
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I am afraid that you cannot change others.
It appears that, for WHATEVER reason, his children do not wish to have anything to do with him or with you. That isn't something that will change, isn't something you can do anything about.
That means that, yes, you are alone as if they never existed.
I would write them that you are now having to consider placement of your dear hubby in care, that he is no longer safe at home alone and you are overwhelmed and cannot do this anymore. Ask if they wish to have a "family meeting" about this before you begin to explore the options.
They may, if the wish to protect any inheritance they figure may come to them, step in to help a bit. You will have to decide if it's enough. If not you should see an elder law attorney about division of assets and ways to protect your own money as your husband goes into the care he deserves.
You have had a good marriage, but this is no longer the man that you married. Sadly, you have limitation in what you CAN do.

So give them that chance to lend a hand or to take on care; if that doesn't work you need to begin to think about placement or hire in help. Because yes, this is now where you are at, whether anyone likes it or not.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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My father's wife was having an affair with dad when my mother was still alive. I was in my second year of high school when I found out about it. Fast forward; mom died from cancer when I turned thirty three. I had moved back home before my divorce. I ended up taking on all of the household responsibilities that included my younger sister. Mom wanted me to have the house so I could stay and take care of younger sister. Dad's wife saw me as a cash cow, and wanted me to pay rent along with taking care of my sister and all the bills. The deal they cooked up was for me to pay all the bills, take on a thirty grand loan, pay the house taxes, house repairs, and other responsibilities. This doesn't even include the basics like medical care, food and clothing.

Dad died in 2014. I haven't spoken to that woman until this day almost nine years later. Her choice of course.

No, I did not share in his care. After all I allowed the both of them to put me through, there was no way I was going to allow myself to be further used and abused by them. I would have more to say, but that kind of language is not allowed here.

After dad died, he left all of his bio children including his disabled daughter one dollar.

Sometimes adult children may have a good reason for not becoming involved as in my case. I did go visit him and I did have him over at my apartment before he died.
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BurntCaregiver Nov 19, 2024
Scampie, you were too good to your father and his wife. They didn't deserve it. You're a good person.
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Why don't the adult step-children like you? You and their father had 38 years to build a relationship with them. My guess is they don't like their father all that much either. When you and your husband were having all the long-distance adventures together, where were his children? Were they like myself and my siblings who lived in poverty and abuse while our father lived it up?

Your post really resonates with me because I have an adult son who I didn't give birth to yet I've been his mother since he was two years old. His father and I were divorced for a while and I was still his mom. I always had time for him too. Is the same thing true of you and you husband with his kids? You had 38 years together and that's a long time. His adult kids weren't always adults.

It's not their job to become caregivers to their father. You will have to make another arrangement like placing him in LTC or getting live-in caregivers for him.

Yes, it's very expensive and will not be free. Depending on how you and your husband set up your assets and estate, you may not be able to afford to be adventurous and travel anymore. Many people are in the same situation as you. That doesn't mean their kids are going to be the free back-up plan.
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Scampie1 Nov 19, 2024
I agree. My father would physically abuse my mother especially around the Christmas holidays. His problem was money and extra marital affairs. He would cut himself off even when living at home. This went on for years.

When he left for the last and final time, he washed some clothes, packed them, and never came back except to come and check in. He didn't give my mother any money. My mother would have to call this woman's house to tell her husband to call home regarding the bills. He and his lady friend did a good deal of traveling and none of us were invited except for her children and my middle brother. Our family became divided after this.

After mom died, dad married this woman less than five months later. My grandmother called and told me. I asked him why didn't he tell me. The excuse was I didn't like his wife. I think the real reason was that he was ashamed to tell me.
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When people show you who they are, you need to believe them - and that applies to both positive and negative interactions.

You will find here that the vast majority of us, having done the caregiver thing ourselves, are huge proponents of getting our ducks in a row and planning for the future - one that doesn't require our own children to provide hands-on caregiving when the time comes.

You mention the dreaded double-edged sword. You are in a caregiving scenario for your husband of 38 years - but you are not the mother of his children - AND you do not have a good relationship with them. I, like Grandma1954, find it odd that after 38 years in the family, there isn't at least a working relationship with his children.

I'll go out on a limb and hazard a guess that there is some history there. (I mean I was only part of my abusive, narcissistic FIL's family for 30 years and still helped with his care - I would go so far as to say I could not STAND the man, but I love my husband and he needed my help so I helped until we could find another option)

Your title says "adult kids don't like stepmom". Your post says you don't have a good relationship with them. Either way - if you are having to beg them for an occasional break, and they are not offering to help because they want to help their dad (let's leave you out of the equation entirely - because I'm thinking maybe their relationship with Dad isn't so great either) - then you have your answer.

They are not your solution.

It's time to look into other options. If he cannot be left alone you really only have 2 options. You can hire caregivers to come into the home when you cannot be there - as you mentioned - very expensive. OR you can find a residential facility and have him placed, and you can manage his care, and go back to being his wife and not his caregiver.

Either of those solutions are equally loving and continue to provide his care.
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Reply to BlueEyedGirl94
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Blended family dynamics can be rife with complicated issues. I know, because my husband's parents got divorced when he was a young teen. It was the outcome of an affair (with his Mom's best friend), and the way it was handled was awful and created life-long wounds and bitterness that went deep. Even when it's handled well, it can cause lasting pain.

From my husband's and his brothers' perspectives, no matter how nice of a person the step-mom is, she is not their Mom. There can be resentment for now having to "take care of" or help another Mom that they have no emotional connection to. They don't see it as their "job", especially if your husband left their Mom to be with you. But maybe he was widowed when he married you. Still, you don't replace their Mom.

Your husband will most likely precede you in death. You now see that his kids won't lift a finger to help you (but may become "active" if they smell an inheritance that they may view as "rightfully theirs"). When my FIL died many years ago, 2 of his sons were shocked and angered that they didn't "get anything" even though his widow was still a young retiree and would need what was rightfully left for her own support. So, the writing is on the wall and you must plan well for your own decline and related care.

But even in non-blended families, there are adult children who choose to not help. One cannot assume other people into a caregiving role. I agree with other comments that you take it as is and spend your savings doing appropriate legal planning and getting good-quality care for the both of you. I wish you all the best as you do so.
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BurntCaregiver Nov 19, 2024
@Geaton

When you marry a man or woman who has kids, you have a moral duty to be a parental figure to those kids even if their mom and dad are still alive. Even if they live with their other parent (or parents these days because few people have full siblings anymore).

If a person cannot become a parent to those kids they can become a friend. When a man or a woman had kids with someone else you as the new love interest or spouse has to learn how to share the love and attention. Yet too many times there is competition between a new spouse and the old kids.

This problem is easily avoided. Don't marry a man or woman who has kids if you want all the love and attention exclusively.
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