Our decision is to move 8 hours away because our parents are aging and my mom has dementia which she won’t admit to. I don’t think it’s fair to leave all to my brother or sister and also I love and value my mother for raising me. My son is a sophomore and he is extremely angry about it. I do know what it’s like to be relocated in high school. It happened to me but I was in 9th. I feel like he will adjust. But he’s so angry with us and says he’d rather be adopted. I don’t know how to tell him how I’m feeling. He just says I don’t care about him. Am I being selfish? Is he right? I don’t want to hurt him but I also want to teach him the value in caring for family. We’ve lived far away his whole life. He’s such an angry guy anyway.
Am I wrong, but I did not see it mentioned anywhere that your Dad is involved in this, I got that its just Mom. So you are between a rock and a hard place. Damned if you do and damned if u don't. I guess no family where ur to take your oldest in so he can complete High School where you live now? I know a couple that did this for his daughter's best friend because her Dad was being transferred.
Have you talked to your son's therapist to see how this will effect him, your therapist?
Really need to get your ducks in a row. I would first want Mom to have a good physical. Labs will show any physical problem Mom may have. She could have a UTI. In older women there is not the itching and burning so can go undetected. Thyroid, diabetes, low potassium can cause Dementia like symtoms. It could be she needs a vitamin like B12. If the labs show nothing, then a Neurologist is the next step. An MRI will show any problems. If it shows Mom is showing signs of Dementia, then its time to decide what you need to do.
Are you planning on living with Mom or get a place of your own? I would say at 70, I would not move 4 kids into Moms house even if she was OK. If she does have Dementia, having 5 extra people invading her home could make her worse. Those suffering from Dementia like familiarity. They don't do well with change. They can be very unpredicatable and certain Dementias make them aggressive. You may not want to expose your kids to paranoia (your kids are stealing from me), hallucinations or anger. They may not understand that this is the desease not grandmom. I agree, that showing children how to care for someone elderly is a good thing. They learn compassion and empathy. But Adults have a hard time dealing with a person suffering from Dementia let alone expecting a child to understand what is going on.
This is a forum of Caregivers from all over the US, Canada and UK primarily. As with any forum you are going to get negative feed back. You just pick out the parts that help you and leave the rest. I realize that you may not want to put ur life out there, but then our answers sometimes go on assumption. This is a good forum as a whole. We share our experiences hoping it will help. But in the end, you make the final decision.
I do understand an angry teen. My daughter had rages where she did not remember what she said or did. Her therapist said when she got angry, to write her feelings down. When she moved out, we found her journal. Yes, we found some not very nice things about us. Effected my husband more than me. She was 14 at the time. We were told that around 16 or Senior year she probably would come around. She came around, not the way we wanted her to, she had my Gson at 16. But he was a blessing in disguise. She went to Nursing school, got a job and supported him all the way. Bought a house at 24. Grandson is 28 now. Daughter has made a good life for herself.
As they are all minors, you as their mother have a PRIMARY LEGAL RESPONSIBILITY to your children.
It sounds like your husband is not 101% on moving.
If your husband does NOT want to move, he does NOT have to.
If hubs doesn’t want to leave his job & benefits, he does not have to.
If he wants himself & 4 minor kids to stay in martial home, where all currently live & all enrolled in schools & part of their community, he can petition the court for that to be ordered till a divorce is finalized.
You can file for divorce, but I so doubt a judge will ever make a father of 4 sell or move out of a home with 4 minors living there. If hubs can afford on his income the house note & costs, imo He & the kids r staying put. You wanna move 8 hrs away & file for divorce, go ahead. Most likely you will have to do a settlement to have him buy out your equity share of the home, & maybe have it work within child support you will be ordered to have to pay.
Hubs - if he has real pit bully divorce atty - can make the situation so onerous for your fulfillment of divorce agreement that you end up relinquishing parental rights or have it so costly & difficult that you end up living debt & regret rest of your life. You’re not leaving bc he’s an addict & cooking meth; you’re leaving to caregive your mom. Hubs will be portrayed as a good case for fathers rights overrride that of a mother. & you’ll be portrayed as a mother who is abandoning her young family to caregiving for 70 yr old mom & who already has a son, DIL & another daughter as her support system.
Really good divorce attorneys when they doing contentious cases are all about minutiae of details required in a short timeframe. Often not all about $ but more that the other is unfit. If you don’t get paperwork or documentation in & on time, you’re unfit. If your late, unfit. They’ll haul you out in front of a judge regularly, if unprepared or a no shows, unfit. His Divorce attorney will have a field day with you as your going to be distracted with being a caregiver.
If you leave, kids are not required to go with you. The 16 yr old has influence over his siblings on not going. Hubs atty can get a report done on situation at your parents home- if the plan is moving yourself & the kids in - to show that it would be a detriment to kids to live there. A good divorce atty will use noncomparable conditions. Like old school is 5 star, new is 3 so u need to send them to private school. Like if 4 kids ea have their own BR now with same sex Jack&Jill bathroom between them, then you will be likely required to have the same wherever you move to. Your parents home would needs to have 6 bedrooms, 3 baths to be “comparable”. Even if you do not have full time custody, but just wkend or seasonal custody. The “comparable” are why so often divorced take kids to a hotel or resort as it gets around the comparable housing issues.
I cannot tell if 8 hrs away is a in a other state. If it is, taking minors out of state can have a lot of requirements attached. Travel costs on you.
Your 16 yr old is old enough to do testimony in a hearing. He can tell the judge he doesn’t want to move and why. If anything he considers inappropriate has happened to him by you in the past or occurs in the future to him or his siblings - like on visitation weekends or summer or Holidays - he can on his own file a report with CPS / child protective services. Like if you make the kids help feed grandma or give her any medications or you put him in charge of overseeing his 3 younger siblings because your busy caregiving your mom. Again, unfit.
That you’re unhappy is obvious.
Leaving to caregive a mom w dementia isn’t going to make you happy.
Personally I’d make martial counseling btw you & hubs & family counseling btw you, hubs & the tweens be the priorities. You have another 15 yrs or so of child raising still to go.
The 4 minor children need to be the focus, imo.
I'm not trying to sound harsh here but your son will not thank you for teaching him the value of caring for family. What he will do is resent you for forcing him to pay the price for your choices.
If your brother and sister are local you don't have to move closer to your parents. The three of you need to get together and make a care plan for your parents. This means homecare if that is appropriate for them or an assisted living facility if needs must.
All of this can be worked out with you and your siblings.
None of it has anything to do with your teenage son and he should not have to pay the price for what you want.
I would consider investing in at least a few family therapy sessions with a really good therapist. As you are dealing with a boy here I would choose a male therapist if that's what he wishes.
I sure wish you good luck. A tough dilemma.
It does sound your life is all at sea at the moment - waves/stress hitting you from all angles.
Exhausting - hard to know which direction to swim.
Can you float for a while?
Talk to a therapist if it helps.
Work out what you really want for your future.
Take all the time you need...
Then sail there ⛵
Sit down and have an adult conversation with him on the situation and how he thinks it should be handled - your responsibility is to your son. We cannot put the older generation before the younger - they have their lives to live based on our decisions.
You and your immediate family (husband and kids) are the priority. You will need to come to peace with the fact that you only (for now) help your mom and your siblings in ways that keep things stable at home and allow you to work on your marriage/mental health/etc. Moving will blow up everything in your current home life. You don't need that right now. If this happens you will be ground to a pulp and then no one will benefit, most of all, you.
It's easier said than done but you will need to work on having peace in your heart and patience when it comes to helping your mother right now. Many on this forum have been in your shoes. I wish you much clarity and courage.
Moving 8 hours away from a parent that needs help really isn't moving close enough to be of much help. I applaud that you want to be more involved in caring for your senior parents. Since they have some support right now, find other ways to help - just for 3 years - until your son goes to college, job or the military.
I have a grandson his age.
Please listen to him. Let him finish his course where he is.
Make arrangements to give the person caring for your mom a week off every couple of months. Help financially by paying for outside care. Your son will see your care this way not only for him but for his grandma as well. Have him be part of the plan. He may have a great idea. Ask him what he thinks would be a way to help both him and your parents. For a couple of years have a plan that supports both.
To give you some perspective - we sold our home in my youngest daughter's senior year of high school. She didn't have to change schools, we didn't leave her home town. We literally just sold our home and moved into another one in the same town. She didn't give up her friends or anything she had come to know - except for one thing- her childhood home. She was involved in the decision making process, she was onboard and all for it. BUT, even that was still a big change. That was the only home she had every known and I don't think she was really fully prepared for how she would feel or the adjustments that came along with it.
Now let's change that up - and take her out of her hometown, away from her friends and family that she has known her entire life, away from everything she has built and worked for - yes I can imagine that she would have had a lot to say about it. Especially if she didn't really understand WHY it was happening. And sometimes from their perspective SELFISH is the only way they know how to describe what they are feeling.
From his perspective - even from yours - is this move NECESSARY - or just something you feel you maybe should do? Is it something that you are feeling guilty about or something that is immediately required? You say he will adjust. Let's be honest - I'm not saying don't do it. Most kids are resilient absolutely. But based on being a sophomore in high school and you guys haven't moved yet- I'm guessing he is about 15. If memory serves (I only have daughters) all of my friends and my mom all swear that 15 is a terribly hard age for boys. We are still in COVID times. Depending on when you moved and where, there are still a number of activities that are non-existent or not open for newcomers until they are vetted in a lot of areas. If he is already angry or not open to the move and you are moving him 8 hours away say around Christmas this year he will be walking in the door mid- year which is a hard time to break into school groups. What is your plan with schooling?
He is expressing himself with rudimentary comments - "you don't care about me" "you are selfish" and you are interpreting that as him not valuing or caring about his family. But I think you are missing what he is saying.
Here is what I'm hearing in those words.
Mom, we haven't lived near my grandparents my entire life and now you want to take away everything I've ever known to move us closer to them. (what he HEARS - and I know you don't intend that - is that you are valuing them over him.
So it boils down to this. Has anyone actually asked you to move closer? Is this out of guilt? If you move closer are you creating MORE problems for yourself because you may feel better being closer to them but you may be creating all kinds of issues for HIM in anxiety and depression (I AM NOT SAYING HE GETS TO RULE THE ROOST, only that you should consider how this will impact him - REALLY consider it and why you are doing this NOW vs later and if it is really necessary or you are just doing it out of some sense of guilt.)
Let him calm down and talk to him - REALLY talk to him. Let him express how he feels and why. Let him get a chance to tell you how he feels without interrupting and making him feel guilty about how he feels. He has a right to feel the way he does just like you do. In the end he may surprise you. He is scared. And angry. And he knows in the end he doesn't get a vote.
you seem like a very caring compassionate daughter and your parents lucky .
your son will adjust and make friends… and your teaching him honour parents. We need more parents like you . Too many are afraid of their kids and want be best friends.. all that sheltering not doing them favour . .
If a teenager can’t move to new school and make friends there’s not much hope .
go ahead and do right thing and hopefully your son will learn adjust and become happier guy.
How about instead of a teenage kid having to be the adult here and adjust and make a new life for himself, mom leaves him where his is and she goes to her parents?
I think the underlining reason for the poster wanting to move is because she wants out of her toxic marriage and thinks she'll find a better support system if she's near her parents and siblings. That may very well be true. Leave the kids with their father then. Don't make their lives any harder then they have to be.
about it? I think I would try to talk her into it.
I think what most people are suggesting is that she slow down and take a step back and really access the situation and make an informed decision taking EVERYTHING and EVERYONE into account. Because once she does this it is hard to roll everything back. I don't see anyone suggesting that her son is the only one that gets to have any input or that he should get his way. If they need to move they need to move. But that wasn't the impression that we were given. The impression I got was that she wanted to move closer. And that's different. There are a lot of factors that need to be taken into account here.
I didn't see where anyone was really saying the OP was being selfish. What I read was everyone suggesting that she consider ALL parties. And while I agree that change and adversity are good for young people, I see little harm in making him part of the process. Yes, they learn from adversity. But they also learn from being included and involved in decisions that impact their lives when the opportunity arises. Just pulling the rug out from under him without talking to him and letting him feel involved in the decision making doesn't help at all. I don't think this about fixing anything for him. It's about him feeling included. And not feeling that his mom is leaving him out of a decision that impact his life and his future entirely. Because at the root of it, it does. He's a high school sophomore. At that age mine were already thinking about colleges. And moving 8 hours sounds like they are probably moving states. Had we moved states that would have impacted in state tuition for both of my girls tripled the tuition for the colleges they wanted to attend and potentially impacted whether they were accepted based on in-state/out of state acceptance rates. I know that sounds nitpicky and may not even be on her son's radar right now, but it is just one of the many things that moving COULD be doing to his future once a kid is in high school. Starting a new high school does impact their future because they already building their portfolio for college and it is important for some kids, they work hard for that. I'm not saying that is her kid, but some kids spend their entire high school career working towards college and moving them means they start all over again and those opportunities may not be available at another school.
So there really are other things to think about than just picking up her family and moving them. Yes, I'm sure her son would get over it and move on eventually. But there is no harm in talking to him about it and trying to understand where he is coming from.
I’m not in your situation but I would tend to lean towards your son’s needs first.
if there is a way to balance between the two it would be great!
My mother is failing also, and lives 1800 miles away. But my first responsibility is to my bride who lives with Alzheimer’s (67 yo).
praying for a good answer for you!
If you move, you are not guaranteed support. Things change and people change, especially those with mental challenges. Take care of yourself first before making any life changing decisions that will affect so many lives. You owe that to yourself and your children who depend on you.
I pray you find your peace and resolve.
Yes, you are concerned about your parents, you have 4 children to raise, your husband is abusive, and the family is in therapy (except your husband). That's a lot! Here are some things to consider if you move: will your son still be angry?- yes; will you and he still need counseling?-yes; will your stress increase because your adding your mom's care to your responsibilities?- probably; will it be easy to adapt to a new location, new schools, new counselors?- probably not; might you have some regret for relocating once your mom dies, or even before?- possibly; will trying to conduct a long distance divorce ease your worries?- I doubt it.
I'm sure there is more to consider, but whatever you decide, the goal is to improve your mental and physical health.
It would not be a move to more support. Your brother and sister have already established lives there, most likely have children, are caring for your mom, and will not be taking on your troubled family as a project. No doubt they love you, but it's wishful thinking to believe that your family will get the level of attention you would need from people who are already raising families, working, and doing eldercare. Your move would likely create more work for them than help. Give up the halcyon dream of snuggling into sibling support if you move. Even the most extraordinary families couldn't live up to it.
And you know what? You would still be you if you moved. Still with mental health issues, an angry teen, younger children, and a shaky marriage. That's if the whole marriage doesn't implode because you want to move - the best move scenario is that you move all your current problems to a new city and add a whole new group of stresses to the situation.
Sit down with your therapist and don't talk about moving, talk about your family. Figure out what works best for the people you have primary responsibility for - your children. Get a handle on your mental health - meds, therapy, whatever. Do you have a job? Some financial independence can go a long way for mental health. Get all your kids into counseling if at all possible. Your husband as well. If he is violent, get with the local domestic violence people and figure out how to end the marriage. Solve the life you have instead of trying to move away from it.
Talk to your sister and brother (and mom) often about the day-to-day stuff that's happening there. Pay a lot of attention to her by phone and by mail. There are quite a few things you can help with from a distance, like paying your mom's bills electronically, keeping track of her insurance claims, handling your mom's grocery orders, etc. If she eventually accepts more in-home help, offer one-week respite visits to your siblings. You have no idea how much that helps. One thing I've learned after looking after three elders: you have no idea, really NO idea, how this situation will develop. She may need in-home help for years, or she may need to go into a memory care facility within a few months. Or she could pass away from something unrelated and unexpected, or be incapacitated by it, and end up needing to be in a nursing home.
You sound desperate and unhappy and I hope you don't take this as criticism. I only wish you well.
I know that when I get the feeling that I want to get into my car and drive away that I need to deal with something serious. And you have recognized and addressed the various things OP has mentioned in her posts and broken them down into the things that matter best.
I am going to copy your post and keep it as a reminder to myself to think about what really is the issue when I get the run away feelings.