I posted back in February and then in April about my 78-year-old MIL moving with us out of state. My last posts have more detail that would be impossible to reiterate here, but bottom line is she was supposed to come stay with us as an independent roommate, but the week she got here she admitted that she lied about her income and needed us to essentially take care of her financially. After several months of paying all her bills, I nipped this in the bud — I began enforcing the original agreement that she was to pay $500 towards rent, and after months of paying her car insurance, medications, groceries, phone bill, etc I began flat out refusing. I told her she needed to get a job or figure something else out but that we would no longer be paying her way. She resisted very dramatically, acting as if we were forcing her to go without her medications and food, and allowing her car insurance to lapse so she could lament that WE “let it go unpaid,” and telling a neighbor that we refused to pay to fix her flat tire so that the neighbors chipped in and bought her a tire (😳), but I firmly kept telling her that she is a grown up and must pay her own way because we are still a young family and our responsibility is to our young child, not her.
Finally, after many weeks of my taking this tact, she got a small part time job in retail up the street. She now has her own money but still refuses to buy her own groceries and if I refuse to include her in all our meals (which was getting very expensive), she’ll act like we are abusing her and start saying that the doctor is concerned she’s losing weight or may be diabetic. It's all manipulation, and it's caused a lot of grief in my otherwise-perfect marriage because I finally began refusing to reward this behavior (my husband still allows himself to be manipulated by her and guilt-tripped —he always has).
After several really crazy incidents (her speaking badly about me daily to my 9 year old daughter, treating our daughter badly when shes angry at me, pretending to “break down” on the highway and making my husband leave a business meeting to go retrieve her to make him feel guilty for telling her we would no longer be driving her everywhere and running all her errands since she insists on keeping her $500/month car payment, and $200/month insurance, catching her in repeated lies), we told her this is not working and she needs to find her own place ASAP. However, she has refused to do so, and it has become clear to us that if we want her out, WE must find the place and WE must pay the security deposit and WE must move her. She no longer speaks to me, making my home so tense I can hardly bear it.
Anyway, here’s my question: when she first moved in, I took her to several doctors appointments to have her tested for dementia. The doctor says she does not show any dementia, just normal aging. However, her behavior is so bizarre we feel he has to be wrong. Aside from the constant lying and refusal to do anything for herself and all the daily manipulation, (I know this sounds really crazy) we think she has been cutting our clothes. When we told her we expect her to help out around the house, we began finding bleach stains and clear scissor cuts in our clothes. Last week, I left my phone on the counter and when I came back in the house, it was gone. We searched for hours, and after I mentioned I was going to try to GPS locate it in the house, it suddenly appeared in a place I already checked a several times. I found out yesterday she had “accidentally” told her doctor’s office to put all her copays on MY HSA card, draining my health account of over $300. What is my next move? Should I have her re-evaluated? Maybe she needs assisted care?
Read what DrB, Takincare and Isthisreallyreal have advised. Over and over.
You need to kickstart the correction. Carefully. Methodically. Respectfully. But - you. Your husband doesn’t have the b*lls.
Do your homework. Make a plan. And don’t back down.
Some good takeaways: Your daughter needs feel safe in her home. Your daughter deserves - and needs - to be nobody’s pawn and nobody’s sounding board. It’s MIL against the world, not just you three. Keep it neutral; no complaining or venting. Document, document, document.
If you are concerned that this will affect your marriage, too late. It already has affected your marriage.
You are already locked into the role of “always being the bigger person.” Take that mindset to the next level — and continue to “be the bigger person” as you engineer MIL out the door.
You only get get one shot at giving your child a non-deranged, non-pathological home life. Your MIL blew it during your husband’s upbringing. Your husband is making the same mistake with your daughter’s home life.
Your husband’s footprint is more passive, but that does not excuse it — and it does not mitigate the damage.
If your husband is incapable of recognizing this, it does not give him a free pass.
Big hugs. Stay focused. No negative talk. Do your homework and git-R-done.
Example: My 79 yr old cousin came to visit for a weekend and she stayed for an entire year. She fell running with her walker to get the phone.. She had a mild concussion and had some memory loss. We took her to the ER. and then she was discharged . I brought her back to our house until she got better. The next week while we were at an appointment she fell again. She was trying to close the blinds mid way up the stairs and fell down the stairs with a chair on top of her head. I told her before we went out not to worry about the blinds. I told my cousin she can't live alone at least until she is able to do all ADL's. We talked about her moving in permanently but we all decided as a family it might be too much. I take care of my 96 year old mother 24/7 and my time is devoted to her but I made sure she was taken care and I did it out of love for my cousin. I made her meals, took her to appointments, did her laundry, picked up her meds and so on. I have a family too and people that depend on me. There are lots of wonderful people with very busy lives that open their heart to our elderly population, why not open yours? She went to rehab for a month and did quite well. We went to see her everyday. The doctor discharged her home and is doing well. She is in a elderly housing apartment and loves it. She has lots of friends, good neighbors and a nursing clinic in the basement of the apartment complex. She has a housekeeper once week and someone is always checking in on her. I feel relieved she is in a good place with lots of support. I am glad I was able to help my cousin even though it was difficult at times.
As a caretaker yourself, you know how difficult it is on many levels. And not all people are appropriate caretakers for a myriad of reasons. It seems to me that you were trying to guilt/shame Jo and I think that is unfair. Your situation/history with family members may have been quite different than Jo's. And/or your financial situation may not be as problematic at Jo's. You might be comparing apples and oranges.
Also, I'd install cameras for further proof. Might not necessarily tell the husband right away, since he is in obvious avoidance of the situation, but I'd want video proof her her actions... maybe once he actually sees her doing these things he'll wake up.
And... $500/month car payment, and $200/month insurance? That's insanity. If she can't afford it, she shouldn't be driving.
https://www.ahnphealth.com/science.html
I have read all your posts and think you are one of the coldest people I have come across. If you don’t want her there then just say so. Don’t back it up with you skewed statistical black column red column bookkeeping.
Regarding your MIL, while she may or may not have dementia, she is definitely mentally unstable. If this was a suddenly new behavior I'd suggest she get tested for a UTI. But it sounds as if this is a continuing behavior, so I think it is manipulation and fear of losing her son, who, by the way, needs to become more involved in this situation. You need to have a heart to heart with him and tell him that you will not tolerate her behavior. You and your daughter should come first for him and if that is not the case, then you need to decide how far you are going to take this. Are you willing to leave?
I do have to say, however, that it sounds a little cold to expect a 78 year old woman to go out and get a job. Why did you bring her with you when you moved?
“. I admit feeling resentful about my new role... especially because we aren’t yet sure if MIL has cognitive decline or is just sick of working and wants to be taken care of and financially supported”
78 and sick of working. Really? You bet you arse she would like some TLC, love and care and support
we we have a saying in Oz. “ I would hate to be stuck in the trenches with you “
Our children are not retirement programs. Out adult children's primary obligation is the protection of their minor children and the funding of their own retirement.
Would YOU put up with the abuse this elderly woman commits on YOUR granddaughter?
Doesn't your husband understand that she has no intention of leaving. Next time it will be a different excuse.
She will have to be dealt with or you will have to decide if you are willing to let your child be psychologically abused by this evil, selfish thing and then have her own problems because no one protected her, or will you be the change for the next generation and go give her a safe, loving, sane home. There is only one good decision and since your husband isn't going to make it, you unfortunately get to choose from the lesser of two evils.
Shame on your husband for letting his mom do these awful things to the woman he promised to forsake all others for and to love, honor and cherish. He is failing miserably. Please tell him I said so. He is also willingly letting her subject his child to abuse, it may be different but the scars will still be there. He really needs a good therapist to get his head pulled out so he can man up and deal with this creature that he calls mom.
My mother, with significant vascular dementia, routinely scored as unimpaired on the standard "mini-mental" exam right up until her death. She could no longer manage her affairs or reason, but those skills are not assessed by that instrument.
Has MIL been seen by a geriatric psychiatrist? Has she had a full (generally 3-6 hour) cognitive and neurological evaluation?
Please pursue getting your HSA account straightened out; talk to the office manager in that doc's office and find out what MIL told them; THAT doctor ought to be your advocate in getting MIL's needs assessed.
What may happen is: she will stop paying rent, since she is so good at playing the 'helpless and without resources' card. She will be evicted. Then she will be homeless, which may "earn" her a higher spot on the waiting list. Just a thought.
At this point, it's become intractable. MIL isn't going to change, DH isn't going to change. Only you can do anything. I agree with other posters here who suggest moving out to protect your daughter, Moving her out will also feel destabilizing, but if you build in lots of stability, and really explain why you're making this choice, it will help her feel protected.
The worst thing about being a child in a crazy home is you're left with a persistent sense of insecurity, because the people you naturally depend on for safety are not actually keeping you safe. The fact that nothing is done to correct the situation, and the culture of denial that anything is wrong, undermines the child's developing sense of what's ok and what's not.
If you move out and provide her with a stable, sane home life, you can continue to work on the problem of removing MIL from your home, and ultimately repairing your marriage.
Unfortunately, it's falling on you to do tbis, because your DH and his mother have a lonnng, entrenched history that realistically is not fixable unless DH himself decides to work on it. As someone else here said, do your homework, keep focused on the outcome you want, disengage from the drama, and take the steps.
Most of all, protect your daughter. She didn't choose this, but the experience will stick with her as she grows to adulthood.
Good luck.
Now MIL has options you just need to help her son stick to them as he helps her choose and accomplish, you can be the back up more behind the scenes but the exchanges with her about what needs to happen really have to be between them, take yourself out of the middle. If she chooses not to work and live off of her SS she needs to do that, paying for herself. If that means Medicaid, so be it and if that means giving up her expensive car and replacing it with something more in her price range... At this point she seems to have written her walking papers from your home so unless she chooses to make a great turn around this responsibility for herself financially means finding her own place too. Doesn't have to be far away, it might be a room in someones house or a small retirement community apartment and if she can't do that for herself DH needs to help (with you behind the scenes) locate 2 or 3 options and walk her through choosing one. Gather the info about assistance available and help her apply, start going to doctors appointments and make sure legal paperwork is in order (POA etc) and get her a neuro psyc eval (a baseline in case it's helpful later) to see if medication or something might help. Sounds like she was very independent prior and still appears very capable of being so but maybe there is something going on she isn't sharing that has her fearful. She is now dealing with new providers she may not trust yet that don't know her or you & DH so you guys might persist more, help her settle. She and DH may each be more frighted than either admit. Don't make your home as "comfortable", expectations and living up to rent promise she has to figure out. Take bk p
In your case, the situation needs resolution. Having read the responses, I would agree that counseling for you, your daughter AND your husband might be in order at some point. He might need it sooner, to get him into "Action mode." You can at least start by reassuring your daughter that what grandma says/does is not normal and for her to try to ignore it. My ex and his second wife used to say horrible things to my children about me - I don't feed them enough, I don't take good care of them, I don't even like them! I just calmIy asked them if they were hungry and said if so there's food here and here or they can ask me (their response was no.) I asked them if they felt they needed something or that I wasn't caring for them, they said no. I laughed at the last one, and said if I didn't like you, you would be living with him! I was also "blamed" for a lot of his issues, so I just laughed and took on blame for ANY shortcomings in the world! They learned to ignore it.
I also concur that this isn't likely dementia. She was unstable before and that hasn't changed (or has upped her game.) She knows/has learned how to play the manipulation game. While dementia patients could possibly do stuff like this, they wouldn't be able to maintain it.
Beware of finding a place and paying first/last/security - IF you sign your name, you will be paying for this forever and a day! It might be less expensive for you to find a safe place for yourself and your daughter to move to. If hubby truly wants resolution, he would have to work on that while you two are away. You say he is willing to do what must be done to prevent you moving away - hold him to that.
Because she has limited income/assets, perhaps she can qualify for Medicaid and find a Medicaid AL facility? It might be a good time to make inquiries with a good attorney - most will give you a limited initial consult for free - they might have ideas on how best to handle this situation. If not, they could help you file for separation (just another prod to get hubby "motivated") which could get you child support to assist in paying for another residence. That might also get the wheels in his head moving.
I also think installing some nanny-cams would be a good idea, especially if you stay in the same home or until you move out. Put them in locations where you might "catch" her behavior (laundry, daughter's room, any place she might try something underhanded.) This would provide video proof of her behavior - documenting it only won't be enough (your word vs hers.) Hubby might need to see this for himself to prod him into action, especially in regards to your vulnerable daughter. Be sure to hide them well and don't put them up when she is around!
Quick lookup on the HSA (never used it myself) says it CAN be used for immediate family and dependents. Is she claimed as a dependent? Even if she is, it should have been processed through YOU, not her. If she is NOT a dependent, I would ask the doctor office to reimburse your account and for them to bill her.
Although your lease is probably for a year, consider moving out when the lease is done, if not before (you and daughter.) Did MIL sign lease? If not, if you move elsewhere without her when the lease is up, she becomes a squatter and would be evicted (problem with this is those damn filial laws!) You could just tell her that lease is up, owner is not renting anymore and she'll have to find a place because the new place you are moving to isn't big enough.
The last thing I suggest is reporting it to your doctors. Generally at a visit they might ask if you feel "safe" in your own home. When you see your/daughter's doc, even if they don't ask, I would bring this up with them. They might be able to initiate something.
I suspect she has always been a controlling hateful person. That does not have to mean mental illness! She may want to ruin her son's marriage. Unfortunately, he has not been able to deal with the harm she has done to him in the past. I would hope he might get help instead of trying to take care of her. She does not love or care about him. She is a user. We all have to take care of ourselves. The hateful little things she is doing out of spite are very bad and could get worse if she is allowed to stay in YOUR home. Get her out now! It is your choice and you don't need experts help. But put your foot down, tell husband she must go. Don't forget to change the locks after you get her out. You are living with an enemy.
Remember unless she is declared incompetent she can't be forced to be evaluated by a new doctor. If she's alert, oriented, smart and evil (sounds like she has the last one down pat) she knows that the threat to place her in a nursing home is an empty one. What would the reason for admission and who would pay for her? Her $1000/mo is not going to cover a month and she, in other words you.... will need to apply for Medicaid. BTW medicaid will need even more documents than HUD. It's time to get things in order before you really need them.
It wish you good luck and blessings in this difficult situation. Please keep us updated.
I would recommend that you have private meetings with (1) your husband and (2) her physician - and confront both of them with the "documented evidence" of her bizarre behaviors.
Her behavior is a lot like a person with a psychiatric illness - not necessarily dementia. (I used to be a psych RN.) You are correct that YOU will need to be the ones to move her out, because she clearly won't do it herself.
Her putting her copays on YOUR card is a felony, since she is not on your health insurance and it is not her bank account! You could have her arrested, if you wanted to do that.
Please keep setting boundaries and putting your foot down!
I think it is sad that a 78 year old has to find a job to pay her way, dies she not have SS and is she eligible for some assistance.
She may be suffering from anxiety or another illness and overall I agree you should have her evaluated but do not give up on her..you are her only family.
Next Id make sure your purse/credit card and insurance/bank statement info is securely locked up. Not just in bedroom but under lock and key hidden from now on. No mail left sitting out. If she is capable of ins fraud she could do other damage. (She took your phone/ruined clothes). Write down all bank/cc info so you have contact info at the ready. Check it weekly.
Then Id sit down with hubby calmly and tell him it isnt working. Home should be a haven and its now a hostile battle ground. Your husb is not going to be able to choose. He has to help working on a solution to get her, her own place. Say it calmly. No yelling. Daughter and you have a right to be in happy home not stressful. Say it calmly.
MIL will flip, but to bad. She can move close by, but she has lost her privilege sabotaging the family.
Do NOT sign anything for mom when getting a place. You will end up being responsible/paying.
I would contact dept of aging in your county. They may be able to help. Maybe a lawyer to draw up a proper legal eviction notice for her since she feels entitled to live there. I dont think words are enuff to get her to move. She will call your bluff and not make any effort to move. Them play helpless victim. She can be given 2 months to find a place. She needs to see legal paper.
Make sure to tell him, hes not choosing one over the other, but just making the family situation less stressful. Or else he wont be able to choose, and will end up doing nothing, as most guys will. He will happily let you be the bad guy. So he looks good in mom's eyes. You will become the bad guy to both of them. You are the only one complaining. So you must tell him he's not abandoning mom, just putting a little distance there for everyones sanity. Your house is your castle. There cant be 2 queens running it. She can be close by. You have a right to a stress fee home.
You have to make sure he knows that he is not choosing one or the other, just helping all parties with less stress. Let us know how it goes. Feel free to vent any time. Im sure your home is a pressure cooker.
As for food just let her eat. Choose your battles. Your getting her out, but meals will be less tense. Your husb can pay for the groceries lol. Also refuse to engage her when she says nasty things. She will stop if she cant get a response. If she says nasty things when husbs isnt around, Id record her and get cams. Only use it as a very very last resort. He wont believe you otherwise. Dont let anyone, even daughter know you are recording. You use that as last resort. You cant lead with Im leaving and taking daughter. Only use that as last case scenario. Get your ducks in a row b4 you do that.
Start to have a date night w daughter. Gets you out of the house, some pos bonding time, and less stress. Can be a movie, the park or just a walk. Husb can make moms dinner and see how living w her by himself is no fun.
Stop making everything about $$$, she didnt pay for meals, etc. He'll just resent you for that.
Makes you think doesn't it.