Home→Forums→Relationships→Helping our Aging Parents
- This topic has 2 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 9 years ago by Anonymous.
-
AuthorPosts
-
October 26, 2015 at 7:06 am #86104DiParticipant
I’m at a stage in my personal development where I appreciate feedback when I feel the desire to “help” and check myself. Am I just being judgemental? Or would it be beneficial to “help” others with some self awareness?
My parents are moving to a seniors lodge next month for medical reasons. A 3 bedroom house plus a garage must be “downsized”.
My mom is struggling greatly with letting go of all the “stuff” she has. (her words… she wants to cry, she is losing her stuff).
Compassion and empathy for what she must be feeling.I am the only child that lives in the same city, my responsibility to get them ready for this move. There is a LOT of stuff. Boxes and boxes of it. I have offered to take all of it. Whatever they cannot take to the one bedroom suite in the lodge, I will store at my house.
The “lesson” I am finding in this is my mother’s reaction.
-She has requested that I go through every item and tell her whether or not I will use it or donate it. If I want to donate it, she won’t give it to me. She says she will decide who gets it. My response has been a gentle reminder that she cannot take all of her stuff. So she has said that the day they move, she will just pile everything that won’t fit in their suite outside the door and I will have to come get it then.-She has further requested that I display her personal items in my house (where and how she wants) so that she can come visit and “see” them on display
-she has a history of hanging onto items even after she has given them away. (if she gave me a set of dishes ten years ago, she expects to come to my house and open the cupboard and see them there being used). This has happened 🙂I cannot control how she behaves, nor do I want to. I am not upset with how she is reacting, it is what it is. It’s who she is, at this moment, and how she is dealing with a change that must be difficult.
Yes, I could entertain her and display a bunch of her stuff at my house. I could also put it away when she isn’t visiting. It wouldn’t harm me.
I know in the end, after they move, all of the stuff will have to be dealt with. It will unfold, without my doing “anything”.so my question is this…
If it was a friend of mine, I would gently try to bring up letting go of attachment to stuff. (yes, I am perfectly okay if they decide that what’s best for them is holding onto stuff)
My mother is 71. Would you bring it up?
Maybe it’s just selfish. I can see her pain, and I want to help. It’s not necessary to be in pain about this. I want to help, but struggle with “when” I am helping and when I am being judgemental.
Is it a matter of never offering a helpful solution, only give advice if asked?
Anyone have similar experiences?Yes, I am aware that it may sound judgemental. Right way, wrong way. I am honestly
October 26, 2015 at 8:10 am #86108InkyParticipantHi Di,
Invest in a storage unit. Have it be your “basement” or “attic”. Don’t even think about it, just dump all the stuff in boxes.
Once a month, open ONE box, and hang or display ONE item when she visits (only show her the one item and ask where you should put it). And truthfully tell her that it is so overwhelming that you would rather “honor” each box, one at a time, and take YOUR time, that is why the rest is in boxes in storage/attic/basement! The rest of the stuff in the box discreetly donate, sell, or throw away. If you are afraid of parental fallout, keep in the storage unit until she is truly elderly.
That is what I would do.
Good Luck!
Inky
October 26, 2015 at 8:53 am #86114AnonymousGuestDear Di:
First input: you wrote that it is your responsibility to help your parents with their move because you are the only (adult) child living in the same city as they. I say: it is not your responsibility, objectively speaking. It is a responsibility you believe and feel you have, but objectively and legally, it is not.
Otherwise: are you saying she wants you to permanently display her items in your house? This is very unreasonable. I would say NO to this, clear and simple.
Regarding trying to teach her or start her to examine her over attachment to things at 71, I think it is futile. What I would do, if I chose to help them, if I volunteered to help them with the move, is I would be assertive about what I am willing to do and what I am willing not to do, clear and straightforward. I would tell her that I choose not to do this or that because I do not believe in attachment to things but I wouldn’t elaborate on the issue of attachment. In other words, I would follow my beliefs on attachment to things, assert myself clearly and confidently, not sacrificing my beliefs so to accommodate her beliefs. I will not store her things so that she will feel comfortable.
anita
-
AuthorPosts