Home→Forums→Tough Times→Feeling like I've failed
- This topic has 7 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 4 months ago by Alexa Stewart.
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August 7, 2015 at 9:55 am #81411Alexa StewartParticipant
I am filled with so much negative emotion right now. I feel as though I have failed my father and that he would be so…not angry that wasn’t like him. No he would be disappointed that I let this happened.
In 2005 my husband (now we’re separated) and I sold one house to move closer to my father who was getting older and to be honest it was much cheaper where we were going. My father passed later on and much of the money left to me went for his funeral, nursing school,bills and my daughter and the economic crisis that December was horrible. Also a good portion of the money went to pay some legal fines my husband incurred as a result of his alcoholism.
After my father’s money ran out the money situation became extremely tight. Between my husband fines and surcharges, typical alcoholic spending and “pie in the sky” reasoning we had real difficulty. I have always worked and provided the medical benefits. His income as a contractor was just too unreliable to count on. Whether he started out fine and the work deteriorated or it was just never gotten back to. That also took a financial toll. People have to be reimbursed.
I share some of the blame I could have been stricter or less generous. I also suck a at budgeting. I think denial at how bad things were was a factor too. I made some bad decision money wise too.
The electric bill at the house was extremely high. My father was on oxygen and a bi-pap machine as well as being in a hospital bed. Laundry was done continuously due to my father going through lots of laundry. Air conditioning and heat in an all electric house….expensive.
Well trying to pay a massive bill didn’t help an already bad situation. We struggled until 2013. My husband was jailed again and I took out 2 loans to make payment arrangements to the electric company. It worked. My husband got out. Since I paid ALL the other bills I left it to him to pay the electric. I know, REALLY stupid. It took 2 months for them to pull the meter. Even though my bill was high, the electric company saw fit to attach my father’s bill to my account. They said because I lived there too. It was about $10,000. The payment arrangements with that extra added was beyond me. I had to leave. I lived with my daughter and son in law for three months and found an apartment.
I live alone now. It’s tough but I’m making it…barely. The bank had foreclosed on the house. I just want my things out of the house to put in storage.
All that being said, I feel like I let my father down. He put his name on the house and worried about me. He got us the house (we paid, it was his name). I feel so ashamed and guilty.
August 7, 2015 at 10:44 am #81413AnonymousGuestDear Alexa Stewart:
Most of the money individuals and family units WASTE, money that could go to promote one’s well being, and instead does not, that wasted money- the reason for this wasted money is lack of mental well being. When individuals and family units lack mental well being, they often make bad financial choices, that is, put their money to ineffective use.
You describe your ex husband as not mentally well, alcohol and legal problems are symptoms of such (symptoms and causes). You describle yourself as not well for maybe choosing your ex husband to marry, maybe for continuing to be married to him as long as you did, etc. This is why the two of you made ineffective use of your money.
Your father: he didn’t father you well ENOUGH to bring about a daughter who is mentally better than you are. he may have supported your decision to marry your ex husband. He may have discouraged you in the past from making choices that could have been good for you and encouraged you to make choices that turned out bad for you. He had his own mental health problems that he passed on.
At the end, you, your ex husband and your father, most likely, all three in decisions made individually and together- made decisions that resulted in money being wasted, lost, not put to good use.
All three share responsibility for your father’s money not put to good use. This should- if you examine it and think it is true- this should cut your shame and guilt by 66.6% and that is way down from 100%.
What do you think?
anita
August 7, 2015 at 11:22 am #81415Kori ElizabethParticipantAlexa,
I just wanted to reach out and say, at some point we have all felt like we have failed. I am recently divorced and that has brought up a lot of those feelings in myself.
Just think of this as your emotional/mental hug for the day. So what, you didn’t handle everything 100% “correct”. At the time, you did what you knew and what you thought was best.
You have spent, what seems like years taking care of people. Take this time and learn to care for yourself, stop beating yourself up so much about past issues. Maybe no one has given you “permission” to take care of yourself for once, so if you need the sign, here it is.
You are loved, and you are great at loving others. Don’t let the world take that away from you. stay strong sister.
<3 Kori
August 7, 2015 at 3:24 pm #81428InkyParticipantDear One,
Your father must have known that you would need the money. Count on it as being the great gift and blessing it was. After all, what if you DIDN’T have the money when you did? Unthinkable, right?
The good news is you can start fresh now. Read The Richest Man in Babylon. Follow the book and put your money where it says to in the proportion it says to. Then, slowly but surely, you will be comfortable again. Dare I say happy. Follow Suze Orman too. (Wish my sister would!)
Inky
August 7, 2015 at 10:03 pm #81438SunflowerParticipantYour story inspired me. You are incredibly strong for enduring all those things that came to you all at a time, While still providing as a Mother a Daughter and a Wife. It also sounds like you were selfless and didn’t take time to love and care for yourself. You DESERVE that. Luckily the home and stuff in the home are just things. And while I understand things have value and or are special they are still things. Your father would be proud to see you survive all this. I cant imagine the stress and heartbreak you are going through and or went through during those hard times. Your father taught you love, and you can see that in your story while you admit some pretty deep things. Its ok to be wrong and make mistakes I can assure you that you wouldn’t repeat them again. You learn so much after all these experiences and here you are now in your little apartment that will soon grown on to you and you will be able to add things inside of it little by little. There is no rush take your time <3 and just breathe<3
August 8, 2015 at 11:09 am #81451Alexa StewartParticipantThank you Kori. Your kindness really helped. It’s tough but your gracious hug helped!!
August 8, 2015 at 11:37 am #81453Alexa StewartParticipantInky thank you. I’m looking into the book. Thanks!!
August 8, 2015 at 12:05 pm #81456Alexa StewartParticipantSunflowerspace, thank you. What you said was very sweet and kind. I appreciate it really. Kind words go a long way.
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