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If you're set to go home February 7th let nothing stop you or prevent that. Nothing.
This is the final stretch because February 7th is only a few weeks away. Your mother will double-down on the games, the drama, the verbal abuse, and the manipulation now.
You MUST be extra careful and observant in the weeks leading up to you going home. If your mother is anything like mine, the fabricated health crises and staged "falls" will also be starting up around now. Many people don't believe seniors do these things but they are very common tactics to get attention and to maintain control over the people in their lives.
Watch for this and beware of it.
Then let nothing short of an act of God stop you from going home on February 7th. Good luck.
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NeedHelpWithMom Jan 2023
And it is usually at the last minute too. Sometimes out of fear, sometimes out of spite, it depends upon their personality.

It’s sad when things seem to be in place, and a parent tries to sabotage everything.

This is when our strength is tested! Don’t think that a parent can’t see their children’s weaknesses. They absolutely do and will use it against them every time.
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I am with Burnt here. You have given Mom a date. Don't bring it up again. Get her to do for herself as much as possible. Do not disable her. Tell Dad not to disable her. Maybe she can't wash and dry clothes, Dad can do that. But she most certainly can fold them.
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Of course, the absolute best scenario is placement for the parents in a facility, because then children who live in another state like Max can rest easier knowing that they will be receiving 24/7 care.

Oh how we dream of living in an ideal world!
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Hi everyone- If you read my recent posts, my mom is now saying I really don’t feel good. See what I replied. I actually have now decided to leave around January 28th. I said to myself what am I crazy!? I keep on adding another week.
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tygrlly1 Jan 2023
Plan on the 28th as your date to finally escape with a concrete plan for an alternate facility in place or caregivers hired and then say NO Keep saying NO and wave goodbye on the 28th. You are agreeing to continue to keep being their endentured slave by agreeing to stay. It will never end. Tell the local APS County office that this is an emergency and crisis on the verge of happening, because you are their only support , they are vulnerable adults , they can no longer safely care for themselves and you MUST leave. Dont cave.
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OH NO! I’M HYSTERICAL CRYING HERE! MY DAD JUST CALLED AND SAID HE’S GETTING A PACEMAKER PUT IN THIS FRIDAY! NOW MY MOM IS GOING TO PRESSURE ME INTO STAYING LONGER TO CARE FOR BOTH OF THEM! PLEASE HELP ME! WHAT DO I DO?!
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lealonnie1 Jan 2023
Your father was already planning to get a pacemaker; this is not new Maximus. Your mother is going to continue pressuring you to stay longer until you've moved into her home permanently, unless you make plans to get both of them placed in Assisted Living where caregivers are available to them 24/7 asap. That's the truth. You have to either plan to leave on X date, plan to move in permanently, or plan to get them placed in AL. Their problems and issues will continue to worsen with time, they will not get better, and they will expect you to be their solution until you say NO, I cannot be your solution any longer. Don't be 'hysterical crying' and create drama; dry your tears & use calm reason & logic to handle this matter now.
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Max, that leaves ample time until you leave on the 28th.

You do see how this is going to go down, right?

Personally, everything you have shared here, your parents should be in managed care. That would be the only conversation about care you should engage in.

Does it suck? Yes, absolutely! But, they are NOT able to be independent, for whatever reason, so they need to accept that life changes and they need to stop sucking your life force to prop them up. If they refuse, they couldn't care less about you, other then giving your mommy what she wants, that's the care they have for you and your spouse.

Yes, you are crazy to keep pushing the date out. That's why you keep getting pressured, IT WORKS! This is your problem and not your parents. You need to learn what no means and utilize it or YOU just create more pressure on yourself.
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I think the best gift a parent can give a child is to realize when they need help and get it. Not expecting their children to prop them up. When u ask your child to care for you, you are effecting their spouses and children and granchildren if they have them. When a man marrys he cleaves to his wife. A father gives his daughter to her husband. This means the parents have no hold on their children anymore. They are setting off to make a new life. The parent are no longer the center of their world. Just a part of it.
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tygrlly1 Jan 2023
The problem is that they dont. They dont get it and they dont want to get it and never will. My grandparents planned for their golden years long before there were government programs, saved earnestly, and graciously went into care , which they had the funds for when they needed it, from their house sale and savings. My parents were not burdened but were a product of the fairly stable 1950s, especially the women...women whose learned helplessness is now making life a living hell for their boomer offspring.
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Thank you for answering so quickly! Had a cup of tea! Now another whine moment. My mom wanted me to call my Dad before while he was at the heart surgeon appointment and tell him to buy dog treats. I said to her no I’m not going to do that because he usually calls you before he comes home - he’s with the doctor. She screamed and demanded me to call, so I did and thank god the doctor left the office for a moment! I told her and she replied Oh I thought he would have been finished. What the heck!?
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Thank you for answering so quickly! Had a cup of tea! Now another whine moment. My mom wanted me to call my Dad before while he was at the heart surgeon appointment and tell him to buy dog treats. I said to her no I’m not going to do that because he usually calls you before he comes home - he’s with the doctor. She screamed and demanded me to call, so I did and thank god the doctor left the office for a moment! I told her and she replied Oh I thought he would have been finished. What the heck!?
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NeedHelpWithMom Jan 2023
Max,

Are you really surprised by your their reaction? Your parents are going to continue to reach out to you to be their lifeline.

You are NOT their lifeline. You can utilize tools that can lead them to a proper lifeline, which of course, is placement in a suitable facility.

It is NOT your responsibility to be their ‘hands on’ care. You can be their advocate after they are placed in a facility.

You want your parents to be happy but you also have to be happy and have peace in your life. You will never achieve this if you continue being their lifeline. Give up that responsibility and allow others to care for them.

I wish you and your family all the best.
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Geez, Max! You do EVERYTHING your mom says if she screams?

Do you understand what it means to be an adult? It means being able to say "no", calmly and firmly one's parent, and take the dog for a walk.

Stop taking orders from her.
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I’m going to proceed with looking into what everyone has posted. I’m waiting until my husband who’s a lawyer can help me and then we can proceed together. Love you guys!
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Good luck. Follow through on your departure date, that is the most important thing. I just arrived at my parents’ for my one month of indentured servitude. I told everyone I am flying home February 10 and I will.
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BurntCaregiver Jan 2023
Good for you, Hothouseflower. You make sure to keep your departure date too.
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Maxi, was this a one-off?

Or are you seeing Mom react like every little thing is a top grade emergency eg do it NOW, I need this TODAY, call Dad THIS minute.

This kind of controlling behaviour can be panic, anxiety, cognitive decline inc problems with short term memory. (Have to do it NOW before they forget). My own Mother gets like this - for all of those reasons.

Wth practice, you will take a deep breath, consider the 'emergency' & then respond.

Remember Mom installed that quick-jab-react button in you to jump at her command!

Once you see it in others, Wow. You kind of laugh when you see them leap of the couch into action over a dropped spoon or something trivial.
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maximus1 Jan 2023
No Beatty my mom from the day I can remember was controlling- we just accepted it - we didn’t like it, just accepted it. It’s her normal behavior. Once when I was about 17 visiting my aunt with her, my aunt offered me a glass of water and my mom literally answered for me saying “NO” . I despised this all of my life and never forgot it. I love her dearly, but wow!
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Another thought on 'emergencies'... About whether you react now! Or just mumble Ok Mom, I'll do that later...

One way to sort the *sensible* from the *silly* is playing a little game called 'What's an emergency?'.

Are dog treats an emergency?

Only accept a Yes/No answer.

You will see if Mom is sensible or silly that day 😃.
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BurntCaregiver Jan 2023
@Beatty

Oh, yes. The "emergency". I can't even tell you how much of this nonsense I've had over the years.
Don't play games. What I do when there's an "emergency" is offer to either call a family member or 911.
I had one of our clients calling the office over the weekend with an "emergency".
I called her DIL (she arranged services) and told her that we do not handle client emergencies. Our caregivers work their scheduled hours. The only time the office should be called is if there is a complaint or cancellation. I told the client and the DIL that if she continues to call the office with all these "emergencies" which are nonsense we will drop her from our service.
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Max,

If you keep going on at this pace, before you even get the chance to speak with your husband, you’re either going to be crying to a therapist or getting an examination from a cardiologist for your own health issues.

Trust me, I am speaking from experience. I was so slow in letting go of control caring for my parents that I ended up in a therapist’s office (best choice that I ever made.) My blood pressure became very high, my heart was racing and my doctor sent me to a cardiologist for tests.

Continual stress in our lives causes a lot of anxiety and physical symptoms as well. My therapist would notice that I was breaking out in hives just talking about my situation.

I couldn’t eat. I felt like I would throw up if I tried to eat a meal. My doctor and husband were upset about the weight I was losing. I can’t eat when my nerves get the best of me.

I found this forum way too late. I needed therapy much sooner too. It took me awhile to wrap my head around so many things. It’s a process.

I am glad that you have a compassionate husband. I do too, but don’t kid yourself, husbands get sick of things. It becomes a burden on them to feel like they have to constantly comfort us.

The best thing my husband told me was, “Your mom gets upset if she gets her way. She gets upset when she doesn’t. So why are you continuing on like this? It’s a waste of time.” He was right! Something inside me clicked that day. I hope something will click inside of you soon too.

I get sad sometimes because I feel like I wasted so many years as a caregiver. I can’t ever get that time back. I didn’t know what I know now. I am grateful to everyone that reached out to me. Find peace, find joy, you deserve it.
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No Beatty my mom from the day I can remember was controlling- we just accepted it - we didn’t like it, just accepted it. It’s her normal behavior. Once when I was about 17 visiting my aunt with her, my aunt offered me a glass of water and my mom literally answered for me saying “NO” . I despised this all of my life and never forgot it. I love her dearly, but wow!
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tygrlly1 Jan 2023
Time to rewrite the script. Welcome to my world. After the past 10 years of putting up with my 92 year old NPD mothers growing verbal and emotional abuse , refusing to cooperate with anything she cant control , ( she lacks the cognitive aability to do so due to dementia) hating my husband for taking away " her" time that she demands of me, her escalating paranoia and aggression, , verbal abuse and lifelong Narcissim , I finally had to turn her over to Adult Protective Services after me ending up in ER twice with panic attacks and new ulcers after dealing with " Queen Mother" . Dont let that happen to you. Narcissists get much worse when dementia sets in..and your folks are beyond your ability to manage. Call your local Aging office to help set up care and go home to the life you and your loving husband deserve and have earned. BTW there are adaptive " wipers" you can order for her. She sounds pretty lazy and entitled. Time for a reality lesson and tough love.
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Why do you need your husband there to talk to your patents about getting help thats not from you? You are in your sixties do they realize that or do they still see you as a child? I would start the discussions now before your husband comes to Florida.
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BurntCaregiver Jan 2023
@sp19690

It will be better to have the husband present when the talk happens.
The parents will take the discussion more seriously and will not likely respond the way they would if it was just the OP.
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Great info guys - especially that I have PTSD from my abusive narcissistic brother who threatened our entire family including my aunt and cousin. I never told you about this. That will come soon, only because I find this forum extremely helpful.
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Isthisrealyreal Jan 2023
You have PTSD from your controlling mom.
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Hi Max - a few of us have PTSD from family members. The gift that keeps giving. It's one reason I cut contact with my sister. Your brother is abusive and your mother is too, in perhaps a different way, but she still is. A parent that totally disregards their child's welfare is abusive and also narcissistic. That doesn't mean she can't be charming to you at times. And then turn into something else when it suits her.

As others say, this screaming is to get you to do what she wants you to do while not respecting your choices or needs. You are caught in the FOG - fear, obligation and guilt of a dysfunctional relationship. Only you can change that.

Under no circumstances even consider taking your parents into your home when they can't manage where they are. If for no other reason than that you can't give them the care they need. You have needs including a safe home in which to recover from cancer. That has to be a priority in your life. Your mother may never get that. Ok, Whatever. That's her. YOU get it You have a husband and a marriage which need your attention and you don't need the additional stress of so much time with your parents. In fact, in your own interests you need to visit your parents less often and spend less time there when you do.

That means learning to say "No" to your mother and no to your feelings of fear, guilt and obligation.

That one change on your part can make a huge difference in your life. If you are serious about looking after yourself and having a better life with your husband and less stress from your parents you will have to say "No" probably many times. You don't have to explain why you are saying no, or justify your decisions to not stay longer or visit as much.

Just say no.

If you need to, practice saying it to yourself in front of a mirror. Rehearse how you are going to respond next time your mother screams at you. You know she will, so plan how to deal with it. And walk away from her if you need to e.g. leave the room. And come back here and tell us you have done. (((((((hugs)))))) One step at a time - you will get there.
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sp19690 Jan 2023
Excellent post Golden.
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Think of Mom as a child. How would you handle leaving a child on their first day of daycare...I kissed my daughter and left. This may have been said before but every time you change the date your leaving makes Mom feel all she has to do is cry "poor me" and you will tac on more time. No matter what, Feb 7 ur leaving, even if she is in the hospital. Maybe the hospital SW will notice Mom is 24/7 care and a 90 yr old man in no way can take care of her. So Mom gets placed.

I think this is the saying by one of our members

No need for them to find a solution, when you allow urself to be the solution (something like that)

No, is a one word sentence

When saying the word NO, your are not responsible for the reaction you receive (Boundries by Townsend and Cloud)

My montra...I am here to help people find a way, not be the way.
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Kmjfree Jan 2023
I use No a lot as a one word sentence. It is actually very effective. Mother still gets mad but I can’t control that and really to the point that I don’t care very much. She has tried to bully me my whole life and I’m very tired of it. So yes just say NO.
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Hi Guys, tomorrow’s our 34th wedding anniversary-we actually got engaged on Friday the 13th, got married on Friday the 13th, I lived on a 13th floor and tomorrow my Dad is having a pacemaker put in on Friday the 13th. How fantastic is that? There’s one problem though, my husband and I are not spending it together, but then again there’s a lot of people who are separated. We actually love each other so much that we are ok with it. Even though we are irritated right now with what’s going on, we’re not that heartless. We would do anything for our parents, we just need to have it on our terms for once!
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lealonnie1 Jan 2023
Happy Anniversary. Maybe all this mishegoss is due to the Friday the 13th bad luck omens.

It's very, very obvious you "would do anything for your parents." The question is, what is your plan to start doing things for YOURSELVES now? Or is that not really an option?
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Happy Anniversary, Max.

May you have a great celebration when you and hubs are together.. Keep your eyes on "Your Terms". it's gotta be that way from now on, not just for once and I hope you won't do anything for your parents. It's not healthy. Boundaries!!!

Prayers for your dad's surgery.
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Thank you everyone❤️Hopefully everyone on this forum is doing better in their lives. I really have appreciated your advice and kind words. Have a very happy day💕Maximus
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Hi Max - I should clarify. I don't mean don't do some things for your parents - on your terms - but don't jump to do everything that they request or demand or expect.

That's where the
"No."
"I couldn't possibly do that."
"That's not an option."
"Certainly not."
"By no means."
"Of course not."
"Not really."
"On no account/not on any account."
"Hardly."
"No way am I doing that."
"Not likely."

come in.

You, together with your hub, figure out what things you can't or won't do and what things you can and will do. Just because you can do something, doesn't mean you should or will do it. You have a choice as to what you will do for them and what you won't do. No one can be or do everything for another person. Your first priority has to be your health and your needs or you won't be good for anyone or anything.

Take care of you. You matter every bit at much as your mum and dad even though you have not grown up with that message. What you want, feel and think is important. (((((hugs))))
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Beatty Jan 2023
Excellent list.

Adding
"That is not an emergency".

Sort each request..
Hard No.
No.
Not Now.

eg for calling Dad mid medical appointment for shopping items.. Not Now. Not an emergency.

Dog treats can simply be added to the next shopping list.
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Goodmorning everyone - my mom, as I previously posted, when she’s not a task master is really giving of herself and a nice person. Yesterday she didn’t make a big deal about our anniversary and wished it very meekly. We of course know the reason - she’s guilty and was never one to make apologies, but we never missed their anniversary and we always made such a big deal about it. Read about their anniversary and us desperately trying to find a way to get here. Here’s the thing, my dad, who had his pacemaker put in yesterday, and he’s feeling great, while on the phone with my husband said when you arrive in 2 weeks we need to celebrate your anniversary! We replied- oh don’t worry about that! My mother never answered. She can never give satisfaction!
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Isthisrealyreal Jan 2023
She can never give satisfaction but, she's really giving of herself and nice.

Wake up, you're dreaming.

Happy your dad's surgery went well and he is feeling better.
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Great that Dad got his pacemaker and is feeling good. Now you can leave knowing everything is good. Mom will get better because she has to. I see know reason why, since Dad did so well, you can't go home earlier now. Feb 7 is over 3 weeks away. You have been there since Thanksgiving.

Your Mom, its what it is. I have a SIL that can be nice and do things for others but when it comes to family its another thing. She can be a real b***h and doesn't care about others feelings. If she wasn't my SIL I would never have her as a friend. And then she makes the statement that people thought her Mom was the nicest person, but they didn't see the other side.
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maximus1 Jan 2023
Hi JoAnn - I’m actually leaving in 2 weeks from today! I actually changed the date without mom realizing it. My husband and I are elated! I will be able to sleep in a regular bed, I’ll be around my plants, I’ll be able to watch our foreign movies together and not the news, I’ll be able to cook my gourmet meals for my husband without a sergeant correcting me, I don’t have to talk to anyone in the morning, except to check in my parents!
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Hi JoAnn - I’m actually leaving in 2 weeks from today! I actually changed the date without mom realizing it. My husband and I are elated! I will be able to sleep in a regular bed, I’ll be around my plants, I’ll be able to watch our foreign movies together and not the news, I’ll be able to cook my gourmet meals for my husband without a sergeant correcting me, and I don’t have to talk to anyone in the morning!
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Ok Guys - mom’ starting to say my knees are killing me, I want to die (she really is in pain). Also, I don’t know what I would do without you, I’d kill myself - I said you’re going to have to because I’m leaving so Dad can help you. She said look at him no he can’t. Oh no, it’s starting!
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MeDolly Jan 2023
Don't go down that rabbit hole again, it is all pure manipulation.

Keep your boundaries and go home, where you belong, with your husband,

When she starts just say " I am going home, Dad is in charge of your well-being".

Me, I would leave sooner.
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Max - ((((((hugs))))) Yes it is happening, as we all knew it would. The closer it gets to the date you leave, likely he harder she will try to keep you there.

There are various ways you can deal with this

"I am leaving on the 28th and Dad will look after you." - as you said. Great.

Another way is to take her and her threats seriously. As you get older you get aches and pains. It is to be expected. You don't have to write a novel about them. She's overweight - she wants her knees to feel better? Lose weight. Overweight is the number one reason for bad knees in older women. Lose weight and start moving (exercising a little). Complaining is not going to help her feel better, nor is it going to keep you there. Right? A little tough love would not be out of place here. "Mum, I understand you are in pain. No one can help you feel better. You have to help yourself by losing weight and walking more." Don't give her extra attention when she complains. That feeds her need for attention. see below**

She has threatened to kill herself so she is a self harm risk. Get her to ER and request a psychiatric evaluation. Frankly she needs a full neuropsychiatric evaluation from a geriatric psychiatrist and probably some meds.

Just ignore her - look up grey rock method on the internet. It is a way to deal with a narcissist by withdrawing your attention. **

Tell her you will help her with what you can until you leave, but you ARE leaving on Jan 28th. Actually she really doesn't want help, she wants your attention.**

When she starts, say "Mum, I gotta go" and leave the room. Don't engage with her beyond saying that you are going out or to another room. Leave, take the dog for a walk, go have a bath or whatever. This may "train" her that you will not stay with her when she talks like that. You don't have to spend your day listening to her try to manipulate you,

Change the subject - "My, the weather is nice today." "Isn't dad doing well." "Look how poochie is growing." "I am so looking forward to going home." "It's going to be wonderful being with hub again."

Use a variety of the No, I couldn't possibly, No way that's happening, and so on.

But under NO circumstances allow yourself to be manipulated into staying even an extra hour!!! Even if she pulls the suicide card just before you leave, let dad deal with it and leave anyway.

You can do this. Stay firm! Your life may depend on it. Number one - look after you!!!!!

I like what MeDolly said - leave earlier, even to a hotel.

** Narcissists need attention. It's called their narcissistic supply. They fixate on certain people who give them that attention, and do whatever they can to keep it. You have been supplying your mother with that attention. When you withdraw from being her narcissistic supply she will fight it, but eventually find someone else to supply her with attention.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcissistic_supply

What is considered narcissistic supply?

In psychoanalytic theory, narcissistic supply is a pathological or excessive need for attention or admiration from codependents...that does not take into account the feelings, opinions or preferences of other people.
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sp19690 Jan 2023
I knew mom had issues when she pouted and sulked because daughter couldn't go there for their 95th wedding anniversary. No normal person gives a guilt trip on something like that.
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I still don't get why the OP cant tell mom she will not become her caregiver as her needs increase. It's bad enough OP has to fund her parents lifestyle but her inability to set boundaries with her parents is going to bite her in the rear end if she can't woman up and stick to her guns on this.

If this were a casino I would bet on the odds that daughter will cave and give into moms demands and continue propping up her parents fantasy life of independence.

What exactly do your parents do everyday? Just curious about their activity level.
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JoAnn29 Jan 2023
Its very hard when you have been guilted all your life that ur job is to be at Moms beck and call. This started out as a visit for TG.
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