by blukatzen » Fri 02 Mar 2007, 18:18:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pablo2079', 'O')h yeah, I think she'd be there.... if she could be. She just has a lot of "issues". I'm not sure I'd go so far as trying to diagnose mental illnesses, but my wife is convinced that there is something wrong there and cannot stand to be around her.
Hopefully, things will work out. Not sure how much time she has left to be in her house and where she'll end up when she goes through foreclosure. I just can't see her catching up on her payments and also keeping up with all of the other bills.
Hello Pablo,
I am sorry to hear about this, but here's my suggestion to you.
I would get in touch with your closest township/county "Department of Aging" and get in touch with a social worker that can become familiar with her situation. I would NOT bail her out, as she has some disorders bordering on insanity (legal, probably), and what you were put through was child abuse, for sure. (especially with the heat in the room story.) I am sorry your father was not made aware of this. Didn't he know she was like this? Why did he abandon you (then) boys to her?
I share similar sympathies along your wife's reasonings, as I have seen this in my husband's family..his mother self-destructed along with the rest of the family when my husband's father died when he was 13. They went to live in an orphanage..Mooseheart.
He had to raid trash cans and steal food, as she didn't go shopping..he told me how hungry he always was. She as well, was a packrat and kept stacks of junk/newspaper/filth everywhere.
He had to endure this for a year and a half before the money totally ran out and he and his 2 younger siblings went away. So did she.
She is still alive, but I am not interested in ever meeting her. I've had to live with the nightmares of what he's told me he went through. I've also heard the same report from the spouses of my 2 in-laws that had to go away as well. The behavior of those that are mentally ill leave a wake of destruction that lasts a long time and definitely work their way into the next generation.
Make sure she is cared for, but CERTAINLY don't get yourself into hock over this. She'd probably burn through your finances in 2 years. And she'd never look back, she doesn't have the CAPABILITIES for reasoning through this. Don't treat her like she is a responsible adult, because sadly, due to her illnesses, she never was.