That's right. You could tell her you are going to pass on the errands. Or go for a drive on your own.
Is she enmeshed? Lacks filters?
I think you mean "It would feel like I am grounding her."
Funny you say that. I don't know what her mental health dx is, but one of my parents has Alzheimer. A lot of the time when I'm over there, I have to take the parental role to an 80-something year old man. His body age means
nothing. It's his current
mental capacity.
He's losing all sense, and he cannot process hard stuff for himself. I cannot sit there EXPLAINING high concept things to him. That only frustrates him, and obfuscates my message. I have to deal with him like being with a kid. Short and sweet. Plain and simple. Like a traffic cop. Do this -- do not do that.
He does something out of bounds? I tell him RIGHT then. Not later. If I tell him right then, he can understand what I am upset about. If I sit and think on it, and he's moved on and forgotten all about this morning? And here I come to talk about upset in the afternoon? He just sees that I'm upset "for no reason" and thinks I'm bringing him misery. Which I am -- he moved on. Do I want my caregiver day to be all about misery or be about smoother sailing? If I have stuff to process still, that is MY stuff. I can process it elsewhere with someone else. It doesn't have to be with him.
So I tell him what he did/did not do in the moment. And what he has to do next. Short and sweet. Plain and simple. Even if it feels parent-y. He usually gets upset just like a little kid. So? I still have to hold the line and guide him along.
"I see you are upset. I am sorry.
This is what is happening right now. I told you I will help if you do X. You have not done X yet. If you want me to help, you have to do X first. (What to do)
We can spend time being upset (what he does not want/like) or we can get on with the show so you can have me helping you with ____. (what he does want/like)
What would you like right now? It is your choice."
He used to fight me, because he HATES being held accountable and exercising self control. But now when we get to that place he just hurries up and "gets on with the show" so he can get to the things he likes. Or he picks being upset and I put it on the timer. Because I'm ok allowing space to vent or whatever, but I'm not going to be doing it for several hours! Have to get on with the show.
To me you sound like maybe you struggle to accept your patient relationship with your wife. You remind me of my Mom.
She has not accepted Patient Dad, and the fact that their relationship has changed. And that yeah, she's going to have to maintain boundaries, hold him accountable, and tell him what to do/what not do. Because he cannot reliably tell himself. And he cannot see when he's being inappropriate. He's lost/losing filters.
All the poly stuff set aside? That sounds like it could be the core thing here. Like you want her to be relating to you like Healthy Wife. But she just
isn't. She's Patient Wife.
Being a patient wife doesn't excuse her from owning her stuff and doing her jobs -- some patients try to coast like they got the "Patient Hall Pass."
My dad does that. He'd LOVE for everyone to let him coast and not be held accountable. Me? I change my expectations and still hold him accountable.
- In his condition do I expect him to balance his checkbook? NO. He has lost that capacity.
- Do I expect him to fee the dog? YES. Do I expect him to fold and put away laundry? YES. He's perfectly capable doing those things still.
So I think you could skip explaining. Just tell her what you want her to do and expect her to do it. Even if it feels "parent-y." try that on for a while and see if things get better that way. If she has no filter and cannot respect people's privacy? Accept it and when it happens, just be a traffic cop. Hold up the STOP sign.
"You are telling me about ____. This is not respecting people's privacy.
Stop tell me about _____.
(What not do do.)
Tell me about Y instead / do Z instead.
(What to do)"
Provide the guidance she needs.
Talk to her counselor or get a counselor of your own so you can get support as you make sense of what is appropriate/not appropriate in her particular dx.
Get your expectations clear and then start keeping the boundaries.
Galagirl