My Father is Still in the Hospital

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(Edited)

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Photo Credit: Lars_Nissen at Pixabay

I am very worried about my father. He is 84 years old. Last week, he went to the Emergency again and was admitted to the hospital. They still don’t know what is wrong, but they said there is fluid in his lungs and he may also have another hernia. This is in addition to the clogged arteries they discovered during an angiogram two weeks or so ago.

Before this trip to the Emergency, my father lived on his own and did everything for himself. I hope that continues. He is mentally and physically more active than I am in many ways.

I have felt very down lately. I have spent most of the past couple of weeks in bed. If you don’t understand depression, this will be impossible to comprehend. The snow has come. I do not like winter. If there is no snow or winter where you live, or if you love winter, you will not understand how bleak I feel about winter, and the winter here lasts for six months. That is not an exaggeration.

I can barely bring myself to write a few words every few days. It might seem like I write a lot and/or comment a lot, but it comes in bursts. I sometimes find myself reluctant to do anything. I am not sure anyone noticed, but there was a week or two in which I wrote almost nothing.

I try to at least write. The second goal is to do some movement since I know that helps so much in getting past depression.

I feel tremendous guilt because my relationship with my father is not what I would like it to be. He is a wonderful human being, and also, a very difficult person. I feel extremely uncomfortable when I am around him. I feel like I almost have to ask permission to breathe. I know he does not expect me to ask permission to breathe, but that is how I feel. It is very confusing.

This past week has been very challenging because I have gone to visit him at the hospital almost every day for one to three hours. That is a long time to spend with someone with whom you have a difficult relationship.

He says things that upset me, but, while when he was younger, I would have told him that what he was saying was unacceptable, now, I feel trapped. If I tell him he has upset me, he will be upset, and he has a heart condition, and other problems, and I love him. It is not so very important if he upsets me a little. I can take it. Besides, I know who he is, and he is not going to change at the age of 84. I made the decision long ago that my life is better with him in it than without him in it.

However, it is hard. For example, I am quite certain that he is disappointed in me. I am certain because he has said so in a number of ways on a number of occasions. It is hard not to feel sad about it. I am disappointed in myself also.

I have two university degrees, but because of my disabilities, I have not done well in terms of employment or economically in general. It is extremely frustrating. I am reminded of all of this when I am around my father. Sometimes, I am reminded because I just remember, but usually, he reminds me with actual words. I feel like a colossal failure when I am around him.

I feel very guilty because I know if I don’t spend more time around him now, there might not be any more time to spend around him, and yet I feel quite awful when I spend time around him. This is exacerbated by his telling me that he thinks he is falling apart, and he wishes to die.

My mother passed away a few years ago, and I miss her so much. I feel very guilty for not spending more time with her in her last few years. She got to be very difficult to spend time around.

I wonder how many people carry a burden of guilt like this for not being better to their parents, etc. in their later years. It is so difficult. I admire people who are able to spend time with their elderly parents, and I admire people who are able to be caregivers to their elderly parents even more.
I am extremely grateful for the Canadian healthcare system. I appreciate it so much. For example, this is my father’s second visit to the ER this month, and he had an angiogram this month. He also had two visits from home care and he had to go in an ambulance (which was free since he is over 65). Total cost to us: $0. We don’t even see a bill. When I read about other people and what they go through, it makes me very sad. It is hard enough to go through illness without worrying about how you will pay for it.

I feel like a very selfish person because, even though my father is in the hospital, I find it very hard to go spend time with him. Much of the time, we have good conversations and everything is fine. Then, suddenly and seemingly randomly, he will bring up some failure or transgression of mine from years or decades ago. It is hard to take.

Then I remind myself that an actual selfish person would probably not continue to go to the hospital to visit someone who is not very nice to them some of the time. I can't help how I feel about it.

I feel stuck. I cannot confront him or express my feelings. He is stuck in the hospital, unwell, powerless. There is no one else in the city who can come visit him. I am his only family here. It seems very unfair, but that is often how life is.

I want him to get well and get discharged from the hospital. It will be a brief reprieve because he still needs open heart surgery, the first and biggest of several surgeries he will need. However, they will discharge him from the hospital first (and then re-admit him).

I would like to leave this city, if only for a month or two. I always ask myself, “What good will getting away actually do?” However, when I get away, I get healthier. When I get away, I start to find myself again. It always does me good. However, I don't think it is realistic to imagine that I will get away this year. For one thing, the pandemic, of course, makes travel more challenging. But the biggest factor stopping me is that we probably won't know in advance when my father will be scheduled for open heart surgery, and I am afraid to leave the city until then.

It will be almost impossible to leave the city for several months afterward. He will have a nurse for support physically, but he will need me for emotional support. That might sound minor because you have not met my Dad. Without exaggeration or irony, I hope I survive this year. I may have to decide between being a good daughter and survival. I feel like I am barely hanging on as it is.

I think maybe a lot of people can relate to this situation of having a difficult relative. We love this person a lot and they hurt us. We cannot walk away, and yet it is hard to stay also. It would be great if people fit into neat little boxes. I have had some people suggest to me over the years that maybe I should stop speaking to my father. However, he has been so kind and generous towards me in many ways. He is just also often blunt, mean, and tactless. I suspect he does not pause to consider the effect his "truth" will have on me.

It would seem wrong not to stand by someone who has been there for us, and yet it is hard to put up with so much nonsense also. It would be easy to say, "Well, give the old guy an ultimatum then," but that is disrespectful. I mean, then he would possibly fully realize that he just insulted the only person who comes to see him. Then, instead of feeling upset, my heart would break.



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Well, I have no idea how to go about this one. You seem to be in a fixed spot and all i can do is hope you find a way out. I do hope your dad realises what he's doing to you though because it's not okay.

Last night i and mom had a slight misunderstanding and she proceeded to tell me really hurtful things. I know I'm not the best person but she brought my really dark past into it. I didn't say a word though. Because I was to hurt to.

Sincerely, i wish and pray for the strength you need to get through this. All the best love.

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Thank you. That is very kind. Family can be so hard at times. I am sorry to hear that you are struggling with your mother saying hurtful things to you.

I often think (or hope) that people don't realize how much they hurt us sometimes.

When my father was much, much younger, I used to tell him quite frankly when he had hurt my feelings. I was up front about what was and what was not acceptable. To his credit, he made some small changes over the years which were probably big for him.

However, I have come to see that this is as good as it gets. He is difficult and often horrifyingly insensitive and mean, but I try to be realistic about the situation. He simply is not going to change, especially not at this point.

My philosophy is that you cannot change anyone; you can only change your response to them. The difficulty here is that there is not much I can do within the scope of continued kindness. In other words I have determined that I basically have to just accept the way things are. Most of the time, he doesn't say awful things. However, if you knew that someone was going to throw a rock at you "only" 1% of the time, it would still be upsetting and stressful the whole time, even if they were very kind the rest of the time. That is how I feel.

I feel on edge because he might say or do something awful. And that's not to say he isn't very kind and nice much of the time. I enjoy his company about 70-80% of the time.

Parents can be very challenging. I miss my mother a lot since she passed and that was also not always the easiest of relationships, especially as dementia set in during the last few years of her life.

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It's basic belief that our parents become very difficult as they age and now I see it.

I feel that's it good go let this out of your chest one way or another. My email is always open even if you don't need it. It's there.

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I appreciate your unpolished frank write ups. At least you can speak at a vastly larger audience in your native tongue than I can. You described the whole situation in a way that I felt like I was there, partially maybe due to the fact that I've spent a lot of (often hard) time with my dad in hospitals till I lost him from cancer just a few years younger than yours. How can you find light in your gloom when the only bright thing around seems to be the snow? Who knows - there's gotta be something. Like for example the fact that someone a million miles away sends you his best wishes (me 🙂).

Speaking of snow, yes for us Mediterraneans it's so exotic and all but we can all agree that it sucks hugely when it starts to melt and the sides of the roads accumulate this gross black mass.

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Thank you for your kind words. I am sorry to hear about your father. I try to be grateful that my father is here and not in too much pain. It's a struggle for sure.

You said something about language, but I have never noticed a language barrier in your posts. I suppose some people have multi-lingual posts and translate their posts. I imagine it would be challenging to express yourself fully in a second language. I am somewhat fluent in French, for example, but it would be harder -- I definitely could not just write off the top of my head.

Besides everything else -- grammar, vocabulary, sentence structure -- there are idioms. I realize as I write this that, having learned French mainly in school, I don't know many French idioms. It seems like that sort of thing wouldn't matter, but I think it affects the flow of writing in two ways: 1. When we write without idioms, the writing is probably overly formal, and 2. When we write in another language, we tend to translate idioms from our own language, which is often hilarious and weird.

My father, for example, is not a native speaker of English, and he sometimes uses the idiom (which does not exist in English): "my soul is not a raisin." The context: I might offer him a piece of cake; everyone else is having a piece of cake. He might say, "Of course I want cake. My soul is not a raisin." The meaning is that, basically, he is a person too. Lol. However, it's pretty funny because no one else says that.

I am stressed out, but, hopefully, things will get better, at least temporarily. (I am SUCH an optimist! Haha.)

Anyhow, thanks again for reading and for your comment!

!LUV

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It's whole difference between a second language we're taught at school (English in my case) and how this is used in real life. What got me first into "real" English was music as the vast majority of the stuff I listened to (and still do) has English lyrics.

Funny story about your Dad's idiom. If he was Greek he could have said "Did I pee in the well?" meaning that he is not punished in order to spare him the cake. It's kinda common expression for us here but I guess quite funny for anyone else🙂

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Have you considered that maybe dad doesn't consider the effect his 'truth' has on you because you take it from him? Maybe try visiting with enjoyable and pleasant dad.

When blunt, mean or tactless dad shows up, you suddenly need to get going. I get the sense your dad is not a stupid person. I suspect it wont take him long to get the message that you will not stand for him hurting you. Parent or not, he has no right to be hurting you.

It's going to take a few times of doing this and probably feeling guilty for doing it to start feeling how empowering it can be to actually assert control over how someone is treating you.

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I have a lot of trouble standing up to my father, mostly because he has no one else. However, on Saturday, he was finally released from the hospital, and I don't remember what he said in the car, but I lost my temper. I never lose my temper with him. Not since I was a teenager. It had an immediate effect! Lol. I should have done it a long time ago. He just suddenly was a lot nicer and he has been ever since. So crazy.

You know, I try so hard to stay calm and be kind and then blowing my top turns out to be the winning strategy.

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Quick recovery to your dad

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My best wishes for you and your dad. I feel you, I have depression too and hate the winter. Since about a month I discovered stoicism as a useful resource to be calm. All days I read a little passage and reflect on my life and my future death. Sometimes is hard to live, but life is a daily present. Take it every second.
(Sorry for my poor English, I am Spanish).

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