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AMEN!
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Dusty, go read Matthew 7: 1-3. Or try Luke 6:37. Please.
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If you are suicidal, get help! Better off homeless than dead!! Ex and you maybe need joint counseling where you disclose just how miserable you are and figure out what needs to change. Dad won't change, except for the worse, most likely. I doubt the change needed has anything to do with your compassion supply, frankly that's NOT a good answer from your ex. You at a minimum needs some respite. And, what happens when Dad passes on after most likely several more years of this? What's left for you?

Also,,fact is, if you are doing all that despite your health issues, you could be doing it for someone else and being paid.
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I need my head examined. I moved back in with my ex and his 90 year old father-- ( yes, I know) the old man was part of the reason we divorced in the first place. I had a small place of my own for a year but was extremely lonely. I still love my ex and wanted to lend a hand because he had his hands full plus he's giving our dog insulin shots twice a day and a strict diet plus he's always been there for me when I needed him.
Sometimes I enjoy making meals and helping in that sense but it's getting to the point where I'm very resentful and it's turning to hatred. I'm not like this so I don't like feeling this way. But his dad has ex wrapped around his little finger and I think he's playing us. He doesn't lift a finger to do anything, sits with his feet propped up and watches the same stupid tv shows day in and day out. I'm unable to work because of health issues and what I get monthly would barely cover rent someplace. He's extremely vain, has OCD real bad and thinks the world should bow down at his feet because he's 90. He's in fairly good health for a 90 year old but it's playing on mine. I feel like I want to end my life. I've talked to ex about this ( not the ending my life part) but he takes up for his dad and uses the excuse that he's 90 and that I should be more compassionate. I AM. I cook the meals,do the shopping, do the laundry-- and try to help out. I felt like it was my calling at first because I wasn't doing anything else but now I want out so bad. I can't even stand to look atthe old man.He's in better shape than a lot of people younger than him and ex keeps praising him on how healthy he is. Well, good for him, bad for me because my outlook is deteriorating and I have no place to go. I don't know if what I did was commendable or stupid. I made my bed and now I'm laying in it and am extremely depressed. His dad thinksof me as a replacement for his wife ( and he wasn't too nice to his wife when she was alive. He's a flirt, vain as h*ll and I resent him.
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I may be reading this wrong but the original post said "met the love of my life and moved across the country". I'm curious as to how they met if Boyo doesn't go far from daddy and the museum
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I was harsh, but it was for effect. I don't expect anybody to kiss anyone's feet, literally.
The questioner put herself into a situation involving eldercare. It is challenging, and rarely fun, I know this from experience. She brought children into the situation. She cannot expect the "FIL" to dry up and blow away, now that she and the boyfriend want him out of the way.
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hopelessdil: You said you had your own home where you were previously living? Did or do you own that home? Do you have family or friends there that might be willing to help you if you leave? You may want to go back where you came from, but I do not know.

I strongly agree with jeannegibbs in that I would call social services and beg for help with an apartment and food and anything else they could throw in. I would get out of that house, cause if you don't you will lose your mind. Your boyfriend could come and see the family and your could travel to his house on occasion if you wanted to but it is someplace clean and dust free and where you can raise your children any way you want.

No one has to tell you that this was all a really bad move on your part to go stay with him in this situation then have two children on top of it and you have never even married this guy. If you were married and his Dad died you would be entitled to half of what he owns (at least in some states), now you probably couldn't get anything because HE DOESN'T WORK NOR HAVE AN INCOME.

Your entire story sounded so, creepy, to me in that it's almost like the Dad allowed you to come, to pacify his son, but at the same time you are both being used to be beaten down by this "intelligent man" and you are kind of like a slave being you are unpaid labor. I see shades of the "BATES MOTEL" in my mind.

I truly feel for you and I sure hope you can find a way to get out of there and hopefully your boyfriend will wake up, but what are you going to do if his Dad dies and he wants to continue to like in this filthy, untouchable house. And the yelling continues and he becomes his "father?" You both need counseling outside of the house and hire a care giver to come and stay with Dad so you can spend time together. Have you even told said boyfriend, you are considering leaving? What did he say?

Good Luck, you are in my prayers!
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Good point JB.
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We need a little girl talk here. Hopelessdil, you are where you are now with two children (one on the way) and a boyfriend. My advice is to get your head out of the sand and your feet out of the air, gf. Get out there after the baby comes and get back on your feet. Mothers work now, and you are too young to age in place. If your boyfriend/father of children wants to come, fine. If not, go to court and get child support for your children. I hope that you and your children's father can work this out together, but life as it is now is not tolerable for you and the kids.

Sorry if this was even brasher than pstegman. Older women need to be honest with younger because we've been through these things already and know how badly things can go.
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Danashel, how can you suggest she should be kissing the old mans feet? Very bad advice.
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You should get out and the terms for continuing the relationship should be couples counseling. Don't drink or do drugs and contact a support group for women.
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I wouldn't have put it quite like that, but Danashel's perspective is one you and your boyfriend ought to be taking into account. You, the two of you, live in this man's home and don't feel you owe him anything? Bit of a liberty, I agree.
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Actually since you are not married, you have sole custody of the children.
(of course I would check with a lawyer) My advice is move out asap. Either your boyfriend steps up or you step out. Stop being the victim here. Sounds like you are subjecting your child and future child into a dirty, dysfunctional household. Regarding of education, intents etc. you have a situation that needs to be rectify.
Regardless on whose fault it is, be an adult and take care of the situation. Good luck.
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Let me sum this up. This 84 year old man owns his home, and he is letting his overage teenager of a son live there, who moves in a woman he knocks up twice, and the man is the one doing something wrong? You should be kissing his feet.

Take care of your kids yourself, with or without your boyfriend. Don't have a third child, in fact, you shouldn't have brought one into this situation. The 84 year old man has little to do with this.
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You recognize the trap that has been built for you..
You know what you want for the remaining 50 to 80 years of your life.
With children involved, there are more challenges than if you did not have children but you can meet them and I promise once you make the move and open yourself up for potential positive future, you will be surprised at the joy that exists for you and your children.

You know what to do...Take the first step by making a written plan of action for yourself, including place to move to, way of supporting yourself, establishing a support network of friends..

I know you can live happily ever after. I hope you will give yourself that chance... Nothing changes until you change something.

I wish you LOVE

Carol
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Ok, they are talking about me when they say 'we just went through this with another poster.' Let me tell you what's different about me, though. I am financially independent and NEVER would consider moving in with my BF and his dad. That is just asking to have your independence taken away, especially because you have no means of income, should you want to escape the situation.That is THEIR house and you are only a guest (so to speak) and you better know your boundaries and not upset the daily routine that they have established decades ago. Old people don't like change. They want to hold onto the good old days and act like the wife is still there or may come back. Hence, the reason the house hasn't deviated since the wife's death. And they still do things that they think would've pleased her....as if she were still alive. I know...kinda crazy. Also, they may expect you to be the repacement of the old man's wife. I kind of felt that way with my BF. Sometimes I feel like my relationship is with the 2 of them instead of just my BF. When his mom was alive it was like they were the 3 musketeers. It was like they were looking for a replacement for the missing musketeer. Not this chick! 3 is a crowd in a relationship!

My BF's dad's house is like a shrine to his mother, although not quite as bad as what you are saying. The house has the same decor---1960-ish, although the carpet has been replaced due to wear. Her bedroom closet and dressers have not been touched except for the cleaning lady to dust them. Heaven help you if you go within 3 feet of the china cabinet containing her prized fine china! His dad keeps 12-year-old jars of canned tomatoes in the root cellar because they were the last one she canned b4 she died. Some peole just can't let go. I feel that she did everything for them and they were too dependent on her. Therefore, they were totally lost after she died. They try to keep the house up exactly as she would've as if she was going to be upset with them if they didn't. Trying to please someone after they are dead????? Strange. But there really isn't anything wrong with honoring them in this way, I guess. I would say your situation is extreme, though.

My motto.....never get yourself in a situation that you can't get out of. And the fact that you have children with this man has majorly complicated matters. Always, always, always have a back-up plan. I know it's too late for that, now, but teach your children this. I am teaching my daughter, for sure! Never allow yourself to be financially dependent on anyone. You said you feel like you are in prison. I felt the same way in my 1st marriage. Independence is the key to freedom. It's the key to escaping the misery if things don't turn out like you thought they would.

I was lucky enough to be able to move back in with my parents after my divorce, go back to college, and get a very good-paying job sothat I could support myself and my daughter. I now have my own home and I'm financially independent. Is there any way you could do something similar? You may qualify for a government grant to pay your tuition. Worth looking into. Other than that, I don't know what to tell you, exept that you need to get out. However you have to do it, just do it. Best of luck to you.
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Fiance sounds like he has no backbone. I'd seriously reconsider whether or not you really want to spend the rest of your life with him. If he already is displaying signs of repeating his parents behaviors, there's a good chance that will continue (and worsen) even after his father is gone. From an outside perspective- I'd run!
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Talk about putting the cart before the horse and what a fine mess it is.

Tell your 'man' that he either s***s or gets off the pot. Move out with his new family, make alternate arrangements for his dad, or you're out of there. Period.

Talk to a lawyer, arrange for child support and get the hell out of dodge. Unless, of course, you want this to be your life until your partners dad dies...which could be another decade or so.

It's time for an ultimatum.
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Hopelessdil (I'm sure you're not, by the way) - have you read a book called "Cold Comfort Farm"? It's a comedy, but it's about sweeping a whole new broom through accumulated tradition and superstition and letting in the fresh air. Give it a go.

You are the broom. And you are a broom with two little broomlets to nurture. Without being brutal, without being monstrous, start sweeping away all that dust. Transfer pictures to a place where they can be seen and explained to your children. Ask your FIL to tell you about them. Take useable items to a charity shop, where they can do some good. Take actual rubbish discreetly away, without comment. Put treasured items on a shelf for treasures. Bit by bit, sift and clean and polish. That house will look very different to everybody in it once you've got parts of it sparkling.

You are the mother of this elderly man's young grandchildren. You have a right to assert yourself as part of the household, and you will benefit him by shifting attention away from his late wife's memorial and on to his future legacy.

You don't have to do this overnight. Little by little is fine. But don't start with the "if only I'd known…" bit. Too late, chuck, too late. You've taken this job on, you're stuck with it, so you might as well make the best of it. Good luck, and come back often to vent.
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What would I do? I'd move out NOW. I'd talk to Social Services for help in finding a place and some aid until I could get on my feet. The fiance will have to pay child support. Then, from outside the museum, I'd offer to go to couples counselling with daddysboy and see if this relationship can be saved. I hope so.

I can't imagine why you had children in this situation, but since you did your responsibility to them comes first.

Good luck.
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On a happier note, kids can grow up well and happy in a small apt vs a scary house.....it will be scary when 2 toddlers are running around and getting yelled at. You are young and with the pull of the babies, FIL is completely unmatched, you just need to step up to the table and start making your demands. BTW, you are not the first young woman to fall in love and follow your heart.
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Dear Hopeless; You've gotten a lot of tough love and good advice here, pay attention to all of it. The thing I want to add is that it appears to me that your FIL has changed since you came into the picture, is probably suffering from dementia, which, if you're living with it day to day, can get by you. Insist that FIL be evaluated by a neuropsychiatrist, neuropsychologist specializing in geriatrics. It sounds like he's had some cognitive decline which is affecting his judgment. And YES, you have to get some relationship counseling. You are making poor choices.
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You have received some excellent advice. Perhaps you should think about it while you clean up the house. 20+ years of dust? Seriously? For crying out loud ....you'll be lucky if someone doesn't call Child Protective Services on you. You and the boyfriend seem to lack common sense and you are having a second child? Get your act together before you get any more screwed up.
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I am old fashioned myself, I believe that parents should be the head of household, you cannot raise your family under somebody else's rule. You and your fiancé need to (1) go to city hall and get married, what are you waiting for (2) assuming fiancé has a job, rent a small apartment and start working your own way up in life. Dad will get his own OJ and coffee. For now he is mobile, he does not require live in help, he may eventually need help or he may die quickly in his sleep. Nobody knows, you cannot worry about this.

Tell fiancé the mother of his children needs to be his wife and he needs to be the head of his own household his childhood days are over. Unfortunately with a baby and another on the way you are not in a good position to better your own life you need to depend on your manchild fiance.

You are no longer a young unattached woman who can make unwise decisions. You are the mother of 2 children, you need to act in their best interest.
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Yeah. You need a place of your own, even if it is a tiny apartment within easy commuting distance. Yeah, you and fiance will spend a bunch of time with FIL. But you won't hate it so bad if you know you can get away. And FIL will simply have to accept help from others when he really needs some. Screw the guilt trips. Fiance has got to get away so FILs bad attitudes and behaviors don't keep rubbing off on him. You can tell him the doctor said the children have allergies and have to limit their exposure to dusty headbands and knickknacks. (I'm a doctor so you would not be totally lying. :-)
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If it were just you, the answer would be easy -- pack your bags and get on with your own life.
However, with children involved, you need to insist that you and your fiance visit a family counselor ASAP to help sort out what your options are (1) if you continue your relationship or (2) if you end your relationship.
Go to a counselor now! This situation is NOT going to get any better on its own, no matter how much you hope it will. If you don't want to do it for yourself, do it for the sake of your children. You do not want them to get caught up in this current dysfunctional situation and end up perpetuating this sort of family dysfunction into their own lives as they grow into adults.
Don't drag your feet about getting help! Think of your children . . . and of yourself. You are still a young woman with a long life ahead of you.
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So your fiance gave up his business to take care of his FIL? You're still throwing your FIL under the bus without acknowledging your fiance is a big part of the issues you have going on. If he doesn't understand his first priority is to you and your children, he's fully enmeshed in a co-dependent relationship with his dad. We just went through this with another poster who's significant other lived with his father and was totally enmeshed in his life. She didn't want to face the truth about her situation either.

Get some couples counseling immediately. Or live with the mess you two adults have created and have pulled your child(ren) into. I'm old, but I just don't get the having kids out of wedlock when you've got all kinds of crap going on. You've created your own victimhood by having children without a good relationship set up with your fiance in your own place and a clear understanding between the two of you what your boundaries are with his father.
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Dil, so sorry, I have a bad habit of not beating around the bush. My sister divorced her husband and wanted to move from NY to GA with her three children. The judge told her she could go if she gave up custody. And that's the ugly truth.
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You think having a place of your own with you Fiance and children will subside your frustration? Think again. He will spend his free time over at his father's place taking care of him than being with you. There is a lot of co-dependency issues between father and son. Unless your Fiance decides what priorities he wants in his life, you will not get what you want.
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Pstegman, thank you for your comments, though your words are a bit more biting than they need to be.
When I wrote my post I suppose my emotions got the better of me and things I have been holding in poured out. It has gotten to that point.
We are all well-educated and my partner was a business owner with his own home before he moved in with his father. My understanding was that it worked well for both of them, they kept each other company and I don't see anything wrong with that. I adored his father and cared for him without issue even when I became pregnant because the plan was always to get a home of our own and raise our family. My father-in-law was aware of this, also.
There is no secret to how I feel about this. It has gone on far longer than I ever knew it would or anticipated.
I'm sorry if the previous poster disagrees, but I do sort of feel like a victim in this situation. I feel like I have taken excellent care of someone who is not in ill health, who sees that we are creating a family, who knew that we were supposed to move out long ago, who knows that this is clearly creating strife, and yet who lays tremendous guilt at my partner's feet and, I believe, makes him feel like leaving the father would be an act of high betrayal.
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