The Complaint Thread

I'm so sorry to hear that, @joshsquash729 - I moved away from my home state of PA to IL when my mom was terminally ill. I know the guilt, but we have to live our own lives as well. I was her primary caretaker, and honestly, it was really draining. My siblings only stepped up once I moved away. I'm glad yours are helping, but I can only imagine how incredibly hard it must be for you, going through all of this. You're justified to feel the frustration you do. On top of your mom being sick, the healthcare system kicks you when you're down. Give yourself some grace though. We can only handle so much before breaking.
 
Sorry you are going through so much these days Josh. One of the hardest things as we get older is watching those we love get even older and eventually pass on. Hopefully your mother isn't at that point yet. My mother in law is in a similar state as your mom seems to be. It's very hard to see and draining at times to deal with.
I would let my mom know how much I love her and continue to love on her even if she didn't improve her situation. Ultimately, it's up to our parents to want to change. Just wanted to let you know that you're not alone in struggling with a parents health.
 
Much of this echoes my experiences with my mom and sister, though it's more extreme. I live across the country from most of my family, including my mom and sister. They've had various illnesses and diseases over the years, and the burden of care has fallen on each other.

I understand your guilt. I experience the same thing.

Unfortunately, I don't think there's a clean solution to any of this. I think you have to take solace in the fact that you're doing your best in a difficult position. Your mom isn't suffering because you don't care or aren't willing to help.
Although I don't think she'd ever admit it, I also have the gut feeling that, whether she realizes it or not, she may be trying to kinda hasten the end in a way.

...

I just don't know how to get her to care about herself, you know?
You can talk until you're blue in the face, but as Puckace said, unless they want the help, you can't force it on them.

I think the best thing is to reiterate your love and show up however you can. Try to make sure she's as happy and pain-free as possible.
It's becoming increasingly clear that she's quite depressed- her quality of life has plummeted since her diagnoses started getting bad, she lost her Dad a couple years ago and hasn't ever really recovered from that, and I've been learning more and more of her childhood trauma lately, but she refuses to see a therapist to talk about any of it; she gives the same excuse as when we ask her to quit smoking- "I'm too old for it to make a difference anyway." And in the case of smoking, at least, she kinda plays the guilt card of "it makes me happy and it helps with the pain".
I hear that. After years of gentle hints, I finally got my mom to enter therapy. I'm not sure whether it will help, or if she'll even go to more than a handful of appointments, but even that was only possible because she wanted to go.

I get the smoking thing, too. My father-in-law just had a major health scare. He's been a hardcore smoker for 45+ years. He told his doctor he'd only be willing to quit if he knew he had multiple years left to live. Otherwise, what's the point? I've seen him quit and start smoking again at least 10 different times. It's encouraging when he quits and disappointing when he lights up again. There's only so much within your control.
We're even trying to teach my nibling responsibility- they'll be 17 in a few weeks, and while on the spectrum, is still very smart and capable.
My sister was similar. I didn't think she'd ever mature. She's in her mid-twenties now. Somehow, it happened all at once about 18 months ago. After two decades of babying her, I have a sibling who is a genuine peer. It's maybe the strangest thing I've ever experienced in my life.
I don't know, man. My mom has, and will always be the most important person in my life, but I'm in a weird headspace recently of being worried for her 24/7, but also just burnt out.
This is where you have to give yourself grace. I go through the same cycles with my mom. I'm hyper-vigilant until I feel my own mental health circling the drain. Then I pull back entirely until I can restabilize.

Being a caregiver is hard. It fucking sucks. My mom has been doing it for her parents for 25 years. It's thankless, exhausting work.
It doesn't feel exactly right to say that I don't care- I do and always will, but I've always been the mediator in the family- both sides of it- and people come to me with any and all of their problems, big or small, and ask me to help. I'm flattered, and I love to help people, but it's to the point where it's becoming a burden, especially when I've seemingly met my match. Not to mention the fact that I'm the type of person to prioritize other people's problems over my own, so it's all just piling up. There's really nothing more I can do- she needs to care about herself and prioritize herself, but she just doesn't seem willing to. And I'm terrified that the end is near; my family is kinda notorious for being healthy and then once an ailment of some kind hits, they decline rapidly and are gone within the year. Not to mention the fact that I'm halfway across the country, and can't do much to really help except harp on everyone to do things. I've considered moving back to be able to physically help, but that's no small feat either- I've built a life here, and while I can move all my things, I don't know if my boyfriend would really come with me (he's built a life here too, and his industry doesn't really exist where my mom lives). I'd like to think he would, but I couldn't blame him if he didn't.

Anyway. I don't know why I'm saying all this, honestly. Part of it is frustration- at the healthcare system, at my mom for not caring more about herself, at all the people through the years that convinced her not to care for herself, at myself for not doing more, etc. Part of it is fear of losing the person that means the most to me, and that horrible realization we all have at some point that nobody, regardless of importance, is invincible. Part of it is rethinking all my life lessons and my views of people- I still love and idolize my mom, but I'm seeing more and more how imperfect she is, and how her faults and flaws, however inadvertently, have led to a lot of my own. It's just a lot, and while it's definitely helping me be able to see what is and isn't important in life, it's also making it so I don't really have much, if any, energy left to really enjoy things anymore, you know? Feels like I haven't been able to focus on my writing or acting or any of the things that make me happy in quite a while, other than these little bits of plastic here and there. I know it'll all work out eventually, I just hope it's all for the better- or at least as good as it can be given the circumstances.
This is the no easy answer part.

You could uproot your life, move back, and give your mom the care she needs. Maybe you being there helps her, maybe not. Maybe she goes quickly, maybe she lives for another 20 years.

I think there's an entire generation of people who will experience this soon. My industry doesn't exist in my hometown. I couldn't move back there and do my job if I wanted to (and hoo boy, I do not). You have to decide what's best for you and your mom, but don't forget to factor in your own well-being and happiness.

In any case, I sympathize. I'm sorry you're going through this.
 
Thanks for the kind words, all. It's a weird mix of comfort and sadness to see that others are going through something similar. Always nice to know I'm not alone in my struggles, but it sucks that other people know such pain. Such is life, eh?

It's always times like these that I wish my family- both sides, really- weren't so damn proud. It all comes down to that, really, and while not exactly so simple, is why my family members are now all so solitary- they've kinda pushed away everyone else, whether deserved or not, so it really does just fall to whoever is still there, which is often me. Again, I'm more than happy to help, but it would be nice to have someone else to lean on, you know? I'm certainly learning to have more grace with myself, and also to celebrate the small victories. While it does feel like I've certainly become more pessimistic and bitter in recent years, I still am someone that's relatively (some might say too) simple, and it doesn't take a lot to make me happy or entertain me, so I'm trying to stay in touch with that side of myself.

im-good-enough-im-smart-enough.gif


Anywho. I don't mean to ramble or bog anyone else down with my issues. I appreciate all you guys and your words. I certainly do extend my well wishes to anyone in similar spots; I know I can be a lot, but I'm always here to lend an ear for you guys as well!
 
I gotta say, I don't much care for folks who ruin the hobby for others.

I don't generally deal with blind box/bag items anymore- it's basically gambling and can be a total waste of money, but if it's something I generally am interested in and don't mind which one I get, I may go for it. Spirit Halloween had some little Scooby Doo mystery things shaped like those old character popsicles you'd get as a kid, and I thought they were cute and nostalgic. Really only wanted one or two, but figured I'd try my luck. Employee said they just put the box out, so it was fresh; grabbed one and walked around a bit. As I was circling back around, there was a guy at the box who had a basket full of blind bag items, half of which he'd ripped open, and he was standing there with the rest of the Scooby packs- maybe 10 or 11 in all. 4 of them he'd ripped open, and he was explaining to his wife, who was holding their fussy baby in her arms and couldn't have seemed less interested, how to tell which one was what and what to price each one online so they could make money. Also overheard him lament the fact that there was one missing, and even though I'd been a little hesitant to actually get the one I had in my hands, part of me didn't want him to have the satisfaction. I don't know if they saw me with the other one; maybe I'm just overthinking, but they seemed to follow me a bit closely after that.

I don't honestly know which is worse- buying up every single pack so no one else can find them and then flipping them for more money, or ripping open the packs to find the one you want and then leaving the rest. I've seen that happen more than a handful of times too. At least with the latter, you're leaving some for someone else, which may turn out to be the one they want. Either way, it's taking away the fun from those who enjoy it. Don't get me wrong- if I can find out what contains what so I can get what I want, I often will, but not if it means ripping the thing open. It's only to save myself from buying untold amounts of something that I don't want.

He struck me as the type to be one of those autograph chasers- the guys who hound celebrities with big stacks of photos to sell. I can understand wanting to make a buck here and there- I've certainly done it from time to time, but there's a difference between that and just taking advantage of people. That's something I can't stand- in all walks of life, not just this hobby.

But hey, at least the one I got was one of the ones I wanted. 😅
 
I don't honestly know which is worse- buying up every single pack so no one else can find them and then flipping them for more money, or ripping open the packs to find the one you want and then leaving the rest.
Both are the sign of a real dickweed. Glad you got one you wanted. Bonus that the loser didn't get them all.
 
I legitimately want to physically harm people who only get things to make a profit off of other people who were "too slow" to get it first themselves. It is so predatory, and when they or other people try to defend it with "that's Capitalism, baby," it makes me want to become even more violent.
 
Oh yeah. I've been seeing a bunch of posts on various platforms in the last couple years of people with huge piles of a single figure or movie or what have you. Like, if they didn't just outright steal a case of them, they must have some sort of hookup. The comments are always more evenly split than I'd expect. Some say it's fair and square if they got there first, which is ironic, because oftentimes it's someone that's previously mentioned, if not outright bragged, about having an employee friend who helps them out. The one that always grinds my gears are the ones who say "Well, the company made them so people could buy them, so what's the harm?" Uhh- cuz it's supposed to be people buying them, not person. At that point, it's no longer the company selling the product, it's a selfish dude trying to make a buck. I really don't know how you can consider yourself an honest collector if you're gonna do things like that.

Again- it's one thing to try and sell something you've had for a while for more than you got it for (especially if it's increased in value), and I can even excuse someone buying a second figure just to try and sell- we've all done it from time to time (and if it's something like an army builder that warrants it, that's fine). But buying up entire cases or driving around to every store in your area to buy up all the stock and gatekeeping it? You besmirch the good name of collecting at that point.

Unfortunately, I think the idea of real flipping kinda broke free to the masses during the pandemic when we saw folks stockpiling and selling toilet paper and other essentials. Not that flipping has ever been solely a collector thing, but it definitely seemed to reach new heights then, and while it's mostly returned to the collector world solely, a lot of folks who otherwise wouldn't normally do it started doing it during the pandemic and are still doing it to make a quick buck.

Anyway. My feet are tried from standing on this soapbox. 😅 Sorry ya'll. It's just increasingly hard to find joy in this world nowadays, and it gets my hackles up that some people are gatekeeping what little remains.
 
True story... I once agreed to buy a bunch of figures from a very well-known scalper on Marketplace and offered extra if he delivered. When he came to my house I told him he was a fucking loser and closed the door in his face. He lives like 30 minutes away from me. SMALL things can make me happy.
 
@TENIME
It sucks that you're going through this right now. A close friend of mine is in / has been in a similar situation. Health issues, shitty jobs that aggravate the health issues, medical bills, house payments, car payments, poorly controlled anxiety/depression/anger, etc. He had to sell a bunch of his Alien statues and other high-end stuff. I just try to be there for him and remind him that life can get better as long as he keeps playing the game.
 
Yet another failed attempt at trying to make something happen with a person I've been into. Oldest song in the world, and it just keeps on playing and playing and playing for me. I'll leave it at that.
 
@joshsquash729
My wife is the 4th child and was the primary caregiver when her mother passed a couple years ago after a long decline involving dementia. My wife's closest sibling was a 4 hour drive away and the others were much more. It's hard on everyone, for different reasons, and no one is to blame. It becomes a second job for the caregiver. Your mom wouldn't want you to abandon the life you're building and have to start over just because of her.
My MIL was awesome. I still miss her. She was smart and loved bad jokes.
 
True story... I once agreed to buy a bunch of figures from a very well-known scalper on Marketplace and offered extra if he delivered. When he came to my house I told him he was a fucking loser and closed the door in his face. He lives like 30 minutes away from me. SMALL things can make me happy.
Not all heroes wear capes! Some wear....whatever you wear.
 
True story... I once agreed to buy a bunch of figures from a very well-known scalper on Marketplace and offered extra if he delivered. When he came to my house I told him he was a fucking loser and closed the door in his face. He lives like 30 minutes away from me. SMALL things can make me happy.
Things that would get you shot in the United States.
 
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