With Aging Parents, Longstanding Familial Resentments Can Reemerge
Aging parents is a common life moment that causes adults to reach out for family therapy, particularly as parents struggle with illness and approach the end of life. With aging parents, adult children are conscripted to function as caregivers, healthcare proxies, advocates, and financial and other sort of decision makers. These are all roles historically played by the parent. At times, parents are reluctant to give up control or have different opinions from their adult children about how these matters should be handled. When siblings share these decisions and responsibilities, differences of opinions can result in conflicts. Old resentments, perhaps long latent, can reemerge.
In our NYC family therapy practice, we find the longstanding underlying issue or issues that lie beneath the conflict over decision-making related to an aging parent. At times, we address the underlying issue in session, but at other times, there is a conscious (and collective) decision not to address it. The decision, in this case, would be to agree that the issue is present and that members of the family are hurt, while working to agree to not let that interfere. Sometimes the necessary ingredients, time, space or collective will aren’t there in order to resolve it. We help folks put the issue aside, finding ways of being together as a family and tolerating that old hurts may not be addressed. This can help members of a family see the ways these underlying issues interfere and give them skills to let that go.