About UsServicesCarePrints
Geriatric Care Solution Logo
I Resent Him. And I Love Him. Both Are True.

I Resent Him. And I Love Him. Both Are True.

By R R

Some nights, after he's finally settled and the house is quiet, the feeling comes anyway: resentment. At him. At the way your life has shrunk to fit his needs, at the plans you've cancelled, the sleep you've lost, the version of your own future you've quietly set down. And then, right behind the resentment, the guilt — hot and immediate — because how dare you resent a sick man you love? What kind of person feels that?

A completely ordinary one. And here is what almost no one says out loud, so let it land clearly: resentment and love are not opposites, and feeling the first does not cancel the second. They live side by side in nearly every long-term caregiver, because caregiving asks for an enormous, sustained sacrifice, and resentment is the natural response of a human being to sustained sacrifice. It isn't evidence that you love him less. It's evidence that you're giving more than any person can give indefinitely without it costing them something.

The guilt is the real trap, more than the resentment itself. When you believe the resentment makes you a bad person, you push it down, hide it, and judge yourself for it — and buried resentment doesn't disappear. It curdles. It leaks out as short temper, as burnout, as a low simmering bitterness that quietly poisons the very care you're trying so hard to give. Paradoxically, the caregivers who do best aren't the ones who never feel resentment. They're the ones who let themselves feel it without shame, name it honestly, and then ask what it's pointing to.

Because resentment usually is pointing to something real. It's often the sound of unmet needs — for rest, for help, for a life that's still partly your own. Treated that way, it becomes useful information rather than a moral failing. The fix isn't to feel less resentful by sheer willpower. It's to take some of the load off, so there's less to resent. More hands. Regular breaks. Permission to have a life outside the caregiving. A place to say the hard things out loud without being judged for them.

That last one is much of what our Care Mentor service at Geriatric Care Solutions provides. We support family caregivers not just with practical technique but with the honest, unjudging space to feel what they actually feel — and with the in-home help that reduces the sacrifice resentment grows out of. You shouldn't have to white-knuckle these feelings alone.

You resent him and you love him. Both are true, and there's nothing wrong with you for it. The resentment isn't a sign to feel guilty. It's a sign to get more support — so the love has room to be the part that lasts.

To talk about Care Mentor caregiver support, call 1-888-896-8275 or email ask@gcaresolution.com.

This piece touches on caregiver burnout and difficult emotions. If you're feeling overwhelmed, please reach out to someone you trust or a professional for support.

Share this article. Spread the word!

    Ready for Breakthrough Care?

    Don't settle for standard when revolutionary is available.

    Let's ensure your loved one feel supported, engaged, and valued every day!

    By contacting us, you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

    Our team will get back to you as soon as possible.

    Get Your Free Consultation

    Fill out the form below and we'll get back to you within 24 hours.

    We will contact you through your preferred method.

    Logo

    Welcome! Let's get you started.

    We can guide you to the right place and provide tools made just for you

    Which best describes you?

    Don't worry, you can always switch these later.

    Logo

    Welcome!

    We've created a space designed for users like you!