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minoanmiss ([personal profile] minoanmiss) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2021-12-09 12:35 pm

Pay Dirt: What Do I Do About My Mother?



My 73-year-old mom had a stroke this summer and was told she could not live alone anymore. Rather than sending her to a nursing home, I offered to let her move in with me and my family.

I have a husband and two girls (8 and 9 years old). I modified my house to accommodate her needs and turned my formal dining room into a bedroom for her. I am currently working from home, so I am able to care for her. She can walk with a walker and use the bathroom on her own, but for everything else she needs my help. I am responsible for laundry, dressing her, preparing meals, supplying meds (crushed) three times a day, and many other things. I take time off of work to take her to doctor’s appointments, including physical therapy.

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After a few months of therapy, she made great progress and started to get careless. She decided she could walk inside the house without anyone helping her on the last step, and she fell. She broke her hip and needed a full hip replacement. Again, I was the one to care for her, including keeping her at home for five days waiting for a hospital bed.

Now she is on her road to recovery again, and I told her it was time to schedule an appointment to get a trust done to handle all items once she passes. She told me her plan for distributing her money. She wants to give my sister (out of state and completely absent) 50 percent, me 25 percent, and my two girls 12.5 percent each. My sister does not have children. She said she wants to make it fair between me and my sister.

I am upset because I am the one caring for her. I am the one making all the sacrifices, and my sister barely even calls her. I cannot even leave for a weekend getaway without making arrangements for someone to care for my mom while I’m away. I feel totally trapped and it’s hard. I tried to get a caregiver for several hours a day and my mom complained until I canceled those services. Now, with the labor shortage, I cannot find anyone to help at home. Between holding a professional full-time job, raising two children, running a household primarily by myself and caring for a senior, I have no time to myself.

Now that I found out my mom’s plan for her trust, I am so resentful. I am actually thinking about finding a nice assisted living facility for her. What would you do? This is a very hard position to be in.

—Tired of Sacrificing


Dear Tired,

That was very nice of you to step up and be your mother’s caregiver after she fell ill. Stroke victims usually need a lot of additional care, which can be draining—as you have found to be true. It sounds like you have gone above and beyond what any child should do for their aging parents. There are limits, and it sounds like you’ve hit yours. You’ve altered your whole reality to take on your mom and this has caused a lot of stress on you. The estate split sounds like it was the final straw.

You are not a bad person for wanting your mother to be in assisted living. You have two children to care for, and you need to be the best person you can be to raise them. This includes making sure your own needs are met and you aren’t in a permanent state of exhaustion trying to balance everything. An assisted living home has trained professionals with around-the-clock care that can better suit your mother’s ongoing needs.

Since you were the one to start the conversation about the trust, open that conversation back up and add that along with her trust, she needs to figure out what her next steps are in making sure she receives the ongoing medical care you currently provide. You can say that you understand why she felt the division of her estate was fair, but that she has not acknowledged the fact that you are financially supporting her without any financial help. Remind her that along with providing the financial support she needs, you have also been her caregiver, which has left you at a point where you are now exhausted, and now would be the time to find an assisted living facility.

The shitty part about all of this is she’s going to be hurt and will probably lash out at you, which might make you feel worse. As hard as it’s going to be, stand your ground and remind her that she has an option to go live with her other daughter if she does not want to go into a home. Caregiving is not meant to be a one-person job. I’m rooting for you.
oursin: Photograph of the statue of Justice on top of the Old Bailey, London (Justice)

[personal profile] oursin 2021-12-09 06:28 pm (UTC)(link)
What this actually needs is somebody close enough to the family but not too involved to point out to Mother what LW has been doing and what 'the fair thing' actually is. This was fortunately the case with my mother vis-a-vis my grandmother, whom she had been caring for a significant period. A relative by marriage (who was the sort of person she would listen to) stepped in and pointed out a) what Mum had been doing for her and b) the initial plans for her will involved pretty much giving away the roof over Mum's head by dividing it up with her brothers, who had not done a hand's turn or meaningfully contributed.
harpers_child: melaka fray reading from "Tales of the Slayers". (Default)

[personal profile] harpers_child 2021-12-09 06:29 pm (UTC)(link)
I am getting a giant whiff of preestablished family dynamics on this one. Also there's some missing background. Are LW and sister in similar financial states? Why did LW's Mom run off the aides? Have LW's parents always put sister over LW? (I've got an Aunt in a nasty family situation involving this dynamic and an ageing parent.)

LW should get compensation of some kind for the care she's doing. A portion of the utilities and groceries at the least.

Full time caregivers burn out quick. That's why nursing aides exist. Some times you can love someone with all of your heart, but you just don't have the ability to keep caring for them. (Why my grandmother ended up in a nursing home.)
movingfinger: (Default)

[personal profile] movingfinger 2021-12-09 07:58 pm (UTC)(link)
The LW should look for a social worker specializing elder care issues and arrangements, they do exist in many areas and are knowledgeable about care options and the practicalities of it. They are also used to dealing with resistant, manipulative bitches like LW's mother.
tielan: (don't make me shoot you)

[personal profile] tielan 2021-12-10 12:17 am (UTC)(link)
Someone who gets along with her parents (and whose parents have been fairly foresightful and even-handed about the distribution of their estate), commenting on the advice:

You are not a bad person for wanting your mother to be in assisted living.

Correct. Busy life, sandwich generation, household and work and immediate familial responsibilities, plus The Mystery Of The Unmentioned Husband (a not-uncommon mystery in our modern advice columns about familial care) means LW cannot manage parental care on top of everything else.

Since you were the one to start the conversation about the trust, open that conversation back up and add that along with her trust,

No. Leave the inheritance out of the dicussion. Even if it's the core reason for LW's resentment and desire not to hand her mother off to assisted care, do not mention it. It should remain unspoken or else the accusations of bitterness and vengefulness will likely linger for as long as her mother lives and quite possibly after.

I am curious whether LW in any way, shape, or form expected greater consideration from her mother in the writing of the will. While, technically, splitting the estate evenly between the two sisters is fair in the broadest sense, LW being put out of her life and not being reimbursed has...problematic elements. Does LW's mother consider her daughter's care her rightful due "for all the sacrifices I made over the years" or whatever line it is that parents give.

she [mother] needs to figure out what her next steps are in making sure she receives the ongoing medical care you currently provide

Correct. That said, it sounds like LW will be the one making the arrangements because mother is unlikely to: she has everything she wants right there.

Caregiving is not meant to be a one-person job.

Absolute truth.
vindoletta: (Nah buddy)

[personal profile] vindoletta 2021-12-10 01:48 am (UTC)(link)
Oof.

To begin, I'd ask if LW and mom are from a culture where children are supposed to personally look after elderly parents, and where sending mom to a care center would be seen as LW's moral failing. Perhaps some of mom's resistance to care aides stems from there?

I'd also ask if sister can and wants to care of mom. If sister has no family then she might be better suited to care for her, as long as sister gets proper support to avoid burning out too.

In some of these "children must look after the parent" type of cultures, the child who cares for the parent also receives a bigger part of the inheritance to compensate them for the time and effort spent. If that's the case here, is getting a bigger chunk of the inheritance the reason why LW hasn't involved her sister? Because she could have asked her sister to take care of mom for a while, or to contribute in any other way.

I'd also love to know what the heck LW's husband contributes to the household, because as far as we know LW is the one taking care of everybody else.
lemonsharks: (Default)

[personal profile] lemonsharks 2021-12-13 12:47 am (UTC)(link)

Sounds like LW's mother is trying to buy her absentee sister's affection to me.