Love living in vilified Canada where we already can choose medical aid in dying if we are proactive and want to know we are in the early stages of Alzheimer's. Most people go into denial and don't do any screening until it's too late.
I don't have any kids to dump on so screen myself via the SAGE test from the University of Ohio. As soon as I slip, I'm leaving this world as a full human being, not a caricature. The myth that life is precious to the bitter end is just about extracting a lifetime of savings from people. Everything is about profit and money. |
When people had kids much younger than they do now, that created more generational layers to provide support. If you were a great-grandparent by age 75 or 80, you might rely on your kids or your grandkids for help. Now, people aren't even becoming grandparents until they're in their 70s, leaving the burden to fall on kids in their 40s who are still raising young kids. And since many older folks aren't dying until their 90s, there's no inheritance until their kids are in their 70s. |
She donated her money while still alive and clearly expects OP to pick up the slack. Just NO! No wonder OP is resentful. She should be. Why should she give up her own home, financial security, and peace of mind to care for someone who expected it so much that she would think of others before her kids? |
You're wrong. People are callous because we are extending life way beyond what is natural and what God intended. Many times out of fear of liability from the doctor. It's ok to let people die naturally. We don't have to keep a sack of flesh alive when the person that was inside is already gone. And it's perfectly appropriate to recognize this fact. Who knows - in the afterlife these life extending measure might be considered torture or inhumane. |
It will never be me. I'll take a long walk off a short cliff. I'll go to Switzerland. I'll "accidentally" overdose on opiates. There are so many thing that could be 'accidental'. |
. Agree. We could build a structure around this to limit the abuse of the system and ensure dignity of the patient. I'd be all for it. If my mind is gone, so am I. |
+1 And the caregivers are disproportionately women. |
I could have written most of the two posts above. My remaining parent speaks nonsense, can't wipe their own butt, needs help to shower, and recently ended up in a wheelchair. We can't go out because they are incontinent and you never know when something messy will happen. I estimate they are around stage five or six (out of seven) on the dementia scale. They really went steeply downhill after an infection. |
I hope they find some medicine to help her stop doing that. Mine can do the same and the medicine prevents it. |
And that's assuming there is 1- any money left for an inheritance and 2- if there happens to be an inheritance that you will get anything. I knew a woman, former co-worker in her 40's unmarried/ no children, who was a caretaker to her mother for a decade. Did everything. The father died when she was in her 20's. Her 2 siblings were no help. One lived halfway across the country and had their own life. Another was a jobless mooch who lived wherever there was a couch that would accommodate him and only popped in when he wanted money. When her mom died she left the family home and all the contents and what was left in the bank to the son because she figured he needed it the most since the lived far away sibling was married and her caretaker daughter had a steady job and her own place to live. Never understimate the twisted rationale of a parent. |
I think about this topic. To keep choosing life extending procedures with other medical issues abounding and increasing the chance the body could outlast the mind. I’m not sure this is how it is supposed to be. Why are doctors and insurance proceeding forward in very late ages? Are they profiting off our seniors or unwilling to address the societal issue here? Does respecting life mean invention of dying whenever possible? Are we also going to grasp at life when death is facing us even though we think now we won’t? Will we also not consider the caregiver and taxpayer burdens as a result? Such heavy and ethical issues among the medical advancements. |
That’s very sad. We grieve the decline and end in many stages. |
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