Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:***She doesn’t have anyone else and no one else in the family wants anything to do with her. I feel obligated***
You need to think really hard about this. Caregiving is hard enough when there is real affection and a connection.
You are not, in fact, obligated to assume care for an elderly, possibly mentally ill person who has had little contact with you.
What exactly does she want? Is she asking for help with housing, for example?
What are your limits? What will you go and not do?
Op here. She’s unhappy living alone in an area where she knows no one. She wants to be near family, but no one wants her near them because of her past behavior. I know she’s worried about what will happen to her when she becomes incapacitated. She was in a bad car accident recently, which hit home on this issue for her. She relied on neighbors to help, but that will eventually get old. I’m concerned because they also told her that she can put their names on her bank accounts, as well as list them as emergency contacts. That is what really raised red flags for me. I don’t know these neighbors and this is not a well-to-do area.
She would like to be out of her house where she has some supports, if needed. I would ideally like to help her determine if selling her house and moving into an apartment somewhere with the next stop being in a nursing home is feasible for her. I mentioned above she will have about $200-300K net worth after selling her house, so I assume she would eventually need to go to a Medicaid nursing home. My question is, what happens between now (where she lives independently in her own home) and when she would go to a nursing home. She will not live with me and I will not support her financially. I can give her a fixed amount to help her get set up somewhere, but long term financial assistance isn’t feasible. How can I help her in this situation?