Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.
You charged your parent to live with you?
I'm not OP, but my parents charged me to live with them after I turned 18. If my parents wanted to live with me I'd charge them too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you cared you’d see them more than once a year and have made an effort to enjoy their company while they were still coherent.
Stay out of it unless your parents ask you to get involved.
OP here and hard disagree. My parents (and siblings) live in a small town in a very remote area. There's a reason my siblings work for or with them -- it would be very hard to have another kind of career there. I moved away because I did not want to work for the family business and you only get one life -- my parents were supportive of me moving, and also my siblings also moved away for varying amounts of time. I would love to see them more often but it is hard (the nearest even midsize airport is 4 hours away from their home, nearest major airport is nearly 7 hours away) and going once a year for a substantial period makes more sense than trying to make multiple shorter trips.
I've found it's sometimes hard for people who grew up in or near cities to understand what it means to grow up in a very remote place and leave for even basic opportunities that you could never find there. It's different than growing up in DC but choosing to live in LA and then making minimal effort to see your family. Even that would be easier! LA is only a 5 hour flight from DC and it's direct.
Anonymous wrote:If you cared you’d see them more than once a year and have made an effort to enjoy their company while they were still coherent.
Stay out of it unless your parents ask you to get involved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.
You charged your parent to live with you?
LOL seriously. Some crazy hard-hearted people on DCUM. OP, you should know you're dealing with an entire range of how to see one's relationship with parents, from healthy to wackadoodle crazy.
Sounds like your parents have your other two sibs nearby and a lot of interaction with them already anyway. Why worry?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.
You charged your parent to live with you?
I'm not OP, but my parents charged me to live with them after I turned 18. If my parents wanted to live with me I'd charge them too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.
You charged your parent to live with you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.
You charged your parent to live with you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.
You charged your parent to live with you?
Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.