Anonymous wrote:You can’t just put a functioning adult in a group home because they’re messy. You need to talk to her and find out what she wants. You’re really going about it all wrong and if I were her I’d never speak to you again. I’d start by hiring a housekeeper for your parents and have that person help your sister clean and organize her space. From there you might transition to an in law suite with the same housekeeper. If you’re concerned about what happens after they pass then build 2 in law suites. Keep the housekeeper on a regular basis. Establish a trust for the sister and use that money to pay for housekeeper. The 2nd apartment you can utilize to rent out and maybe do rent deduction if that person checks on your sister every day or 2. You need to think least restrictive means not most restrictive seeing a as she clearly has shown she can live alone. For right now see if you can talk her into doing a CNA course so she’s prepared to assist with parental care as parents age. She’s not useless and she’s not broken so stop viewing her that way and you’ll be better off.
Anonymous wrote:You can’t just put a functioning adult in a group home because they’re messy. You need to talk to her and find out what she wants. You’re really going about it all wrong and if I were her I’d never speak to you again. I’d start by hiring a housekeeper for your parents and have that person help your sister clean and organize her space. From there you might transition to an in law suite with the same housekeeper. If you’re concerned about what happens after they pass then build 2 in law suites. Keep the housekeeper on a regular basis. Establish a trust for the sister and use that money to pay for housekeeper. The 2nd apartment you can utilize to rent out and maybe do rent deduction if that person checks on your sister every day or 2. You need to think least restrictive means not most restrictive seeing a as she clearly has shown she can live alone. For right now see if you can talk her into doing a CNA course so she’s prepared to assist with parental care as parents age. She’s not useless and she’s not broken so stop viewing her that way and you’ll be better off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you be worried she would junk up an in-law suite?
Yes, absolutely.
The more I research in real time here, it is obvious that she has adaptive functioning behavioral issues. Group homes look like the best bet, but she doesn’t have a formal diagnosis. I don’t know how you would find one anyhow for high functioning adults. There seems to be a category of care that just isn’t there.
Anonymous wrote:If you have money, there are homes/communities for people who can’t live alone. Sorry I don’t know their names, but there is a good one in Florida.
Perhaps a local Trusts and Estates lawyer would know of options (since old people with only one/a disabled child, also face this challenge.) Good luck to you all.
Anonymous wrote:Would you be worried she would junk up an in-law suite?
Anonymous wrote:OP, my heart goes out to you. We are dealing with a very similar situation with my BIL (technically he was recently diagnosed with ADHD but either it's very severe or there is more going on there). I don't know what the solution is, but all I know is it is very hard on all parties and I'll be following this thread to see if anyone has any great ideas.
Hugs to you though. This is so, so hard. No easy answers.