Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep a box of ammo in the safe.
This. No way I am budgeting for skilled nursing or memory care. I will leave this world before that happens. Why do people think we were ever meant to live that way? Science makes our bodies live longer than they were meant to and left the brain behind.
Having watched it happen a few times, the vast majority of people don’t do this even if they think they will. You still feel like yourself while you’re declining so it doesn’t feel like “time” and then it’s too late.
Anonymous wrote:If you move into a continuing care retirement community and can pay the monthly rates, then you are effectively taken care of, no? The one near me is quite nice as such communities go and a 1-bedroom starts at, I believe, $6k a month for a single occupant after you've bought into it, and as long I or my estate can keep paying the 6k plus whatever normal annual increases, the community has to take care of me regardless of what happens? Even if I move in completely healthy and five years later develop alzheimers? That's my understanding. Correct me if I'm wrong!
Anonymous wrote:For those of you who don't have LTC insurance, how much are you including in your retirement budget for assisted living, memory care, or long-term care? My partner and I are trying to budget to have ~$1M remaining at age 90, which could support a few years of LTC for each of us at current rates. But I also wonder - what if one of us has a stroke at 70, and we need 10-20 years of continuing care? Just wondering what other people's assumptions look like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep a box of ammo in the safe.
This. No way I am budgeting for skilled nursing or memory care. I will leave this world before that happens. Why do people think we were ever meant to live that way? Science makes our bodies live longer than they were meant to and left the brain behind.
Having watched it happen a few times, the vast majority of people don’t do this even if they think they will. You still feel like yourself while you’re declining so it doesn’t feel like “time” and then it’s too late.
Exactly. My parents always swore they’d crash the car into a piling once they became infirm. Instead Dad spent four years in a nursing home with Alzheimer’s. Very few people can actually pull the trigger (literally) when the time comes.[/quote]
Very sad that you talk about your own dad this way. Are you blaming him for unable to kill himself?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you who don't have LTC insurance, how much are you including in your retirement budget for assisted living, memory care, or long-term care? My partner and I are trying to budget to have ~$1M remaining at age 90, which could support a few years of LTC for each of us at current rates. But I also wonder - what if one of us has a stroke at 70, and we need 10-20 years of continuing care? Just wondering what other people's assumptions look like.
We have 3 ways of thinking about this:
1)We're thinking about doing a small joint QLAC that is deferred for old-age so that the elder care for one spouse doesn't bankrupt the other. Basically to bring it up so that social security + annuity equals very basic expenses.
2)We're planning on putting aside 250k each at retirement that is invested for long-term care through a combination of stock index and t-bills/TIPS.
3) We are doing our planning to leave an inheritance (we put it in the models as a minimum of 500k inflation adjusted) that ostensibly could be tapped if the first two things aren't enough.
So 2 and 3 are kind of like your 'ending with 1 million' but we're instead doing 'setting aside 500k at point of retirement and letting it grow with that investment time frame" and 'ending with 500k extra as a minimum."
Anonymous wrote:I don't "budget" LTC per se. Yes, there is always a scenario under which our money will run out, so my kids won't inherit much. This is another reason to fund their 529s to the max to make sure that they get at least something.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry to be blunt, but I am not obsessed about it. I really don't care much what happens to me if I am brain dead and can't remember anything or feel. If I have as stroke and my brain is gone, or I get severe dementia, I'd rather be euthanized. If I am mentally sharp but my body isn't working, I'd try to use my assets wisely to get minimum adequate care. I'd prefer to live at home and have a visiting (or live-in) housekeeper to cook and clean or a low wage type of caretaker. I hope I won't need a nurse or a medical professional. If I do.. this means I am severely disabled and my QOL is zero and I might as well get euthanized, although that would be a harder decision.. than being brain dead.
If I fail to accumulate enough or something bad happens and I lose most of what I saved from decades of hard work, then I would work on eliminating assets and being poor. This way you get government assistance and extra medical coverage. I will have to research which state/city pays the most and establish residency there before I become frail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep a box of ammo in the safe.
This. No way I am budgeting for skilled nursing or memory care. I will leave this world before that happens. Why do people think we were ever meant to live that way? Science makes our bodies live longer than they were meant to and left the brain behind.
Having watched it happen a few times, the vast majority of people don’t do this even if they think they will. You still feel like yourself while you’re declining so it doesn’t feel like “time” and then it’s too late.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I anticipate an inheritance from my mom of at least $500k (she's in her mid 80s, lives with my sibling, and has LTC insurance if needed). We don't factor that into our retirement except as LTC. If we don't use it, that will pass to our kids.
My dad, FIL, MIL have all died and none used any kind of LTC.
I hope your sibling is getting the bulk of the inheritance
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep a box of ammo in the safe.
This. No way I am budgeting for skilled nursing or memory care. I will leave this world before that happens. Why do people think we were ever meant to live that way? Science makes our bodies live longer than they were meant to and left the brain behind.