Anonymous wrote:There’s a service available that will manage the medications but OP can’t take advantage of it because her nurse mother, whi presumably gave medication’s too many people who were not her relatives, got “angry”?
It’s not “compassionate and right” that OP is doing this if she’s being guilted it into it by her mother and is being completely overwhelmed and burnt out.
Pay someone else to give the medications. Your mother will get used to it. Spend your time with her visiting not managing pills…
Anonymous wrote:You don't need to do that much if she is in assisted living. Cut back.
Anonymous wrote:You don't need to do that much if she is in assisted living. Cut back.
Anonymous wrote:You are being petty. You're angry she won't bring her children. This is not your relationship to manage. Your mom shouldn't be getting that much mail and you should be able to set up autopay for most of her bills. You can probably make things easier for yourself. You seem to be in martyr territory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much would something like laundry cost? What if you raised the question with the siblings, saying that laundry cost $x per month at the facility, but that you're willing to do it for $y (less than x!), then ask which they would prefer. It may be that it's worth it to them to pay someone else so that you don't play the martyr.
Medication management plus laundry is an extra $700 a month. I just feel badly my mother spending $8400 a year on that. I have been doing it for over a year so I have saved her $12,600. The sibling who is supportive is extremely angry at the one who hasn't visited in 4 years and has just said we should pay but when I proposed it to our mother, she became so angry. She was a nurse so the thought of somebody (besides me) giving her medication gets her extremely agitated.
Anonymous wrote:What is the expensive activity that takes all their time?