Anonymous wrote:i let my parents live in their unsuitable house until things came to a head with worsening dementia. The local agency on aging/adult protective services got called by neighbors, they were taken in for an evaluation, and the state decided they couldn't live on their own anymore.
once extracted from their house, it took me six months to get rid of the worst of the hoarding and put it on the market. closed in 40 days, and then I relocated them to a better private pay facility close to me. dad's passed, and i have enough proceeds left to cover mom for another year before I have to move her to a medicaid facility.
believe me, i tried to get them to understand that they needed to downsize before the dementia got too bad, but there was no convincing them. they had to do it the hard way.
Anonymous wrote:Another thing you can try is hiring an aging care professional to work with her-check on her every few months, eventually every month then every week to assess need and hire out accordingly. It helps to remove you from the equation. These people are trained to talk to the elderly in a way that feels empowering and they can assess need. Also, too often our elders feel entitled to treat us poorly and take advantage. When it's a paid professional they shape up or they fire the person.
You try all sorts of things and then if she is determined to make self-destructive decisions and is cognitively able you let it go and can have some peace if her decisions lead to her own suffering because she did what SHE wanted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My practical advice is to start small. If she’s not use to help, get her a weekly cleaning service. That may turn into more frequent helpers-with shopping, cooking, help around the house. But since healthy people have cleaners too, it can be a start.
Then, when you can visit, start touring assisted living options, just to see them. Also start working on organizing important documents or cleaning one room of the house. Each trip have one specific goal. Anything you can do to prepare will help later.
Ugh. That’s the thing. Even the two items you mention involve trips across the country. This poor woman is going to spend $1000 to get on 1-2 flights to clean a room for a weekend and probably get scolded. And then repeat it how many times and how often? Every month for a year?
The last thing I want to do after working all week is to go straight to the airport, fly across the country, get in a rental car
at midnight and clean/get yelled at for a weekend and then go straight back to work on Monday.
I agree with this - I know I have a moral obligation to help my aging parents, but when my mom refuses to take any advice, makes bad choices, fails to face reality, then things go badly and she expects me to swoop in and clean it up? And then calls me a bulldozer for trying to help her solve obvious problems? And implies I don't respect her? This is like beating my head against a wall and reliving what it has been like to be her daughter. Seems like a tall order.
As for moving away from your parents, isn't that what we want to encourage our children to do? Move away (if they want) and follow their own path/dreams? As the parent of adult children, I believe it is on me to move near my kids as I age if I expect to have their help. I have offered to move my parents close to me, and they have said no - literally calling me selfish for suggesting it.
So where do I go from here? I'm going to detach a little and wait for a crisis. Then I will solve it like the bulldozer I apparently am.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My practical advice is to start small. If she’s not use to help, get her a weekly cleaning service. That may turn into more frequent helpers-with shopping, cooking, help around the house. But since healthy people have cleaners too, it can be a start.
Then, when you can visit, start touring assisted living options, just to see them. Also start working on organizing important documents or cleaning one room of the house. Each trip have one specific goal. Anything you can do to prepare will help later.
Ugh. That’s the thing. Even the two items you mention involve trips across the country. This poor woman is going to spend $1000 to get on 1-2 flights to clean a room for a weekend and probably get scolded. And then repeat it how many times and how often? Every month for a year?
The last thing I want to do after working all week is to go straight to the airport, fly across the country, get in a rental car
at midnight and clean/get yelled at for a weekend and then go straight back to work on Monday.
Anonymous wrote:Can you explain in a little more detail what you did for the bolded?
Anonymous wrote:
intervening things you can do: set up unobtrusive cameras around the property (i used blink). I also set up my dad's phone to auto-answer after 15 seconds, which meant that phone calls went to voicemail normally but facetime would answer if even if he couldnt hear the phone. I put an airtag in his car. I set up an echo show and used the camera/drop-in feature to check on them. I put most of their bills on auto-pay and checked on the bank account every so often. we registered the DPoA paperwork at their bank.
Anonymous wrote:
intervening things you can do: set up unobtrusive cameras around the property (i used blink). I also set up my dad's phone to auto-answer after 15 seconds, which meant that phone calls went to voicemail normally but facetime would answer if even if he couldnt hear the phone. I put an airtag in his car. I set up an echo show and used the camera/drop-in feature to check on them. I put most of their bills on auto-pay and checked on the bank account every so often. we registered the DPoA paperwork at their bank.
Anonymous wrote:i let my parents live in their unsuitable house until things came to a head with worsening dementia. The local agency on aging/adult protective services got called by neighbors, they were taken in for an evaluation, and the state decided they couldn't live on their own anymore.
once extracted from their house, it took me six months to get rid of the worst of the hoarding and put it on the market. closed in 40 days, and then I relocated them to a better private pay facility close to me. dad's passed, and i have enough proceeds left to cover mom for another year before I have to move her to a medicaid facility.
believe me, i tried to get them to understand that they needed to downsize before the dementia got too bad, but there was no convincing them. they had to do it the hard way.