Anonymous wrote:But "ability" is sometimes determined by our choices. The SN child was not a choice, but what about moving away?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm sympathizing with your siblings on this one. You can ask about the money when you're down there in person. (Leave your kids home with DH as others recommended. You will have enough to deal with.)
What you aren't mentioning and maybe aren't grokking is that your local siblings are providing all the emotional support to your mom right now, and are probably going through far bigger emotional turmoil than you about your parent because of this. They're closer to the problem and they have to deal with some new wrinkle every day, whereas your distance insulates you from it to some extent. You may have other problems going on, but this problem -- your mom -- your siblings are doing all the emotional heavy lifting on. Give them credit for that. Recognize that that is hard work nobody wants to do. Your distance lets you be a bit of a dilettante or a tourist to your mom's worsening condition, whereas they're on the front lines. You owe them more respect, even if you do want to check up on the money side. Your money doesn't put you in charge. You're still a bit of an interloper because you're just not there every day like they are, so you don't have the depth of understanding of the whole situation as they do.
Sorry about your mom. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for the tips. My ILs can't help--both close to 90 and not interested even when they were younger. No aunts or uncles on husbands side. As for the money aspect, I would be happy to write the check but unfortunately my sister's husband is not trustworthy and I think they would try to pay themselves a salary for their time on the project. That's what they were going to do a few years back when there was some discussion of using some of my mom's money to put an addition on my sister's house for her to live in. That's why I called the movers--there's a trust issue and I want only to pay the movers directly and not my sister and BIL.
I understand but you are trusting them to take care of all of the non-monetary aspects of the move without micromanaging. You either need to get more involved and help more, or else trust them to take care of it and just write the check. I probably would give them some extra money for their time btw.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for the tips. My ILs can't help--both close to 90 and not interested even when they were younger. No aunts or uncles on husbands side. As for the money aspect, I would be happy to write the check but unfortunately my sister's husband is not trustworthy and I think they would try to pay themselves a salary for their time on the project. That's what they were going to do a few years back when there was some discussion of using some of my mom's money to put an addition on my sister's house for her to live in. That's why I called the movers--there's a trust issue and I want only to pay the movers directly and not my sister and BIL.
Anonymous wrote:I was in a similar situation this summer. One of my parents required life saving heart surgery, DH was overseas, my brother went AWOL and my other sibling my sister freaked out yelling at me to come down to our hometown to help manage my dad's surgery and my mother who was a basket case.
I sucked it up and rented a suite. in an extended stay hotel for a week. I had to bring my kids and my dog. I hired sitters and enrolled the children in camp. My father almost died in that surgery and was on life support for 4 days. I can't imagine if I hadn't been there to literally, physically hold my mother when they told her re the complications and to prepare for last rites.
Sometimes life is inconvenient, expensive and a pain. Just because you are out of town and have a complicated life doesn't mean you get a pass. Sorry. I would find a way not to take your kids. If yon need to take your kids find a sitter, a high school kid with a car to take them to a museum, the movies, a park, etc., anywhere, so you can 100% focus on the task at hand. The task isn't to show your sisters how hard your life is managing your kids (this isn't show and tell), does that make sense? If you are waiting for the other sisters to "get" how hard you already have it and say "OMG, your life is already so stressful, don't worry about it" you have the wrong attitude.
I often write checks to my parents and my sister re handling medical and other costs of my father's ongoing care. My sister goes from yelling at me to giving me praise. I need to grin in bear it, because in reality she is the one handling the day to day, everyday.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks for the tips. My ILs can't help--both close to 90 and not interested even when they were younger. No aunts or uncles on husbands side. As for the money aspect, I would be happy to write the check but unfortunately my sister's husband is not trustworthy and I think they would try to pay themselves a salary for their time on the project. That's what they were going to do a few years back when there was some discussion of using some of my mom's money to put an addition on my sister's house for her to live in. That's why I called the movers--there's a trust issue and I want only to pay the movers directly and not my sister and BIL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If Op is being asked for money to help out then I think it's fine for Op to get the specifics on how that money is being spent. If her sisters are paying themselves a salary for handling this move that isn't necessarily a bad or inappropriate thing but it would be dishonest of them to not mention that to Op.
This. They know how much the movers quoted them. Not to share that info with OP is shady. She needs to be able to budget her money.
My cousin mismanaged funds associated with her mom's healthcare. She asked some family members to help cover costs, then used several hundred dollars to pay for her dd's birthday party and gifts. It happens. OP has the right to know where her money is going and how much things cost. That's not micromanaging.