Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.
You charged your parent to live with you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, rather than focusing on what you owe, like it's a monetary transaction, why not try to find ways to feel closer to your parents, one or both.
NP. I kind of agree here. What stood out in the original OP was that you seemed to base any obligation to your parents on their cash outlay to you, rather family obligation, duty, love, guilt - ie, anything that connects you emotionally.
To be fair, OP may feel that their parents may have made less of an investment in them than their other siblings. Rounding errors may be one thing, but if we are talking about tens of thousands of dollars @ compound interest, then I kinda get OP's angle.
Anonymous wrote:Beancounting is never a good look, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, rather than focusing on what you owe, like it's a monetary transaction, why not try to find ways to feel closer to your parents, one or both.
NP. I kind of agree here. What stood out in the original OP was that you seemed to base any obligation to your parents on their cash outlay to you, rather family obligation, duty, love, guilt - ie, anything that connects you emotionally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t owe them anything. That said, offer as much as you feel comfortable. For me, I contributed my time and effort to navigate the Medicaid process to get them into long term care. I asked my sibling to help with some of the financial paperwork but did most of the work myself. My parent lived with me for a few months (paying way below market room and board), but after a fall and long hospitalization, I refused to let them come back (fall risk and no one at home to take watch, house inaccessible). My obligation was that they were not homeless and medical care taken care of. I was not going to damage my finances or family dynamics or sanity by having a dependent elderly person in my home.
You charged your parent to live with you?
Anonymous wrote:OP, rather than focusing on what you owe, like it's a monetary transaction, why not try to find ways to feel closer to your parents, one or both.