Anonymous wrote:Did they have a 50 year anniversary? And then they called it quits? Are they both in good health?
This is rare because most people and marriages just dont last that long. And most that do think its more of a hassle to get out than stay. There had to have been something traumatic below the surface here to make ir worth their time.
I would encourage each to find a retirement community to move in to. Sell their house and assets and split it and see how long the money will last them in their new homes. Your burden will be to visit. But their care and eventual death may be easier logistically if they find a place to stay in now and downgrade most of their things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shocking how everyone just thinks of money!
Because this is what matters. It makes the difference between dying with barely-there medical care, and dying in relative comfort. It makes the difference between an engaging last few years, and just waiting for death. There are very few people to whom money does not matter in the last 10 years of their life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents did not divorce, but they "divorced" in the sense that they were leaving on 2 separate continents for the last 6 years of my dad's life, and my mom would stay in a hotel instead of their house when she visited the continent where my dad was.
Where I come from, this is divorce. They just live in different houses and do their own thing.
That creates problems for Medicaid when you need to go to a nursing home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd be so angry if my parents did this. It's ALL going to fall on you now as their kid. Even little appts like eye appts where they dilate your eyes will need someone to drive the parent. Parents should be helping each other through sicknesses in old age and not burdening their kids. And multiple holidays now...
My aunt and uncle did this and financially they really never recovered.
This.
Financially it's a disaster. They can't afford as much divorced as they could have together. Your dad will likely remarry and she'll get everything.
Inheritance is dumb anyway. We should tax inheritance at 90% and block gifts from people over 60 to pay for medicare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Damn. I can’t believe the number of selfish adult children in this thread who think their parents have an obligation to stay together to appease their 30yo+ adult children.
That's not why. It's because I've seen this go really badly for the people who are divorcing.
Anonymous wrote:My parents did not divorce, but they "divorced" in the sense that they were leaving on 2 separate continents for the last 6 years of my dad's life, and my mom would stay in a hotel instead of their house when she visited the continent where my dad was.
Where I come from, this is divorce. They just live in different houses and do their own thing.
Anonymous wrote:Did they have a 50 year anniversary? And then they called it quits? Are they both in good health?
This is rare because most people and marriages just dont last that long. And most that do think its more of a hassle to get out than stay. There had to have been something traumatic below the surface here to make ir worth their time.
I would encourage each to find a retirement community to move in to. Sell their house and assets and split it and see how long the money will last them in their new homes. Your burden will be to visit. But their care and eventual death may be easier logistically if they find a place to stay in now and downgrade most of their things.
Anonymous wrote:My parents did not divorce, but they "divorced" in the sense that they were leaving on 2 separate continents for the last 6 years of my dad's life, and my mom would stay in a hotel instead of their house when she visited the continent where my dad was.
Where I come from, this is divorce. They just live in different houses and do their own thing.
Anonymous wrote:Shocking how everyone just thinks of money!