Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The conversations and actions for eldercare needs to happen and put in place in the 50s and 60s. Otherwise they feel loss of control.
This is what I’ve been thinking too. If you have a preference on how you want it to be when you’re retired, organize this lifestyle now. Move where you want to be. 70+ is when executive function starts to give in
+1. It's also too late to establish any community in your new place if you move in your 70s. My mom wants to move near us and I don't feel comfortable being her only social support. She isn't a "joiner" and she would be leaving several lifelong friends from her current hometown, as well as all of her doctors, familiar routines, etc. I asked her to move closer (at least part-time) over a decade ago, and no interest was shown in that idea. Moving her now and finding her all new doctors and being the only person she knows in her old age feels overwhelming to me at this point, as selfish as that sounds. This step needs to happen earlier or incrementally (ie a part-time place that you eventually downsize to full-time).
I disagree with it being too late. My parents, in their late 80s, just moved to a retirement community. It's been wonderful for their social lives as people there are very friendly and eager to meet the new folks. They are asked to dinner about 4x a week in the dining room and see people throughout the day. It's been great. And with my dad's Alzheimer's, my mom is grateful to have other people nearby and an immediate outlet for when she needs to get out of their apartment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The conversations and actions for eldercare needs to happen and put in place in the 50s and 60s. Otherwise they feel loss of control.
This is what I’ve been thinking too. If you have a preference on how you want it to be when you’re retired, organize this lifestyle now. Move where you want to be. 70+ is when executive function starts to give in
+1. It's also too late to establish any community in your new place if you move in your 70s. My mom wants to move near us and I don't feel comfortable being her only social support. She isn't a "joiner" and she would be leaving several lifelong friends from her current hometown, as well as all of her doctors, familiar routines, etc. I asked her to move closer (at least part-time) over a decade ago, and no interest was shown in that idea. Moving her now and finding her all new doctors and being the only person she knows in her old age feels overwhelming to me at this point, as selfish as that sounds. This step needs to happen earlier or incrementally (ie a part-time place that you eventually downsize to full-time).
Anonymous wrote:PP, you know your mom best. Some people, though, do fine with meeting new people, at age 70, 80 or 90. They may complain about the new environment. Mostly because it's all they have to talk about and oddly it's how they bond with others.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, sometimes the worst thing has to happen before they open their eyes. It's really sad and scary, but if they won't listen you can't force them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in my 70s and refuse to get housekeeping services. The thought of trying to secure all our financial and tax info and valuables is more exhausting than scrubbing tubs.
Literally no one cares about this...unless you keep gold bars lying around.
Anonymous wrote:I am in my 70s and refuse to get housekeeping services. The thought of trying to secure all our financial and tax info and valuables is more exhausting than scrubbing tubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The conversations and actions for eldercare needs to happen and put in place in the 50s and 60s. Otherwise they feel loss of control.
This is what I’ve been thinking too. If you have a preference on how you want it to be when you’re retired, organize this lifestyle now. Move where you want to be. 70+ is when executive function starts to give in
+1. It's also too late to establish any community in your new place if you move in your 70s. My mom wants to move near us and I don't feel comfortable being her only social support. She isn't a "joiner" and she would be leaving several lifelong friends from her current hometown, as well as all of her doctors, familiar routines, etc. I asked her to move closer (at least part-time) over a decade ago, and no interest was shown in that idea. Moving her now and finding her all new doctors and being the only person she knows in her old age feels overwhelming to me at this point, as selfish as that sounds. This step needs to happen earlier or incrementally (ie a part-time place that you eventually downsize to full-time).