Anonymous wrote:I would pay someone to come in daily with the job of teaching her to do these basic things she refuses to do and also to talk to her and be her companion. I think if you do that for awhile, with the person understanding that their job is to gradually get her to do the normal stuff on her own, then you won't have to spend all that money forever, maybe just a few months. After that you could cut back on the aide's hours to maybe just a few hours a day.
If you don't like that idea you could consider what we did with my mother when she was in her 70s and started having heart issues where she would push her alert button in the middle of the night and we had to rush over to her place or the hospital. (Turned out she needed a pacemaker.) What we did was buy a house together with mom with room enough for all of us and we (me, sister, brothers, spouses, adult kids, minor kids) all took care of mom until she died at 90. It was a privilege. And BTW we paid an aide (out of mom's money) to sit with her 8-4 M-F while we were at work toward the end of her life but family took care of her the rest of the hours.
Anonymous wrote:OP I am sending you endless support and encouragement here. My hear goes out to you and I relate. I have been through so much hell with my parents and sometimes positing here you get the trolls who have no empathy.
I would report that social worker to her licensure board and at the very least ask to speak to her supervisor immediately as she is doing harm and has the potential to do harm to other. She is poorly trained to deal with the very complex issues that comes with sandwich generation issues and she clearly has no empathy or understanding of the situation. That SW needs supervision promptly and she needs to be taken off the case.
You had her evaluated and the doctor said no signs of dementia. is that correct? This was just recently, right? I assume many meds have been tried with her to no avail? At one point one of my parents was put on adderall with zoloft so she can manage and it helped for a while.
I might get a case manager involved at the agency you hire the aides. A good one can work well with all parties to mediate and move things forward.
Also, if she goes into assisted living, what do they do when she runs out money? I would find out exactly and see how you feel about that. She many not even live to see that happen. There is absolutely no reason to use your own money on her retirement.
Anonymous wrote:WOW. Op and the rest of you are clueless and unsympathetic when it comes to elder care! Op - she is 88!! She probably needs the help and attention. She liked the other place. Move her back there. You are saying she has enough to last five years? That takes her to 93. She will probably die sooner if you leave her where she is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s 88, for heaven’s sake!
If she has the money to pay for the assisted living place, let her spend it.
And if she runs out of money, what then?
Then she goes into an income based program or on medicaid in a nursing home. She's 88. She doesn't have that long to live. Put her in an independent living program where she will have the social or meals. Its unreasonable to move her alone into an apartment at that age. She probably is having memory issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously there is a to of resentment from OP and sister towards mom. I get that though if mom was never able to be involved really in parenting given her inability to do anything independently, that is going to leave scars.
I think you have to be careful though to not take that resentment out on her now that she is vulnerable and OP and sister have control over her life and her finances. Since mom can't make decisions, OP and sister are making them all for her but through a lens of being very frustrated and hurt by having had a helpless parent.
I think you need a neutral party here - maybe an adult social worker who can help advocate for what mom needs, what her limits and abilities are, what reasonable expectations are, what supports she needs and that person can stay in regular contact to see how she is doing.
There is no way Op and sister can be that person given their anger and resentment and disappointment in their mother as a person, a wife, a mother etc. it would be better for them to step back from the decision making and just visit and be her daughters and have someone else who doesn't have financial interest or childhood hurt / pain be her advocate.
OMG. The woman has been there for TWO weeks and her dutiful daughters are in regular contact with Mom. Give the woman time to adjust to her new environment before you start berating the way Op and her sister are handling things. You sound just perfectly awful, tbh.
Op says (top of page 2)
"My sister is very angry as well. We just paid $1300 to move my mother to the new apartment, and my sister took two additional days off from work to help set the place up. I arrived a few days later, after shopping for all her new needs, and completed the job, including hanging up pictures."
They are both angry with their mother. They are resentful of having "helped" her (not based on moms wants) and are upset they gave time and energy to their mother. They are very resentful. It isn't clear if they are paying for moms accommodations or if mom has her own money.
You give someone something they don't want and then get mad they don't immediately like it and act appreciative. That isn't the sign of someone who can be an advocate. These two women have decades of anger and resentment. It may be justifiable if mom has always just been a helpless passive figure - but it doesn't make them good advocates.
What Op and her sister are going through right now is VERY frustrating. It is also VERY typical - especially in the first few weeks of placing an elderly parent in a new environment.
You do not seem to have much, if any, experience with this. All I can tell you is that your judgement is really harsh and uncalled for.
NP. As someone who is going through something similar with MIL (though to a much lesser degree), agree 100%. OP and her sister are doing a great job (and it's agree you two seem to be on the same page and working well together, that is not always the case). What they've proposed is very reasonable. What their mother has proposed (paying hundreds of thousands to be waited on hand and foot or for OP and her sister to drop their lives (jobs, kids) to wait on her hand and foot when she is capable) is not. GL, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s 88, for heaven’s sake!
If she has the money to pay for the assisted living place, let her spend it.
And if she runs out of money, what then?
Then she goes into an income based program or on medicaid in a nursing home. She's 88. She doesn't have that long to live. Put her in an independent living program where she will have the social or meals. Its unreasonable to move her alone into an apartment at that age. She probably is having memory issues.
Anonymous wrote:Wait a second, OP. Growing up as a child when you were living with your mom, she never even threw her own trash away? She left her trash on the kitchen counter and waited for your dad to throw it away? When your dad was at work she literally never dialed a phone?
Is the trash can she have now the type where you step on the pedal and the kid flips up or an open one? I would tell my mom if I go over there and there is trash on the counter I am walking out the door and leaving and will come back the next day to see if it is gone. That is just ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s 88, for heaven’s sake!
If she has the money to pay for the assisted living place, let her spend it.
And if she runs out of money, what then?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously there is a to of resentment from OP and sister towards mom. I get that though if mom was never able to be involved really in parenting given her inability to do anything independently, that is going to leave scars.
I think you have to be careful though to not take that resentment out on her now that she is vulnerable and OP and sister have control over her life and her finances. Since mom can't make decisions, OP and sister are making them all for her but through a lens of being very frustrated and hurt by having had a helpless parent.
I think you need a neutral party here - maybe an adult social worker who can help advocate for what mom needs, what her limits and abilities are, what reasonable expectations are, what supports she needs and that person can stay in regular contact to see how she is doing.
There is no way Op and sister can be that person given their anger and resentment and disappointment in their mother as a person, a wife, a mother etc. it would be better for them to step back from the decision making and just visit and be her daughters and have someone else who doesn't have financial interest or childhood hurt / pain be her advocate.
OMG. The woman has been there for TWO weeks and her dutiful daughters are in regular contact with Mom. Give the woman time to adjust to her new environment before you start berating the way Op and her sister are handling things. You sound just perfectly awful, tbh.
Op says (top of page 2)
"My sister is very angry as well. We just paid $1300 to move my mother to the new apartment, and my sister took two additional days off from work to help set the place up. I arrived a few days later, after shopping for all her new needs, and completed the job, including hanging up pictures."
They are both angry with their mother. They are resentful of having "helped" her (not based on moms wants) and are upset they gave time and energy to their mother. They are very resentful. It isn't clear if they are paying for moms accommodations or if mom has her own money.
You give someone something they don't want and then get mad they don't immediately like it and act appreciative. That isn't the sign of someone who can be an advocate. These two women have decades of anger and resentment. It may be justifiable if mom has always just been a helpless passive figure - but it doesn't make them good advocates.
What Op and her sister are going through right now is VERY frustrating. It is also VERY typical - especially in the first few weeks of placing an elderly parent in a new environment.
You do not seem to have much, if any, experience with this. All I can tell you is that your judgement is really harsh and uncalled for.