Anonymous wrote:OP please start a go fund me and post if you feel so inclined. I will repost it to see if I can get others to donate.
Anonymous wrote:How do people end up so far away from their loved ones with no plan on how to get back. I wished that I lived locally to my parents, but I would move home in a nanosecond if I couldn't afford to visit whenever I wanted. How did this happen?!?
Anonymous wrote:You don't have the ability to put $1200 on a credit card?
How old are you?
Anonymous wrote:Your first priority is your child, and you simply can't afford this. Look into skype calls or something else, but your child is dependent on you and it is not fair to her to put her in a financially precarious position. Don't charge the visit and rack up debt that will make you even more stressed out. Going out there isn't going to heal your mother and frankly you're probably still going to feel shitty afterwards, except you'll feel shitty & even more financially stressed. I grew up with parents who were always financially stressed and it sucked! I would get so angry because they did it to themselves & their children. At the end of the day, you can't afford this.
Anonymous wrote:This may sound odd or off putting but do you have a will, OP? My DH and I did not travel together and I would not travel as a single parent without my child until I had a will in place in case something happened to me. To me, it is more important to make sure I have guardianship set up for my children than traveling to see my mother without it. I know you don't have a lot of money but if you leave your daughter to see your mother, be sure to have steps in place in case something happens to you.
Anonymous wrote:This may sound odd or off putting but do you have a will, OP? My DH and I did not travel together and I would not travel as a single parent without my child until I had a will in place in case something happened to me. To me, it is more important to make sure I have guardianship set up for my children than traveling to see my mother without it. I know you don't have a lot of money but if you leave your daughter to see your mother, be sure to have steps in place in case something happens to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate to bring it up, but what would happen if she passes away? Do you need the few resources you have to travel for a funeral, or arrange her affairs?
Of course you'd rather spend the money to see her alive, but practically speaking...
I don't think you'll get much of a reasoned response here. Most of the people on this board seem to know nothing about what it's like to scrape by, with credit cards virtually maxed.
OP here. Exactly what I was thinking. If I go now, and she passes away, I won't be able to go back.
To answer some of the questions, it wouldn't be good for my well being to be away from my DD. Her dad and I are not together and he has never taken her for more than a night, never wanted to. And it would be good for everyone's morale and my mother's health to see her. Flights are around $375 for each of us. There is no one to drive us around, so car is necessary. We would stay somewhere cheap, like $80 a night, maybe I could get something for less online. Still, that's more than $1200, without food. I could probably save enough to get us there over the summer. But my heart wants to go NOW.
My brothers are paying rent for my aunt, where Mom used to live, so they're tapped out. Their apartment is not an option either, sadly, they're hoarders and it's disgusting. Thanks much for trying to think of options with me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate to bring it up, but what would happen if she passes away? Do you need the few resources you have to travel for a funeral, or arrange her affairs?
Of course you'd rather spend the money to see her alive, but practically speaking...
I don't think you'll get much of a reasoned response here. Most of the people on this board seem to know nothing about what it's like to scrape by, with credit cards virtually maxed.
OP here. Exactly what I was thinking. If I go now, and she passes away, I won't be able to go back.
To answer some of the questions, it wouldn't be good for my well being to be away from my DD. Her dad and I are not together and he has never taken her for more than a night, never wanted to. And it would be good for everyone's morale and my mother's health to see her. Flights are around $375 for each of us. There is no one to drive us around, so car is necessary. We would stay somewhere cheap, like $80 a night, maybe I could get something for less online. Still, that's more than $1200, without food. I could probably save enough to get us there over the summer. But my heart wants to go NOW.
My brothers are paying rent for my aunt, where Mom used to live, so they're tapped out. Their apartment is not an option either, sadly, they're hoarders and it's disgusting. Thanks much for trying to think of options with me.
Yes, it is much better for you to wait until she dies and then go back for the funeral instead of seeing her while she is alive.
Sorry to be snarky, but I was in this exact situation with my dad, and so was my brother. I chose to go see my dad and spent time with him while I could. My brother chose to go back after he passed away and deliver the eulogy and act like he was the "good son". I can sleep at night knowing that I did what was good for my dad. I hope you do right by your mother.
Maybe your brother knew that it would be important to get back to be there for your mom and to show proper respect for his dad at the funeral? Maybe he thought that he was doing what your dad would have wanted him to do? Everyone grieves differently, Op. And if he had other obligations maybe that was the best he could do at the time.
It was good that you were able to be there for your dad.
Please, spare us that tripe. You don't show proper respect to a person by being there to their funeral, you show proper respect and love to them by being there for them when they're alive. When they need you. When you can still share your life with them and they can still share their life with you. Not when they're a bunch of tissues beginning to rot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate to bring it up, but what would happen if she passes away? Do you need the few resources you have to travel for a funeral, or arrange her affairs?
Of course you'd rather spend the money to see her alive, but practically speaking...
I don't think you'll get much of a reasoned response here. Most of the people on this board seem to know nothing about what it's like to scrape by, with credit cards virtually maxed.
OP here. Exactly what I was thinking. If I go now, and she passes away, I won't be able to go back.
To answer some of the questions, it wouldn't be good for my well being to be away from my DD. Her dad and I are not together and he has never taken her for more than a night, never wanted to. And it would be good for everyone's morale and my mother's health to see her. Flights are around $375 for each of us. There is no one to drive us around, so car is necessary. We would stay somewhere cheap, like $80 a night, maybe I could get something for less online. Still, that's more than $1200, without food. I could probably save enough to get us there over the summer. But my heart wants to go NOW.
My brothers are paying rent for my aunt, where Mom used to live, so they're tapped out. Their apartment is not an option either, sadly, they're hoarders and it's disgusting. Thanks much for trying to think of options with me.
Yes, it is much better for you to wait until she dies and then go back for the funeral instead of seeing her while she is alive.
Sorry to be snarky, but I was in this exact situation with my dad, and so was my brother. I chose to go see my dad and spent time with him while I could. My brother chose to go back after he passed away and deliver the eulogy and act like he was the "good son". I can sleep at night knowing that I did what was good for my dad. I hope you do right by your mother.
Maybe your brother knew that it would be important to get back to be there for your mom and to show proper respect for his dad at the funeral? Maybe he thought that he was doing what your dad would have wanted him to do? Everyone grieves differently, Op. And if he had other obligations maybe that was the best he could do at the time.
It was good that you were able to be there for your dad.