Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It boggles my mind that people want to protect their parents' assets and condemn them to a Medicaid nursing home (if they qualify) rather than use their assets to have a decent end of life.
I get someone being forced into a Medicaid nursing home if they have no money, but that kids want to preserve the money for themselves truly astounds me at the selfishness.
I think all LTC/skilled nursing facilities are sad and depressing so it doesn’t matter much.
This is simply not true. If you can afford to pay for skilled nursing, they can be much better than a Medicaid bed.
Moreover, Medicaid is for poor elderly. Not elderly whose kids disperse their parents five years out from potential death.
You are awful.
A better option is of course to receive caregiver hours from the state (some states have those age in place options).
My parents don’t have any money anyway, but it baffles me how there is no generational wealth concept anymore. Everything is spent on eldercare or blown in casinos or on cruises.
Anonymous wrote:I think this current elderly generation is going to shape how all of us plan for our own eventual demise. I will never put my kids through this, I’ll move somewhere suitable while I’m still able to enjoy all the offerings those places charge for. For people who really didn’t seem to want to be a burden earlier in their lives to be so selfish as they age is just mind boggling.
I know someone out there is going to call me an ungrateful jerk who hates their parents or something similar but I’m living in the front lines and have been for almost ten years. I can feel what I feel about the situation.
Anonymous wrote:Same issue here. My parents have lived in the same house for 50+ years and don’t have any plans to move. They’ve talked about it over the years (threatening to move over politics usually saying “we need to wait and see what happens with the governors race,” stuff like that). But it was all talk. Now it’s just inertia. They’ve never known anything else nor have had any big dreams. They still brag about the good school district my siblings and I went to as if they still have kids there— it’s been 30 years since the last one of us graduated. I do wonder if they stay there because they live in the past.
OP, do you think they stay because they genuinely like the house and memories or they just literally don’t know what else to do with themselves? In either situation they probably won’t move into life makes them move. I wish mine would’ve moved years ago— visiting is a nightmare because of how far they are from the airport, traffic, cost of renting a car and lack of much to do. They should let a family with kids benefit from the schools but for whatever reason, they’re staying put.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:pp again. I ask re: siblings because you join forces and over time, you make it happen. If several known-to-be-reasonble adult children all agree, "Mom do you like this place or this other place?"
All the research that was needed has been done. It's not endless talking. You recognize, that due to the elder's age and condition, you (singular or plural), are now the competent adult in the room and are entirely responsible for their safety, making all decision the best you can.
NP here. My mom would say to us “Thank you all for doing the research. I’ll think about it.” When asked about it later, she’d say “I’m still thinking about it.”
Anonymous wrote:pp again. I ask re: siblings because you join forces and over time, you make it happen. If several known-to-be-reasonble adult children all agree, "Mom do you like this place or this other place?"
All the research that was needed has been done. It's not endless talking. You recognize, that due to the elder's age and condition, you (singular or plural), are now the competent adult in the room and are entirely responsible for their safety, making all decision the best you can.
Anonymous wrote:I have a similar situation, and it's very difficult. Between all the stairs Mom can't navigate safely, and the broken furniture she insists are treasures, and the piles of books and magazines and other belongings that gets furious if someone moves, the situation is absolutely unsafe. It's also unsanitary.
If we had a competence hearing, I'm not sure she'd be found to be competent. But she 100% believes she is. So what to do?
(No, like actually: what should I do?)