Since finances are a very personal issue, I did feel a warm glow because my mom had overcome her independent spirit and admitted the problem to me. I offered to help...offered, didn't just take over! Armed with my calculator, I assured her it would just take a few minutes to straighten out. But things were so muddled, that I got bogged down in a bigger mess than I expected.
Mom didn't have the obvious signs of trouble: piled up mail, bouncing checks, forgetfulness, unpaid bills or calls from creditors. I made sure her taxes were on target and had automated payments for utilities. She didn't have a computer so she couldn't get in trouble on-line. Thank goodness she watched TV Land and the Game Show Network. Whereas, one of my clients found 21 sets of sheets and comforters in her mother's basement – all ordered from a television shopping channel!
Yet, I discovered that she had mounting credit card debt due to mail order purchases and charging her medications and charitable donations. She admitted that she bought gifts for the family and she believed there was a better chance of winning the various sweepstakes and drawings advertised in the junk mail flyers if she bought something. She bought lottery tickets so she could leave us a legacy.
She gave cash gifts to her cleaning lady on top of her hourly charges, "because she is such a nice girl." Fortunately she had not given her anything more valuable, although a piece of keepsake jewelry disappeared mysteriously during that time.
Luckily, mom had learned to hang up on telemarketers or tell them "She's not home" when they asked for her by name! According to the Federal Trade Commission, 80 percent of the victims of telemarketing scams are over age 65, especially those who live alone and look forward to the phone ringing.