Follow
Share

Please excuse the lack of punctuation but I’m using Siri to dictate this. First a little about me I’m 51 years old married and still have two kids at home. I am an elder at my local church and at one time we were very active in our church and community. I am self-employed in a very time demanding business. My wife also works full-time. The only sister I had died several years ago so I do not have the support of siblings. We are not very close to my dad's side of the family and most of them are older or have their own families to take care of. While my dad was in his bad health for the many years he was they rarely checked on him. My mom's side of the family is very small. She only has one remaining sibling and he has Alzheimer’s. The only local cousin that I have takes care of his dad and he’s also busy with work and kids. For a long time now I’ve been doing things for my parents which I do not regret. Up until my father died in April they were living at home by themselves and I would just run their errands take them to doctors appointments and check in on them. About six weeks before my father died he was in the hospital and in rehab and I realized very quickly that my mother was not able to stay by herself. My wife and I were taking turns staying with her some at night. After the death of my father we have to stay with her around the clock. We found someone to come in during the day so that we can work. My mother lost over half her income she still has a house payment, utilities, insurance, medicine, basically all the bills that my parents had before my father died. I have on a couple of occasions paid for several of her bills and someone to stay with her but I can no longer afford to do that. However my mother does not have enough coming in to pay someone full time. Her house needs a lot of work which we do not have the money to do. Any money that they have in savings we’re having to use for bills and it’s not going to last much longer. My dad had a life insurance policy but a lot of that went to pay for funeral and final Dr.’s bills. For the last few months now my life has basically consisted of waiting on the caregiver, going to work, working a full days work, coming here to relieve the caretaker, and taking care of my mom at her home, and staying away from my family. Our house is not large enough to bring her in and my kids do not want to move up here and I don’t feel that it’s right to uproot them. My loving wife is very good to help but I have told her this is not her responsibility. We no longer have a normal life. We have not gone anywhere but one or two times as a family together not even to church services. Between my business, my home, my mother’s home, and we actually help My mother-in-law with her grass and property, even though she lives with my sister-in-law. My business is starting to suffer, my marriage is starting to suffer, time with my kids is suffering, responsibilities at my home and other places are going undone. My youngest son is still in high school and he plays football and the season is about to start and I do not wanna miss all his games but we can’t afford for anyone to stay with her at night. One of the other issues that I have is before my dad died he told me that number one he did not want my mom going into a nursing home unless she just got to a point that she didn’t know anyone or anything and number two he said that he did not buy this house to give it to anyone other than his family. He said giving it to a nursing home or the state was not an option. I don’t have the heart to put my mother in a nursing home right now because she does know quite a bit even having dementia and Alzheimer’s. She has even told me that she did not want me to do like they did their mother and her sister and put them in the nursing home and throw them away. I am not the kind to say that I am depressed, but I am tired of not having a normal life. I find myself getting irritated more and my wife is getting more and more agitated. I need help.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
"...before my dad died he told me that number one he did not want my mom going into a nursing home unless she just got to a point that she didn’t know anyone or anything..."

Break this promise right now since your father didn't know what he was asking and you had no way of knowing what you were agreeing to. It's not possible and you are seeing it, feeling it but not wanting to believe it.

"...he said that he did not buy this house to give it to anyone other than his family he said giving it to a nursing home or the state was not an option."

It IS an option -- the best option -- for your mom to pay for the care she needs and the relief you and your family needs. What will happen as she continues to decline? And, unless the Lord takes her in her sleep, she will continue to decline and her needs will continue to increase and so will your stress and financial problems.

You are getting more irritated and agitated because you are approaching burnout.

Your first priority is your wife and family, not your mother. She can get good care by others.

People your parents' age have very bad memories of nursing homes, but the newer good ones are completely different. Maybe you should just go visit one on your own to see. You have options, they just feel difficult to make, but if you don't want to burn up your family and resources, you'll need to do it. Your mom will be ok. My MIL is in very nice facility in LTC on Medicaid. She gets great care. Your mom can, too.
Helpful Answer (18)
Report

Deathbed promises like your father had you agree to are just so wrong, it's mind boggling. To leave you with those words is something that no father should EVER do to a son, ever, under any circumstances. Your mother is burdened with dementia & Alzheimer's, meaning she IS going to require more care than you can possibly provide her. The home they own is precisely FOR her care and not to be 'saved' for an inheritance. Since your father is no longer living, he does not get a say in what 'options' exist for the home, or for your mother's care. The main thing is that you take care of your wife and children, and that you realize your mother needs care in Memory Care Assisted Living now; the house can be sold to finance her stay there, as my parents sold their home to finance their life in old age, b/c it's the right thing to do. "My" inheritance was not taken into consideration, only their care was uppermost on my mind when dad fell and broke his hip and I had to place both of them in Assisted Living. What other options did I have????

On his deathbed, my dad asked me to promise I'd 'take care of mom' and I did. I promised him I would, and I did. I managed her entire LIFE for her for the next 7 years, in Assisted Living, then Memory Care AL, as she continued to decline with dementia. I fulfilled my promise to dad AND I took excellent care of mom in the process. Win-win. I didn't lose my mind, my marriage, or my own home financing her care either, b/c I managed THEIR money properly.

I suggest you do the same for your mother and don't get bogged down with those 'promises' dad had you make. Promise YOURSELF and your wife & children that you will take care of them AND your mother by getting her placed in the managed care facility that works best for all of you. No guilt, no remorse, just an adult son doing right by his mother. "Throwing her away" doesn't for one moment describe what you're doing by placing her in a lovely Memory Care residence where teams of caregivers will work round the clock to see that she's cared for properly. Then you and your family can go visit her there and take her gifts and photos and spend quality time together instead of trying to finagle 1000 things as you're doing now.

Wishing you the best of luck taking a realistic look at what needs to happen here, for ALL of you.
Helpful Answer (12)
Report

I realize I'm echoing what everyone else here is saying, but...UGH! -- these deathbed promises extracted from vulnerable and grieving family members are abhorrent and so, so wrong.

I understand your dad saw that the house was a result of his hard work and not putting your mom into care was his vision of caring for your mom. Well, he wasn't correct. Certainly that hard work was done for her care, but it should be translated into getting the best care possible, and in your mom's case, memory care may well be the best care for her.

You and your wife are simply not equipped to do everything she needs. You are not to pay her bills -- that's what her savings and Dad's life insurance are for -- because you have your own retirement years to think about. There is nothing out there that says family members are magically qualified to be caregivers, and once you see how caregiving is done in a memory care facility, you'll understand why. It's done in teams around the clock, and that's simply not possible for you and your wife to do. You must realize that first and foremost. You are not Superman.

As others have said, nursing homes are nothing like they once were, and if Mom is "thrown away," that's because you put her in there and never go to see her again. I know that's not what you'd do. What you'd be doing is spending quality time with her, because someone else will be doing the hands-on work and you won't be frazzled anymore.

You must be realistic -- you also have your wife's parents to deal with, and this is multiplying your duties even more. It just isn't possible to be all things to all people, and your own family must come first. Give yourself permission to extract yourself from an unreasonable promise your father requested. He didn't know what he was talking about in the context of nursing homes, and honestly, he just didn't leave enough money to enable the kind of care at home that he wanted for your mom.

My own dad literally ran himself into the grave caring for my mother, and that's because it was what he wanted to do. He was honoring his vows which I respected and he never would have put her in a nursing home, so I gave him my help as I was able. However, when my dad was diagnosed with inoperable cancer and was going to die before my mother, he told me in no uncertain terms not to sacrifice my life and my family caring for my mother and arranged for her to have a place to live in a nearby nursing home. I lived an hour from my folks, and I would have had to move in with Mom, because my house couldn't be retrofitted to make it accessible to her. As it was, I lived with and cared for both of them for the six weeks my dad was sick, and I lost 10 pounds and never slept more than four hours a night. I was absolutely impossible for me to have kept that up for any period of time, and as it was, my mother -- the more sickly of my two parents -- lived another 2 1/2 years after my dad died.

Give yourself permission to make the best decision for your mother's care. Your dad was working with outdated information, as is your mother, and you have to do what's best for EVERYONE involved. Do not feel guilty because you don't follow your dad's request -- you're the one in charge of this family now, and it's time to make the tough decisions.

Good luck to you.
Helpful Answer (11)
Report

sgsellsit, so many times a parent will ask not to be placed in a nursing home, and the reason is because their own parent or grrandparents had been placed in one a century ago. Today's senior facilities are built more like hotels, with main dining rooms, movie rooms, etc.

When my Dad [who was in his 90's] decided it was time to sell his house and use the equity to pay for senior living, he loved the place so much he wished he would have moved in sooner. Even though Dad was shy, he still enjoyed being around people from his generation.

My Dad started out in the Independent Living section having a really nice apartment which had a full size kitchen, large living room, 2 bedrooms. Dad did option to eat his meals in the main restaurant style dining room. It was interesting seeing the women residents dressed to the nines at dinner time :)

Later when Dad's memory was starting to fail, he was moved to the Memory Care section of the senior facility, to what my Dad would call "his college dorm room". He was quite content being there.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

Look at it this way:

You don’t want to have mother in assisted living or anything like it because it would make YOU feel bad. You will have to set that aside.

What’s best for her is 24/7 care and access to medical personnel any time she needs it. You said you can’t keep up with all her needs and demands, and you’re right. No one can! You cannot give her the care she needs anymore, and that is not your fault.

So if you can’t stay with her, and you would feel like a bad person if you placed her… your only option is to hire 24/7 in home care. And that isn’t cheap.

Mom needs placement. There are thousands of elders in assisted living that have all their mental faculties.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

You said "My mom after retirement came to work for me for years and when things were bad would not accept pay. Not to mention I did not leave home until I married at 26. I owe my parents more than most." As a mother who loves being around my kids I would do the same for them, and they would not owe me. It would be a joy to spend those times with them. All families are different and what you describe would not work for everyone but I think it's lovely.

You care very much about the promise you made to your dad, and if he was a kind and loving dad then he meant well. However, like my dad, he was not all knowing and all seeing, and you've promised something that is not longer the right thing to do. Would he have asked for that promise if he knew it meant huge damage to your health and marriage? Would he have asked if he knew he was asking for a worse life for your mom? You can honor the spirit of your promise by making the best decision for the people he loved, which is both you and your mother.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

I honestly felt compelled to sign up for aging care after reading your post. I am so sorry you are going through this. I can relate all too well. I was a person that always said I would never put my mom in a home. I thought that was a disgrace and that I could manage alone. I'm 31 years old, and my mom is 73. She suffered a hemorrhagic stroke, amongst other things, including most recently small lung cell cancer. When she first got sick, she went to an SNF, where I got a taste of nursing homes to complete rehab, but due to covid, I couldn't really see the facility or be involved as much as I wanted to be. Sorry I completely got sidetracked by relaying my story. What I mean to say in your specific situation is that you have 2 options. You can try to have your mom apply for long-term managed care through Medicaid if she is eligible, but honestly, if you are needing round-the-clock care and can't afford it, you may want to consider a nursing home. I recently came to this decision myself. There are options where you can get 24hr in-home care, but it is proving to be very difficult to obtain and may take a very long time. I expect my first child in October, and I know I can't manage to care for my mom, who also needs around-the-clock care. The most we were ever able to get was 12hrs, which still wasn't enough, and I would either have to go to where she lives to stay at night, or I was draining my pockets trying to find people to care for her outside the 12 hrs. It's just unsustainable. I know nursing homes have a bad rep (I still don't feel 100 percent comfortable with my decision), but I do not believe caregiving stops once your loved one is in a home. Make sure you visit and call them and get familiar and friendly with the workers there so you know your mom is in good hands and so they also know that you are an involved child. Since your mom still seems to have some wits about her, try having the conversation with her. I hope this helps!
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

The posters on this forum have all lived through your situation. The problem is that there aren’t many options to solve your problem.

Someone can move in with Mom. But it can’t be one of your family on a permanent basis, obviously. And hiring someone to live at Mom’s house can be expensive, plus you have to vet them thoroughly.

You don’t have room for Mom to move in with you, so that is not an option.

You can’t keep going the way you’ve been going, because your life is falling apart. Your family must come first. Your children absolutely must come first. They are more your responsibility than your Mother is.

The final option is to move Mom somewhere else. Make sure it is a facility that accepts Medicaid for later. The best option may be to put the house up for sale now, not down the road. Then use the proceeds to pay for Mom’s room. When she is almost out of funds, have the facility help you apply for Medicaid. They will then just switch her from Private Pay to Medicaid. They will use her social security as part of the payment, she will get to keep a small amount.

It sounds like you are at a breaking point where you have to do something. No matter what anyone has said in the past, things can’t stay as they are and her house will be needed to pay for future medical costs. Everyone’s wishes can’t change those facts. I hope you get some relief soon.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report
KatLaw19 Jul 2022
Very sound advice.
(1)
Report
It seems your mother can not continue to live alone. If she can not move into your home, then she must move somewhere else with others. There is a process to finding a "good fit" for your mother and her needs:

1 - Get a thorough evaluation from a doctor. Ask the doctor to check her over for all diseases - chronic and acute - so that she is getting all the care she needs. Ask the doctor to evaluate her cognition and recommend the type of home she needs: assisted living, skilled nursing care, or memory care. The doctor's recommendation will guide your next steps.

2 - Based on your mom's needs, start looking for places that she can move to that are near your home. Look online at first and then narrow the choices down to 3-5 places. Since money is tight, consider places that will accept Medicare/Medicaid.

3 - Do telephone interviews and set up in-person "visits." When you have arrived at about 3-ish good choices, take mom for visits in person. Make arrangements for her to do "respite" in a couple of places- a short stay - so you and your wife can get a long-needed break.

4 - When you have decided on the place(s), get mom onto their waiting list. Some waits are very short; others not so much. When she is accepted, help her pack and move in. Her "new home" will provide her with opportunities to make friends, do fun things, and allow you to visit frequently - without the burnout you are suffering from.

5 - Sell the house and use the money to pay for mom's care. Houses, furniture, land... are all "stuff" that are to be used to sustain us, not be a burden.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

In a nutshell, placing your mom in memory care IS taking care of her.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

See All Answers
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter