So my dad has pushed me to the limit. I can't do it anymore. Going to leave and set him up with some wellness checks and elder services help. It has to be free or he won't sign-up for anything. But I can't do it anymore. He doesn't believe or trust me. His meanness and dementia has gotten the best of me and I can't take it.
What did other people do? Several have written what they have done. Some people notify the authorities and walk away until the senior ends up in hospital from a fall or such and then the system says he cannot live alone and you work with the staff to get him the care he needs whether he likes it or not. That may mean putting him in a facility or laying down the condition to him that if he wants to go home he has to accept help. No one is saying that these times of transition are easy. They are not. And the caregiver often has to move from being in a child-parent relationship or an adult-adult relationship to being in a parent-child relationship where the caregiver is the parent, and the parent is the child because the parent can no longer look after themselves. You seem to be having trouble with that.
ADVERTISEMENT
You need to go to his bank and ask to see whoever deals with this kind of situation. Bring with you the POA document and anything you have in writing about him being incompetent. Discuss with the bank personnel how best to deal with it, If you have POA and he is officially incompetent, you are in charge of his accounts. Again go to the professionals involved.
I took the POA document to my mothers bank and spoke with an accounts manager there which was who I was referred to when I called and explained the situation. She told me what they could and could not do and what I could and could not do. Tell them the medical information - that he cannot live alone and needs help and you need to use his money to hire help for him and he is resisting.
In your position, I would involve dad in hiring helpers (a girl to do the laundry and cook)--put it into whatever terms he can wrap his brain around. Invite the neighbors to meet the help. Show the neighbors your paperwork and explain what the new setup is. Get phone numbers from them and give them yours. Encourage them to let you know if there's a problem.
For the state to take over, you would need to resign from being DPOA and medical proxy. That like Emjo23 wrote this means it would be wise to check with the local agencies and lawyer about resigning your DPOA and medical proxy because you are just not in a position to do these things and wish for the state to take over. I hope that I have added some clarity to this matter and not confused things more.
I guess what I have been trying to say is that it is time to get professionals involved.
My mother was getting more and more paranoid in her ALF. A community mental health team had been assigned to visit her after a hospitalization, and they did "casual" assessments and those together with input from me and her case worker caused them to make the decision to hospitalize her in a geriatric psychiatric hospital where she still is, awaiting placement in a mental heath facility. She wanted to move to another ALF as hers was not treating her right, in her view. It would not have solved anything. She is now on an antipsychotic and much calmer and easier to get along with. She refused to take the antipsychotic before, but they worked with her - in the safe environment of the hospital - and she has agreed to it now. She is very stubborn too and has Borderline Personality Disorder which means she is a control freak and an angry person. The last couple of years have been particularly hard with the onset of dementia and paranoia. These times of transition often are, but I think we are seeing the light at the end of the tunnel now. I did nothing about her finances despite a few errors on her part until she sent me her cheque books and basically told me to take over, She would have fought me tooth and nail otherwise. Then I went to her bank. I am a distance caregiver. I am 5 hrs drive away from my mother, and made trips down to meet with the bank, to see the psychiatrist who was part of the community mental health team, to meet with the staff at the psychiatric hospital etc. She actually has not been declared incompetent other than in the area of making health decisions for herself, but I was urged by her lawyer to step in when I saw the errors she was making with her money. Fortunately they were small sums, but showed her increasing inability to manage her money.
Re the financial side of things, if he is not having trouble managing his finances (I can't remember from your other thread) then I don't see any need for you to become involved at this point. Misplacing cash, forgetting PIN numbers is often a first warning sign of dementia.You need to read your documents to see what your responsibilities are. If you intend to keep being the POA it would also be wise to check with one of the local agencies and/or lawyer already mentioned what your responsibilities are and if you can get into trouble for walking away. If you intend to resign from being POA etc. then it would be good to check with them about any implications for you. If he is incompetent and there is no one who is appointed POA then believe the job falls to the state. You will notice that I would things "I believe", "may" and so on. I am in Canada and it works a little differently here though there are similarities
I have been waiting for you to post that you had spoken to the local Agency for Aging, or local APS and they told you .....this or that. All we can do here is give you pointers to follow up. Things can differ even from one state to another.
Hope some of this helps. I can only stress that you get the professionals involved. Good luck
You can google regarding getting a state appointed guardian and/or check with your lawyer who should know. Good luck. It is a very difficult situation.
I don't know the steps to do this but it is possible for the state to appoint a guardian for him since he is incompetent, in need and no one is in a position to step up to become a guardian. I know this takes place, but I don't know how it gets done.
I'm sure someone here must know how that gets done.
overwhelm - if your mother and stepdad refuse respite care that is their choice. Don't make it your problem. Make a plan and stick to it despite their emotional blackmail. Whatever help they need does not have to come from you. They both are competent and, like sea's dad, can make decisions about their own care. You are not responsible for everything.
Many here who did not have good parenting are trying to finally obtain that from their aging and often demented parent. You think - consciously or otherwise - that if you do enough of the right things finally they will change. Unfortunately they don't change and they can get much worse. He is who he is - defiant, selfish, mean, and probably getting worse. I am sure that being there is taking a toll on you. Are you hoping that your inheritance will keep you afloat as you age? If he has assets and needs to go into a facility, they can eat up those assets pretty quickly.
Please look ahead for you and for what is likely to happen to your dad. I don't think it is wise for anyone to give up working unless them themselves have enough assets to survive on for the rest of their lives. He may go quickly or he may linger. No one knows at this point. Please look after your own interests. You lost everything once before - do you want to do that again?