Alcoholic. She is getting demented, angry if she doesn't get her way and very mean to her daughters. Is there anyway we can get the situation under control? She hangs up on us or calls and tells us to do something that she thinks she is having a severe health problem but yet when one of us go there to help she is dressed to the nines and smiling saying it all passed. Years of alcohol has definetly affected her mind but if a doctor tells her to quit drinking she doesn't go back to him. She recently inherited some money thru my step-sister who passed away and Mom is spending it like water. She lives in a Senior Apartment Place and has no other money for her future. All advice with this situation would be helpful.
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What you choose, depends on what you feel comfortable with.
Only you and your sibs can figure what works best for all of you sibs--what Mom thinks is kind of a moot point now; she's shown financial irresponsibility, and is elderly, frail, and will be in need of various helps, sooner or later. She may also have shown bad behaviors which could get in the way of placing her in a facility when needed.
With our family, Unfortunately, when I tried to rally my sibs to work together to take care of Mom's needs in a productive way, none of them were capable of working together. #2 said "just let her spend it, because she's lived on nothing for most of her life" [never mind she'd burned through at least 3 nice inheritances, then the proceeds from selling her house]. #'s 3 and 5 never picked up their registered letter to even read it. #3 chose to do what they called "an intervention", planning the whole long-distance removal of Mom from our place as a dash-and-grab fast trip, without telling me anything until they arrived. It was a mess, and extremely painful, to see our family being torn to bits, instigated by Mom--the others didn't even recognize that she was doing that, and they sure didn't recognize Mom triggered them to help do it.
Mom's fav. thing is shopping 2nd hand stores and hoarding--she feels safe sitting in piles of junk. IDK if sib #3 is allowing that to happen or not...that sib is really against hoarding..so gotta think maybe, that one might be keeping stuff from piling up.
Mom has not allowed ANY of us to have a DPOA. She hand-wrote a temporary one good for a year, once. But, she thinks she can handle stuff...except she cannot even manage her own bills, and hasn't been able to for many years.
IF any of us is going to get Guardianship, or a DPOA, sib #3 is likely it, since Mom went there. But it's not likely.
I almost got her to set up death arrangements...found an option she was good with--it donated her body to science research, and has a free cremation. But...now she's with Sib #3, all that could change, even though Mom signed the documents complete with notary.
She can still change her mind, because the documents weren't sent to that company in Portland, OR.
You need to get certain legal documents in order.
HOW you do that, is up to you.
==You can get a Doc to diagnose her with alcoholic dementia, or what ever is pertinent to your Mom's conditions.
==Get a DPOA, and get on with setting up arrangements.
==Controlling her spending is critical...by throwing away her money, it means Medicaid and Welfare will make her Wait, until they figure she would have spent down her money to take care of her needs...that can be a few years or more.
==Shut down credit cards, and get balances either rapid off, or understand family will have to pay taxes on the outstanding balances as "income" from her estate.
==Block her using a bank account or accessing her savings. Those funds need to go towards her upkeep and living expenses for housing, medicine, etc. maintenance.
==Set her up with a modest allowance....pocket change she can spend on things like getting her hair done, or going out to lunch.
Thing is, when an elder is being irresponsible, the kids become the defacto parents.
You love her enough to protect her from herself, to prevent her becoming a street-person and dying in a ditch.
If the person refuses to allow the legalities to be taken care of properly and in a timely way, sometimes it might be wise to force the issue. That usually always has to start with a Doc declaring the person incompetent to manage their affairs...then, with some help/guidance from Social Services, perhaps, it can get done.
Please don't allow her to break you and your siblings apart.
Some elders are [especially alcoholic and/or mentally ill ones] very good at that game; once broken, it's real hard to put the pieces back together, because trust is broken along with family ties.
She can't help herself, at this point in the game.
Sometimes it's necessary to take over that responsibility for them.
You all need to protect yourselves from her behaviors, and, for whatever you are doing for caregiving.
That usually requires keeping very good records of daily activities and verbal exchanges with Mom--a calendar or diary can be kept by all of you. This could help your cause.
Look all around this site; there are very good helps listed, questions answered.
We're all here for each other to help each other through the caregiving adventure. Many of us have been through similar to what you describe. Please keep up posted. You are not alone!
My Mom is 86 years old. Very manipulative and yes sick all the time. She takes care of her bathing/ makeup, etc. But loves to drink wine and then she gets all mixed up with her meds. It's a mess.
Right now she is not talking to one out of 4 of my sisters because she is mad she can't get her way. She tells them she is going to come visits me at Christmas time but she has never said anything to me about it.
She lives in a dream world and spends her money on expensive clothes, household knick knacks, shoes, purses. All things she doesn't need because she's had things like this all her life. Her apartment is getting so full of stuff that she won't go thru so she probably has double or triple of the same sort of things.
I don't live in the same state but I have 4 sisters who are trying to help her and they keep me up to date. As far as I know for Christmas she will probably stay home and drink her wine all day.
As for the money--it's like has been stated. Depends on her age. My 95-year old Aunt is currently living with me. In 2006, after her husband had died and selling her home, had in the neighborhood of $250,000. No children. Just a cousin in the another city, myself and my parents (dad was her brother). She spent the money as if it were going to burn a whole in her pocket. She bought some nice presents but she wasted most of it on JUNK...CRAP...from catalogs. Anytime we said anything to her about keeping some money aside she flat out said it was none of our damn business. It was her money. By 2012, my Dad had passed, she had moved in with my Mom based on an agreement that she would keep money aside to take care of herself cause my Mom could not. She had begun having medical problems, had virtually no money left. So when my Mom passed, she moved to my cousins in Mobile. That was when we learned about money and Medicaid and nursing homes, etc.
Because she had wasted all that money, she could not qualify for Medicaid. But I don't think she cared if someone had to care for her because she was determined to stay "home" and not go to a facility. When my cousin's wife passed, the task of caring for my Aunt has shifted to me. I love her but anytime her spending from the past comes up she just says it doesn't matter cause she wants to stay home. If your Mom is an alcoholic, there is nothing you can do about her spending. If your Mom isn't an alcoholic, there is nothing you can do about her spending. And my guess is she's expecting that you and your siblings will take care of her so why save the money. Take the legal route and save yourself some future difficulties and heart ache. Good luck.