Since my father has been in the nursing home, we have now discovered from his doctor he will never be able to go home and live by himself. We live in a city that has no live-in nurse time program. he cannot use the at home health care for he has had many TIA's and they cannot be there all the time. So now we are forced to sell his home and everything in it-minus the items that have special memories. I am the POA, so of course all this is dumped on me which i have no problems with. I just feel so guilty for selling his things-i feel i am getting rid of his life long belongings-i feel horrible, i feel like i am betraying him. I know they are nothing he will ever use again but they were still "his". He has dementia, he knows we have to sell his home, but its my guilt that is eating me up inside. don't know how to feel. :(
You need to realize that your Dad's life and the love he has for you is not tied up in those possessions. Try to dispose of that pain and guilt you are feeling. You are doing him a wonderful service by being his POA and taking care of all of his final wishes and the details to get him settled into his nursing home. You are actually giving him a very large GIFT by doing this for him.
I have no idea what the rules and regulations are within a nursing home but IF he is able to have any of his possessions in his room, that might prove to be somewhat comforting to him and to you. If pictures or anything else are allowed I would see if I could somewhat decorate his room so when he is awake he will still be able to see his things.
My second thought would be to put his belongings in storage and wait until he passes and then ask your siblings if any of them would care to go through his possessions with you and take something to remember him by. You may think that they don't want anything of his but you would be surprised....
In a persons Trust are papers that the Trust holder can fill out to give away particular items to specific individuals. I too am POA and I asked my siblings if they wanted anything specific to please give me a list so I could assist Mom with making out the forms and placing them in her Trust. No one did anything! My younger sister mentioned that her daughter wanted an old cookie tin that sits on top of Mom's refrigerator that she puts her cookies in. It is not beautiful or especially useful but my niece associates it with her grandparents and she wants it. My older sister, when she heard about it, became upset and stated, "There was going to be a fight over that tin!" That statement surprised me because I had no idea anyone else wanted it in the family.
Last week, my younger sister saw Mom putting her cookie tin away and she asked Mom to please make out one of these forms giving the cookie tin to her daughter and Mom agreed to it! I have not mentioned this to my older sister because honestly, I don't want the argument. Everyone had the opportunity to ask for it and only one person did, so who's fault is it? You just never know what may be in a household that means a lot to one person.
Your guilt is not a useful emotion to have holding you down at this moment. We can all say, "Oh don't feel guilty" but the truth is this is something you have to deal with and get past. You are trying to handle a lot of issues alone and I am sure you are stressed. Please give yourself a break and do try and put a spin on it, realizing that you are indeed giving your Dad a gift by being there for him and handling his affairs.
God Bless You All!
Maybe stay all night. If you are not in a rush then hang on to it for a while. When you are ready have someone else sell it . You take your favorite things. Any thing you are not sure about put them in a storage unit. Good luck.
Maybe stay all night. If you are not in a rush then hang on to it for a while. When you are ready have someone else sell it . You take your favorite things. Any thing you are not sure about put them in a storage unit. Good luck.
Hugs,
Anksana-Moon
You are doing the right thing, the necessary thing, and you're doing it the right way. You can't help but have it make your heart ache to do it though. Once its done, I hope you have lots of time to enjoy with your Dad.
1) Be glad that your father is still alive and you don't have to be mourning his death as well as going through his possessions.
2) Take the time to savor the memories that the items bring back. Even if your father will not get the pleasure of looking at them again, he'd be happy for you to relive old times. Your emotions about the items give validation to your good family memories. Then, it's time to get rid of the things you've decided not to keep. Estate sale, auction, theater departments, charity, recycling - it all works.
3) Take pictures of everything - rooms, individual items, books, etc. I took pictures after the estate sale was set up, too. It still pains me to look at them, and I don't yet, but I like knowing I have the pictures.
4) Going through the 4 generations of things in Mom's house was truly the hardest thing I've ever done. I still think about the estate sale every day. But though it's sometimes mentally hard for me to move on (time DID help) I certainly moved on in my life. My time was not dominated by stringing the process along. In the end, it was good to get it done. Now I can concentrate on Mom instead of her things.
Good luck.
My husband died in late 2008, and I'm just starting to sell and/or give away his precious things. I'm keeping everything of his that really mattered, or has special value to the family. His room is still the way he left it on that ride to the ER, not knowing he'd never return.
What's your hurry?
My way of honoring their lives and their possessions was to go through everything, touch everything, know what I was dealing with, and make an informed decision item by item. If the economy had been better, I might have taken the time to try to sell some of her things but, that not being the case, I decided to offer certain things to people that had been meaningful to my mom, and they to her, so I could feel that her special and favorite things found a good home. Although I certainly did have to throw out an accumulation of a lot of unimportant things (like junque we all have), what was important to me was that items I knew she really loved, enjoyed or were important to her did not get discarded out of hand or scooped up by some impersonal clutter or removal service.
I am disabled so choosing to do this was hard work for me. I could certainly understand that due to a disability, other family needs or work pressures, this choice may not be possible for everyone. The bottom line is, you have to do what you have to do. If your elder is still alive, as mine wasn't, you may be more pressed for time than I was and other choices would be necessary. You have to console yourself in all cases that you're doing the best you can. That's all anyone should expect from you, or you should expect from yourself.
Dad knows we need to sell the house, but is not able to do it himself. He can not emotionally or logically make the decisions that are required to clean it out.
Perhaps this will help you move past the guilt. Your "job" is to take care your dad. Everything you do must be in his best interest. Currently, he NEEDS the house settled. Thus, as difficult as it is.. you MUST do this FOR him even if he doesn't understand why you are doing it. Even if he becomes sad because of it.
Sometimes parents must make painful decisions when raising their kids. This time, you must make a painful decision to take care of your dad.
All that being said, I'm going to take the chicken way out. I've rented a storage unit and I'm going to move the majority of his stuff in there for now. This way I can clean the house and sell it.
If dad should happen suddenly remember something he wants, I'll be able to say it is safe. I know I could lie to him, but I'm not that good at it (although I'm learning).
My BIL forced my MIL to sell everything in an estate sale and rushed her into a nursing home shortly after my FIL died. She had none of her stuff left and it was very sad. The proceeds were not much, in the end, and she really did have some nice things. Antiques aren't fetching lots these days and double beds well, no body wants. I am NOT a hoarder - the exact opposite! So I do put things into perspective about 'it is just 'stuff', after all'. But storage units are pretty cheap and if you need to buy some time before divesting of all his belongings, I see nothing wrong with that. If you need counseling to deal with guilt, then get it and once you are feeling a little more settled, begin to get rid of things.
It's quite likely this is harder on you than on your dad. That's frequently the case. You are seeing items that have had a place in your life as well as your dad's. You may want to take pictures of many items just for memory's sake. It the whole process is too hard, you can hire professionals who will work with you or even do it all if you'd rather not be there. Try to remember that no matter how long your dad had these things, they are things, and your dad's care now is the most important part of his life. My hear aches for you, because I know it's hard. But you'll get through it.
Carol