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I have become increasingly dissatisfied with my job situation. I have been working at my job for nearly 20 years, am well paid, have excellent benefits and some flexibility with scheduling, as my supervisor understands that I am sole caregiver for my mom with dementia. I am 59, so not quite old enough to retire yet. I wish I was because I just can't stand my job anymore for reasons I won't go into. I also have zero time to actually search for and apply for new jobs because in my spare time I am caring for my mom.



Lately I have started to think that I could quit my job next year, take some time off (have enough saved to live job-free for about 2 years) and have enough time to do a proper job search. Getting paid to take care of mom is my worst case scenario, in case I can't find a job that I enjoy. We would of course consult an elder law attorney, draw up a contract, etc because I am mindful of the possibility that mom may some day need to apply for Medicaid.



She is 82, has mild dementia and will probably live for many more years as she is in generally good health. She currently has 3 caregivers, one who works 5 hours a week, another who works 15 hours a week and a third who works 25 hours a week (two overnights). I would replace the ones who work a total of 20 hours a week and of course pay myself for things that I have been doing for her without pay.



Curious if any of you have done this, what it was like, what the advantages/disadvantages were ... Again it's a worst case scenario situation for me. My preference is to leave the job where I am dissatisfied and eventually find something more enjoyable for the last 6-11 years of working life that I have left.

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I think what you are considering is a viable option as long as you go into it properly. You have gotten some good advice (Myownlife) and some advice from many who just absolutely missed the point of your post. I am caring for my mother who has dementia. She is still able to live in her home for now, but will have to be placed in a facility when she cannot live alone any more. Living with any of her children is not an option. My sister and I alternate days going to mom's house, and because of a hospital stay for my sister recently, her daughter, my niece, takes some of my sister's days, but this still means every other day for me. All 3 of us are getting paid from mom's funds for the care we give. We have all signed contracts, we keep time sheets, keep all receipts for anything bought for mom.

I am her POA, so I pay the bills, keep track of all of her financial and health necessities. I log in these hours and get paid for it, and why not? If we hired someone, they would get paid. If she lives long enough and the money runs out, we have all the documentation needed for Medicaid.

When I consulted an elder care attorney a few years ago, I had already researched for the contracts, I made up my own timesheet using Excel, and was keeping the records of everything. The attorney looked it over and said it was just fine and would satisfy Medicaid requirements. The timesheets I found on the internet were just too complicated. Your mom is already paying for some care, so you know what it costs. The attorney advised us to set our rate a little lower than the rate charged by caregiver businesses, but we charge more than what those businesses pay their employees, it's in the middle. You want to make sure it's not too high for eventual Medicaid filing, but high enough for you to have to pay the taxes because mom has to file a 1099 for you (which you will have to do for her).

You mentioned in a reply that you have been giving more thought to cutting back your hours to take on more care of your mom. I can see you are good at brainstorming, but it's also nice to get feedback from those of us who have traveled this path.
I think you already know most of this, as indicated in your post. There are even available allowances for respite care for the caregivers to take time off. We haven't done this yet. It can be so mind-numbing caring for an adult like this. I was a licensed daycare provider for many years, it was a lot of work, but also so rewarding watching the kids grow and learn. The caretaking of an elder is very difficult. Cleaning up a poop mess from an adult is not the same as changing a baby diaper. Giving a baby a bath is way different than having your mother grit her teeth and scream "I hate you" because you try to get her to take a shower.

Good luck, this aging care is tough stuff, but somebody has to do, so why not get paid for it.
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I think you answered your own question the best, caregiving is the worst case scenario, probably best to look for another job, can you imagine yourself staying at this job for 6 or even 2- 3 years?
I was in the same situation, i left good job, because stress was worse, no regrets.
Now, being caregiver, there is stress, but I have some control and choices.
Maybe work part time or take some time for yourself as you have flexibility. If you decide to become caregiver, make sure your pay is as high as possible, it is not taking advantage, it is one job that is under appreciated.
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I was in your shoes December of 1999. I quit my Customer Service Rep. job January of 2000 after 26 & 3/4 years.
My Mother was ailing and I was having issues at work...

There months later I had an ephiany that I committed the worst mistake of my life... By September of 2000, things quieted down and life wasn't as chaotic..

My Mother died October 2002 and in those 5 years afterwards I grieved something awful but with our Lord and Blessed Lady's help I was able to accept my Brother's death in November 2007.. Life was difficult after my Mother's death as I didn't return to work...

Tall to Family before you make such a commitment..

Good Luck...
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If your mom qualifies for Medicade they have a program called “In Home Supportive Services”. This would require a separate application from the Medicade application.

They will send someone to the home and determine what she may need and how many hours she qualifies for. Then the state pays the care giver. Services provided are light housekeeping, meal prep, etc. Family members are eligible to be paid care givers. I am a provider for my developmentally BIL. As a provider you would have to submit an application, background check, fingerprints, etc.

Bear in mind that it is eventually TOO MUCH WORK for one person no matter who is getting paid to do it.

Consult with an elder care attorney as you mentioned. Start keeping receipts for EVERYTHING. Keep ALL copies of every receipt and and ALL the pages of every bill (even if page is virtually blank), bank statements, etc. If the bill say 1 of 4, etc, be sure you have all pages. Medicade will want them ALL.

I tell you this from Medicade processes we went through for my BIL and mother.

Be sure you have copies of birth certificates, death certificates (fathers?), copies of any trust, bank statements, POAs, house titles, etc. Once again this comes from experience.

My moms care taking journey was a LONG difficult experience. Some of the paperwork processes were horrendous and complicated by Covid.

If you decide to be your moms caregiver check with your local Council on Aging for respite services. You’ll need it.

Good luck.
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If you are looking to stay in your field or parlay your experience in a related job, before quitting your current position you should speak to head hunters/employment agencies that focus on your industry for their professional opinion relative to your job prospects today and if you take some time off. You should also find some time to apply for some jobs and go one some interviews before you quit your current job. These steps should give you some insights to finalize a plan. If you quit without another position, you will most likely become the fallback caretaker for your mother when the other aides quit, cant make it, etc. and then you may never get back into the workforce and your role caring for your mother may become more expansive than you ever planned.
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Well paid
Excellent Benefits
Flexibility in scheduling

Most people would give anything for that kind of career.

Keep your job. I don't know how to put this politely... but Mom will croak sooner rather than later, and if you've given up your job, you'll be left with nothing
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iamexhausted: It is not advisable to cease your employment. At my last place of employment of over thirty years, it was not a piece of cake, oftentimes working extraordinarily long hours under poor supervision, but I stayed the course.
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Don't do it! It's never worth it. You'll get a little money, but have no life if your own. Don't do it.
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Don’t do it.
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The grass always looks greener on the other side of the fence! Consider your future pension when you’d be shortening it by quitting the workforce. Being a 24/7 caregiver will leave you trapped and you’ll regret it. Then, the job you once hated will start to look good compared to your new caregiver job. Be careful.
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Let me take a wild guess on your disaffection with your job. The young workforce, their expectations and what they are willing to give??? If so you might be better off stepping down from management and be a worker bee and show them how it used to be, keeping your medical benefits and adding to your retirement vehicle.
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iamexhausted May 2022
Good guess but wrong. There are no youngsters at my job. The youngest is 46. I am also not in management and would not want to be. The problem is my boss who is at retirement age but refuses to retire and just sits around taking up space and blocking any attempts at interesting or worthwhile projects. The workplace has become a stagnant pool of mediocrity and everyone just accepts it, except me because I have standards and actually believe in what I do. The real solution for my problem would be for this person to finally retire (and no, I would not want his job, but I think almost anyone else would be better at it). I hate to be in a position where I am actually wishing someone would get sick and die.
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You could look into a program called IRIS or something similar in your state. They help the elderly and disabled to stay in their home and provide them the income they need as well as the care they need to do so. This will help her to get things she needs in the home and it would also give her the ability to hire anyone she wants to be her caregiver(s). That includes family! It is a wonderful option. Family is what matters most and those you love and trust to be there for them when they need you most.
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Debstarr53 May 2022
Looks like you missed the point. OP is wondering if SHE should become the caregiver for pay because SHE the OP does not like her current job.
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I haven't read all of the answers, but after seeing a number of them, I don't see any mentioning that if your mother will need Medicaid at any point, you should consult an elder attorney about this. The 5-year look back is something to consider. And if you work for your mother, you will need to have a "contract", and be paid at the average caregiver rate for your area based on her ADL and IADL needs, not her wants, not what you think she needs. And you will need to add your income to your annual IRS forms. You will also need to adjust your Mom's IRS forms to reflect her employer status.

I have done exactly what you said, about retiring and taking care of my mom, and because of my job. Different ages. I did this around the beginning of the pandemic, and with my age, was able to take full retirement. So I do have my monthly social security income. But I've never gone forward with having Mom pay me. I think about it, but just haven't. However, Mom's elder attorney advised me of the above.

What I do know, is that Mom was 95, 2 years ago, when I retired. She was still easily able to ambulate with a walker. In the last 6 months, she has declined a lot. She can walk with a walker in the house, but needs a wheelchair anywhere out. At this rate, I am thinking only wheelchair by the end of the year.

I tell you all of this, because things change, possibly slower or quicker than you might expect. And you are 5 years younger than I was when I retired, so you may really want to go back to work, whereas I've been undecided on that score.

As someone else said, as you already have caregivers set in place, seriously think about just changing jobs. I am very happy I quit mine then, at the end, a job I grown to hate. But I'm not so sure I should have just not gotten another job then. Once you are not working for 2 years, you may not want to go back to work. If that matters to you, just think about it.

Otherwise as much as I bellyache and lament sometimes about the woes of caregiving, I and my daughter who lives with us, are happy and ok "right now" with being there for Mom. But in the back of my mind, I know a nursing home may be closer in time than we realize.

Good luck with your decision, and know you have this forum for support. (And ignore the negativism. )
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iamexhausted May 2022
I very much appreciate this answer. It's exactly what I was looking for: the actual experiences of people who have gone through it. Just saying "don't do it" does not really help me and isn't what I was looking for. Thanks so much for your kindness.
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I want to address getting paid by your mother. First off, do you have the POA for her. If so, make sure it stipulates that you can get paid. If not, then you cannot take money out of her funds to get paid. I was told this my an advocate.
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iamexhausted May 2022
Yes, I mom's general and health POA. If I do it, it would be with her approval and a contract, which would be important in case she needs to apply for Medicaid.
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No not leave your job of 20 years. Do not be your moms full time caregiver and turn into the child slave. Stay involved maybe POA, but not recommended to put your relationship in that downward spiral.

I’ve been dealing with physical and mental slide for 10 years, 5 years ago moved back to California and took over to get my home in a home. Her health has improved here. I visit and make sure her care and insurance is paid. Now moms money is running out. All she has is 3200 in ss/survivor benifit. Basically her expenses in the home are a wash.

Just be POA and pay her caregiver and love her.
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With the agreement of my siblings, I have four, I pay myself $15.00/ hour. We agreed that it was a token amount for the time I spent managing her finances and health care. I am my mom's POA for healthcare and finance. My siblings generally do not help with managing my mom's care, but, on occasion, when one does, that sibling also gets paid $15.00/hour.

I do not provide direct care for my mom and live in a different state. than her. Since she cannot live alone due to stroke-related dementia, I hired 24/7 caregiving for her.

My plan is to wait until after my mom passes away before I actually reimburse myself, just in case she needs the money. If she passes away, and there is money remaining, my compensation will be taken our first, then the estate will be divided equally. If she needs all the money, then there will be no compensation.

I don't think I could provide 24/7 for my mom, directly, even if I wasn't already taking care of my own family and had time. I'm not trained to do it and emotionally, it's very hard to watch my mom decline to the point she doesn't always recognize me, or her caregivers.
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bundleofjoy May 2022
"My plan is to wait until after my mom passes away before I actually reimburse myself, just in case she needs the money."

very kind of you.
not only are you a wonderful daughter, but i bet, full of integrity and wonderful values.
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It seems you have thought it out and have developed a plan. Be sure your plan is to your future benefit and how that weighs against leaving your benefits (before Medicare) and an income that will support you. Don’t do it because you hate your job. Consider changing jobs first see if you feel the same way. Consider different hours at your current job?
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iamexhausted May 2022
Different hours at the current job is something I have considered. I am thinking about asking for a cut in hours, down to 28 or even 21 hours ... that might help for a while or at least give me a chance to catch my breath ... as well as time to apply for another job if I choose and also get used to living on less, which I will inevitably have to do when I retire.
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What you can legitimately pay yourself for caregiving is not going to come near the pay and benefits you imply by saying your current job is "well paying with excellent benefits.". If you take the step of quitting your job to be your mother's caregiver, be realistic about what you will be giving up and about the overwhelming level of care that may be needed as your mother ages and her condition declines.
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I understand your frustration with your job, no one wants to be miserable. You said you are already caring for your mother 4 nights a week & also time during the day, You already know what it takes.
If I understand, you are considering taking on those extra 20 hours a week replacing the current caregivers (5 & 15) & retaining the caregiver working the nights you aren’t. You would be paid for your time allowing you to leave your job.
I would find a balance. You would need to determine what works for you. If in fact you find this arrangement wasn’t what you were expecting, post pandemic has opened up endless possibilities in the job market. There are still employers who value knowledge & experience.

My mother is turning 85 in September with some dementia. We travel together & I care for her when needed. In all honesty, I’ve never gotten paid or expected to. Its important for me to know when I need to leave, I can & do.

My mother has lived in the same home over 60 yrs & has no intention of ever moving. She will need in home care very soon and that won’t be me. Caregiver burnout is very real. The exhaustion is mental & physical. I relocated 5 years ago putting a healthy 3 hour distance between us. I can make the drive when necessary but I’m still far enough away to avoid calls for simple tasks easily handled by others (home grocery & pharmacy delivery, lift line for doctor visits),

You are 59, you could take an early retirement at 62. Your 2 years worth of savings gives you 1 year left to cover financially.

I am turning 64 in July. I found 2 great jobs in my 50’s. I took an early retirement at 62.
I say do what makes you happy. Carefully considered risk usually pays off.
Wishing you peace & joy.
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iamexhausted May 2022
Thanks so much for understanding where I am coming from. You actually read my post and responded to all of the points. You understood that I am already taking care of my mom for many hours a week (and not getting paid for it), and that because of that, I do understand what it takes. I also know that burnout is real and there have been many times when I wondered how much longer I can do this, this being working full-time plus taking care of mom.

Your suggestion that I wait until 62 is a good one. I've considered that. Within the next 3 years I could very likely save enough for an additional third year of expenses, and leave at 62 with enough savings to live until Medicare. (But I doubt that I would actually retire at 62 because my SS payment would be too low.)

Thank you also for pointing out that the job market is currently quite favorable for almost anyone. That was my thought. I realize it's a risk but as you said, "carefully considered risk usually pays off" ... I really like the sound of that.

I think one thing most everyone missed is that I see taking care of mom for pay as a worst-case scenario, the option of last resort in the event that I can't find another job. But over the weekend I've also been brainstorming other options, including asking to work part-time for a while. That might be enough of a respite.

Thanks again for your thoughtful reply. I really appreciate it.
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Don't want to sound likea negative Nellie but none if the folks I know in your age group who have left a job for an interval have ever found one comparable to their previous position (if they found a job at all).
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Doug4321 May 2022
Exactly right. I know. I tried it.
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If you are already taking care of your Mother and are tired - and have a good relationship with your Mom it may work . As Long as you still Have help coming in - a CNA for bathing , a House cleaner , meals on Wheels , Physical therapy when she needs it and a social worker . Someone to House sit and Elder sit if you want to go away. Also someone to help for walking her . When you do the caretaking full time as time goes on your job grows - Finances , house repairs , gardening , car , groceries and entertainment . There are support groups for caregivers but it is a lonely isolating road . Then eventually you have to think about end of life care . I think you Know what to do go with your heart and not your head .
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iamexhausted May 2022
Thanks so much for your reply. I already do most of the things that you mentioned and do not get paid for doing them. I handle all of her finances including paying bills, do all her food shopping, plan meals, serve her 5-6 meals a week, take care of home maintenance (for 2 homes in 2 different countries), coordinate her caregivers (including hiring, supervising and firing), make all of her doctors appointments and take her to the doctors appointments,

I don't actually have a particularly good relationship with my mother, most of the time I don't even like her but I like to work, so that's not a problem. She's a nice enough person, she means well, but we've just never been close.

Thanks for pointing out that it could work if I have help as that is my intention, not to do it alone. But tonight I realized that she may be starting to have difficulties wiping herself after she poops and that has definitely made me rethink my plan!
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At 60, I too was burned out at my corporate job and, when my company offered early retirement, I made the decision to move in with my parents as their 24/7 caregiver. I thought relocating to a small island community would be a welcomed change. That was three and a half years ago. At the time, my father had mobility issues but his mind was sharp and my mother was mobile but with early dementia. With a small pension, a $1500 “gift” a month from my parents and free room and board, my financial needs were met. While my dad was alive, I could leave the house for hours at a time and created a new life here. My dad passed in March and now things are difficult. My mother’s dementia has progressed and she can no longer use a phone. She doesn’t wander or try to cook, but she is a fall risk and gets anxious quickly when I am out of sight. I cannot leave for more than 30 minutes for simple errands, and there is some risk in that. Elder care companions are available at $30/hr for longer times away. If mom goes into MC, which she does not want to do, I can’t afford to stay alone in the house without drawing on my SS and a small annuity, both of which are 3 years away from full value. That would affect income for the rest of my life. I could try and find a job, but now I’ve been out of the workforce for over 3 years and I’m 64 years old. What a prospect!! So, it looks like I am going to stay trapped in this house with my alcoholic mom for the foreseeable future. At least the gilded cage has a water view! In retrospect, I probably just needed to take a month off and deal with the burnout. Ideally, my parents would have been better served medically and socially to have been moved to an AL facility. They were/are very isolated here but just didn’t want to leave their home by the ocean.
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iamexhausted May 2022
My condolences to you on the loss of your father. My dad passed in 2020 and I still miss him very much. I am so sorry to hear about your situation. It's a cautionary tale. I bought a place near my parents in 2019 but did not move in until the start of the pandemic. While my father was still alive, everything was easier. He took care of my mother, and I spent the day at their home making their meals and helping out around the house. That was exhausting sometimes, but at least I got to come home and sleep in my own bed at night. After he passed away, I did consider moving in with her but I know it wouldn't work, would drive me nuts. I need a place of my own.

If your mom goes into MC, would you need to sell the house to pay for the MC? Are you hoping you will be able to stay with her in the house until you can start collecting SS and the annuity?
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I've been where you are due to a job I loved but 3 (in a row!) harassing bosses shielded by Administration and AFSCME was what passed for a union. Most people who have been in AFSCME know how useless they generally are - I've been in very GOOD union as well, so I know the difference. Anyway, I was able to take early retirement but found it almost impossible to find any job - let alone one I loved - as I was female and over 40. Just remember, they want you young, stupid and male if possible. Also, what about your Social Security? Can you live on what you'd get at this point or have you made plans to save in an IRA, etc.? It's tough, I know, but think long term. Best of luck.
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iamexhausted May 2022
My problem is in fact my boss. He is not harassing, he is useless and It drives me crazy. I hate having a do-nothing boss. He is at retirement age but refuses to retire. His bosses are unhappy with him and come to me giving me assignments that they should be giving him. When I let him know, he blocks it. I work at a place that could be great but one useless manager makes it useless ... and it's so hard to recover when you work at a place where some people are allowed to do almost nothing while others work their butt off.
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sounds like you just want to quit your job that you don't like, which is mostly everyone's reality, and let your mothers caregivers go so you don't have to look for a new job.
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rlinroiy999 May 2022
i couldn't agree more; how do u take
$ from your own mother? disgraceful
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No, don’t leave your current job yet. You said you are 59, and have savings to last about two years. You are going to take over a job of a caretaker who is working 25 hours a week and you are already providing some hours of caregiving services that don’t give you enough time to look for another job. You want to quit your job to be able to search for another job, while working 25 hours as a caregiver for your Mom. I think working more hours as a caregiver will mean you have less time than now. Also, you might live another 20-30 years. Before you quit your job, ask yourself these questions: Will the new caregiver job allow for you to support you, your Mom and her other caregivers for the next couple years while your Mom is still alive, and then provide benefits to support you after she is gone? Are you going to be ok being a full time caregiver If you can’t get another job? In general it’s difficult to find a job in a field or area of expertise when you don’t currently have a job in a field. Thus, make time to do your job search now, before leaving your current job.
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Consider the tax free gift of 16000.00/yr from your mom to you that is irs approved. And then get paid any additional as caregiver.
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gladimhere May 2022
That yearly allowable tax free gift is not to be used for those that may need Medicaid within five years. Those gifts disqualify the elder from using Medicaid for long term care.

This is misinformation and frequently appears on this site. Yearly gifts disqualify Medicaid beneficiaries.
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Something to consider. You won't be able to leave this job if you don't like it. As your mom ages further with dementia, the job will become increasingly challenging in many ways. Are you going to move in with her? If you do, you will be working 24/7.
What will you do when you need time off? What will you do for a vacation?
How will you handle it emotionally if your mother becomes demanding, unreasonable, or does not express gratitude?
If you realize that you do need to get back into a traditional job, you might not be able to.
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Odaat59 May 2022
Our youngest sister, of four daughters, never left our parent’s home, and quit her job to take care of them a few years ago. Our family has never openly discussed the choices made by them, I tried, but we are expected to simply accept their decisions. It’s complicated. It’s wrong, imho, because their decisions don’t just affect them. Even tho I was told by my caregiving sister “it is only her story to tell”, her choice to never leave the family home.

I noticed awhile ago, her FB occupation says she is the Professional Caregiver of our parents, and whether she is being paid by mom and dad, or our state, no clue. Given the condition of their home, turning into a hoarder’s mess, I doubt the state is paying, as I’d expect inspections to be necessary, but not positive. We are given very little info about anything, all subjective info, e.g. mom and dad’s lab reports are great, not showing us the lab reports. I no longer ask questions cause she is in charge, per mom and dad’s wishes, and I’m starting to just not care anymore. I find peace by knowing our parents never wanted to live anywhere, but their home, even tho they didn’t work hard enough to stay independent, expecting their youngest to be their 24/7 caregiver. Our parents didn’t do this for their own parents.

Another reason why I ask nothing is because I don’t want to be the one that points out how fragile their situation is, because she has been taking care of them alone, for many years now. She never left home, as they never forced her to, and now she is in charge. If I cause problems by asking reasonable questions, and she loses it, who takes care of mom and dad? They just want her, and the codependent bond is so tight, we just let them be. Beyond frustrating.

I would advise you to think very carefully before you give up your home, income and tie yourself to an elder, you seem not so interested in taking care of, rather you seem to dislike your job. I get that too, cause my sister didn’t like her job either, and her obligations to our parents, were getting in the way of her doing a good job. Listen to inkandpaper, this is not a job you easily quit. The person/s you will be serving will not get better, easier, and I have no clue how my sister is doing it, but she doesn’t want my help. Until she does, and then I give it freely.

I do nothing to rock their boat, cause I do not want her job. In my family, saying that is considered uncaring, mean, and thankful for this forum, that has common sense and a realist approach to elder care. I will NOT suffer any guilt, cause I tried my best to be part of a team of helpers, but the one in place has to be their everything. She will say it isn’t true, lol.

I worry about my sister realizing what she gave up, her life, and will be sure to let her know the job was never offered to me, the eldest, as my much younger parents expected me to learn to fend for myself, at a very young age. How the oldest two were raised, very differently from the much younger caregiving sister. When I asked mom why she hadn’t moved out, and started her own life, mid 20’s, mom wouldn’t speak to me for over four months. I was worried decades ago about how our family was headed, but never allowed to say a damn thing, as I’m the black sheep, got sober at 24, stayed sober by living a disciplined life, guided by 12 steps and a desire to be both mentally and physically healthy. The elder women on mom’s side, the side of family we saw, weren’t into moving, were heavy and the attitude was feeling older, much sooner than one should, for best aging. Dad is in better shape, but mom
is both immobile mostly, and incontinent, but both parents want to do mostly as they please, and our sister accommodates that desire.

If my sister read my words, written tbh, in fear, I would be texted a book about how I should think and feel. But I am over it. This forum is where I share my experience, strength and hope, praying you will be careful what you decide to do.
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Biggest disadvantage I see is the possibility of having less/zero income in those years just before you apply for SS that could reduce your monthly SS when it starts.

Since you already have people in place to care for mom, use the flexibility of your current job and vacation time to apply for other jobs. The other option is to look at working a few more years where you are and think of the time is the last few feet to the bottom of the hill. Any job has downsides and people who work alongside you who make it miserable.
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LoveLea May 2022
Excellent response!
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Don't quit your job at your age to take up being your mother's caregiver 20 hours a week.
You're 59 years old and have been at your job for 20 years. Put in a few more and take an early retirement at 62. Or start looking for another job while you're still working. Everyone here is right. It's easier to find a job when you're employed. Don't become your mother's caregiver. What will happen is you will become her full-time 24/7 caregiver. This is what happens when an adult child takes up part of the care for an elderly parent. They end up doing all of the care for the elderly parent. The parent/son/daughter relationship ends when you get the caregiver title. At best most adult children become an employee with the parent as their boss. At worst they become caregiver slaves 7 days a week and the elderly parent is master. Hired caregivers don't have a history with their clients. We leave at the end of our shifts. We walk away if we don't want to stay on an assignment. Sons and daughters have history. When they take up the responsibility of caregiving they can't just hand mom or dad's case off to a supervisor or put in their two-week notice. Keep that in mind.
When a person has had a loving and caring relationship with their parent it gets wrecked when they become caregivers to elderly parents. If the relationship wasn't great and there's abusive history, it will wreck your life. Take it from me, I've been living that dream or should I say nightmare for a while now. Leave the hands-on caregiving and the hour after hour of companionship/sitting work to homecare staff. Stay employed and continue having a parent/child relationship with your mother with some distance.
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bundleofjoy May 2022
excellent, excellent answer and warnings.
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I was 61 when mom had to enter a facility. I found a job and was able to return to my profession. But, to be able to do that I had to be willing to move to a community about 600 miles away, a rural community, where it was impossible for them to find.anyone with the experience they wanted. So, off I went. I hated the location and thankfully was able to find a position in my field, closer to home, a year later. Now I am 67, just started a new position, an hopefully will be financially able to retire in another five years. That four years was a financial drain, without it I could retire now.

After caring for mom that four years employment in my field.was very hard to find. I could have found a job as a caregiver making $10-12 an hour with any agency. I was asked a couple of times. I was so terribly insulted, all while being under the stress of trying to find something that paid decently.

Exhausted, that is what it was for me. Yes after a court order, I was paid a ridiculously low amount for 24/7 care of mom. Yes, court! I had been accused of financial exploitation by twisted sissies, investigated by APS (lawyer time) that led to an excruciating couple of years, with attorney fees, followed by another stressful time looking for work, something I wanted to do. APS closed the investigation because, in their determination nothing of the sort was occuring. There was nothing to investigate.

So, exhausted, ignore what others here are telling you. They are only trying to show you another perspective of what could easily happen. I will repeat once more, back away from caring for the mom you have so much resentment for, look for a job you will like while still employed, in a location that you will enjoy, and make the change now. There are so many positions and employers looking for workers there really is not a better time to make a change that will be good for you.

And my mom still toileted, dressed and bathed (with oversight) herself during the time I cared for her. Though she had frequent explosions that I would.need to clean up.
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