Does anyone have experience dealing with this issue? He is still physically able to function. He gets up and does his thing each day (puttering around his acre of land) but when early afternoon comes he is tired (he's 85) and so he just goes inside and watches tv and drinks light beer. He can get argumentative but so far not physically abusive. His natural temperament is easy going.
I have walked this path and it has taken a terrible toll on my life. Al-Anon helps. It helps you put things in perspective.
Regarding "care" documents. Consult attorney to find the right documents to help you be a caregiver. Avoid having your name on assets directly (eg: a bank account you co-share. If the "girlfriend" wants to help your dad, then let her "do" all the grunt work except managing assets. Put protectionary measures on a Trust for your dad. It's for him and only him and his lineage per-stirpes. Write specifically that spouses do not count.
Be an "ATF" (As Trustee For) -- ask your attorney if this designation works in your state. If you are just a "co-signer" person on a bank account, your assets are subject to whatever the "girlfriend" may try to get her hands on. Or, you also run the risk of being "co" responsible for debts.
Just sayin' per listening to many stories in this peer group of caregivers. Also, decades of personal experience with dealing with widowed parent w/ very active alcoholism. Doubt you can change them. Some doctors will work with you, some will stay very much on the sidelines. They know if they do the bare minimum they'll get paid, but they sure do not want to get into an ethical/common sense issue because of the legal quagmire.
YOU have about as much chance of convincing a set-in-their-ways alcoholic to stop drinking as you would winning a Powerball jackpot. Good luck.
So, make sure the AL management aren't 'tea-totallers'. If they are, move him out to a place that will accommodate his desire to drink, but help manage any negative behaviors around it.
I can tell you that in the community I'm associated with, there are residents who happily have several beers a night, not realizing that only the first one is real beer. Same goes for some of our wine lovers. The drinking that residents do in their own apartments is (within reason) their business. Families sometimes have a hard time with this. They may have struggles with their parent's drinking all their lives and, now that they have some authority, can't resist trying to 'fix' mom or dad's drinking problem. I understand where they're coming from, but it's an exercise in futility. Accepting and managing are much better strategies.
You can't let his alcoholism destroy your own health. Have you tried Al-Anon? The program is comprised of people who are coping with similar situations, so that program could help you. Use the building block of your faith and add to it with support from others who understand.
Take care of yourself,
Carol
I'd pursue taking him up on his offer to put the house in your husband's name. You're right that there would be consequences, but if you talk with an attorney, he can lead you to the RIGHT trust that would protect his properties from unscrupulous people in his life. It wouldn't be deeded over to your husband, but I'm sure there's a way to do it.
You have any number of things to be concerned about: she could convince him to marry her; she could convince him to borrow against the properties and gift her the money; she could run up credit card debt in his name; and more, I'm sure.
Your POA is meant to be used when a person is incompetent to make his own decisions; not to keep a person from making decisions you don't agree with. Even when those decisions are poor.
If it were me, I'd talk to an attorney about "What kind of trust can we set up that will protect dad's properties from a fraudster?" In the end, though, if dad won't cooperate, there's really nothing you can do.
But she did want his expertise in carpentry, use of all his tools, him being her gofer, use of his trucks, and all he has gotten at times (and most recently) is a few meals.
She is having financial troubles and is moving out of her own home to rent it. She is moving IN to my dad's mobile home which is just 75 feet from his own home.
Dad was told that she is a gold digger, having 3 husbands who have all died, but he is ignoring the warnings.
We tried, this past Sunday, to talk to dad (you remember he is alcoholic too, drinking himself into oblivion every night) , we talked to him in the morning (best time) about possibly putting his assets into a medical protection trust (just in case he ever needed it) and also possibly paying me to help him because it costs us money to drive down there and eat on the road and basically have two sets of necessities. He agreed about the trust, at that time, and said he would rather pay me than pay a professional. Then he went to his lady friends and told her all about the paying me part. He came back home and said "Zoe, said, "DON'T LET THOSE KIDS PUT YOU IN A NURSING HOME! I WILL TAKE CARE OF YOU FOR FREE!" I asked him why he went to her and told her about our conversation and he said he values her opinion.
She is undermining our efforts to help our father.
I talked to an attorney and she said "has she offered to marry your dad yet?" I said "no". She said "she will, when the time is right.".
So, not only do I have this demented, alcoholic dad to deal with, now I get to worry about this woman stealing everything away from him.
I talked to dad's attorney, who couldn't help too much because he is dad's attorney, and he said this is a grey area. Dad is still able to function, seemingly, but he isn't making good decisions. I cannot use the Power of Attorney to alter the trust, he is the only one who can do that. Great. What use is a power of attorney then?
So, dad did offer to deed the properties to my husband and I (there are 2) but there would be horrible tax consequences but he can't understand all this legal stuff. Saying that, I do think we are going to try to show him examples of how much a trust would cost and how much it would cost to pay taxes if he gave it to us. And it still wouldn't be protected from Medical.
If he won't do the trust so I have peace of mind, I feel like just giving up and not going down there anymore. Letting her have him and letting God have it all. I love God and He loves me and if I am to inherit then God can work it all out for me. I love my dad too but I cannot kill myself over him. I am getting so stressed out I can't take a breath. I can feel my eyes bulging out from the blood pressure.
It's all so sad.
I hung on every word. I took care of my father for 10 years through his drinking. he had stopped because mom wouldn't let him alone until he did, but as soon as she died, he visited the alcohol store. and became a regular there. I excused his drinking one of the reasons you defined so well "helping someone with emotional or mental issues to numb-out, because they haven't been able to get proper help resolving those issues otherwise" Mom didn't realize that you don't just "stop" without changes whatever is driving you to drink or you become a "dry drunk". I finally realized that I could not take care of him 24/7 and after a drunk (daily) and a fall (frequently) and a bone break (3 times) I guided him from rehab to ALA. He is a dry drunk and at 92 I doubt he will ever be anything else. Sometime after I read all the posts where people are dealing with alcoholics at home, and after I hear how agitated he gets I wonder if I am doing the right thing keeping him there instead of bringing him home. Then I remember the dead weight.. The many nights he fell and me trying to push, pull, drag him into bed. and him not remembering a thing in the am. it only got worse as time went by. he's been in ala for a year now and I doubt he will ever come out of his wheelchair....
Fallen, frail elders are limp weight; trying to lift them off the floor, or extricating them from between furniture they fall between, can end up with the rescuer injured.
Using a lift is really needed, but often can't fit into the house to use.
Them drinking alcohol, makes it more difficult.
Expecting them to remember anything said or done while they are drinking/drunk, is delusional on the part of those expecting that.
There's a difference between an elder who likes one evening alcohol drink.....and an elder who drinks multiple alcohol drinks per day or evening--or one frail enough that one light beer now causes same impairment as several drinks..
Alcohol causes trouble with many medications, trouble with their overall behaviors, and makes many health conditions worse---if you think dementias are 'fun' to deal with, they're even greater adventure when dementia is escalated on alcohol!
Far smaller amounts cause greater impairment, yet the elders tend to think they can still handle the larger amounts.
[[geez...what's not to love about slow suicide, with the company and co-dependance of your injured kids?]]
Per population, there's a boatload or few of alcoholic or other substance abusing elders...who need care and compassion.
There's compassionately prescribing one short beer or glass of wine per evening, for someone who has no substance abuse history and is Lucid, or someone in hospice;
Compare that to: a long-time closet or social drunk, or one with meds or dementia, which should preclude any further alcohol.
Giving the latter alcohol, is like contributing to the delinquency of minors--with potentially deadly consequences---nothing about that sounds heroic to aid-and-abet.
OTH--if ya wanna help them kill themselves faster--that's one way.
IMHO, there's very little that's 'kind' about alcohol, except maybe helping someone with emotional or mental issues to numb-out, because they haven't been able to get proper help resolving those issues otherwise. For that, there are kinder drugs to offer, which do not cause combativeness or other bad behaviors---those might cause them to stay in bed--but at least calm, and where care can safely be given.
It's a hard thing to do, to suddenly remove booze from a user.
I failed to achieve that w/Mom; many others fail, too....It fails unless or until the person can no longer shop for themselves or get ahold of household supplies, or connive caregivers or guests to get it for them--
--or they get put in a facility that bars all access. Yet even in those, I have seen staff and visitors get talked into getting them some.
Each must decide what is the real goal of allowing the alcohol:
==allowing their dependence and your own co-dependence?
==help them die faster?
==relax tight muscles?
==ease pain not otherwise controlled?
There might be many other reasons.
It's as individual as each elder.
Whatever you decide, be clear about it, and willing to live with it whatever the consequences. Make sure all caregivers are informed and agree, so appropriate care plans can be made and followed.
after that night, I did nothing. I thought a lot but I didn't know what to do. but by the next day, my father didn't remember a thing and I remembered it---still remember it, like it was a minute ago.
My father has since fallen 3 more times and broken 3 bones. I love him and always will and it hurts me that I can no longer take care of him and that he is in a living facility where they watch every beer that he might sneak into his room. I visit him at least every other day and he clings to me and still doesn't understand while at 92 he cannot drink anymore. and I wonder too. why cant I bring him home and just let him drink himself to death. he is miserable and I empathize and it hurts. he is so depressed and has chronic pain and I find the right place for him and I cannot leave him because the rest of my family has and it would be like leaving a part of me. I want to bring him home, but if I do, I would be killing him and doing myself in. as it is, I put one foot in front of the other.....work my full time job...try to keep peace with my husband who alternates loving me and hating me...and know that for whatever reason, I will continue to be there for him for as long as he lives. or as long as I live. whichever comes first.
I guess my bottom line is that IF the ALA let him drink, I wouldn't stop them. but they insist that he doesn't.... his VA doctor wrote in on his charts. he doesn't understand. for godsakes, hes 92. lived this entire life, seen the invasion of Normandy and the blood and guts of battle and took home the bottle instead of drugs to calm his PTSD (undiagnosed, of course, but I figured it out sometime after I reached adulthood). And this is the best we can do for him. no, im not guilty of causing his alcoholism, but neither is he. PTSD is a result of seeing death and living death at an impressionable age, and the country made sure when they dumped the guys out of the backs of ships to take the beaches that that would happen. God bless America and God bless my papa.
Sorry for ranting; thanks for the opportunity.
Janny, Alanon is awesome, and as they will tell you, AA would be awesome but the person can't be forced to go. You can do interventions, you can assemble friends and family who care, and there might be substance abuse treatment options open to him. There is a fine line between non-enabling/detaching and taking reasonable steps to protect a person from themselves when they are either too depressed and/or lack the judgment to do it on their own. Your thinking about it is headed in the right direction.
It doesn't matter if your dad drinks light beer or whiskey. It's still alcohol and it's still an addiction. Alcoholism isn't about what someone drinks or even how often they drink, it's about how the alcohol affects the person. Alcoholics are wired differently than non-alcoholics. Their brain is wired differently. And as an alcoholic your dad doesn't have a choice. He has to drink. I'm sure if he were given the option he would choose to quit because the life of an alcoholic is something out of a nightmare.
Good for you for going to Alanon! You're right, caregivers often fall ill from daily stress and anxiety that never ends. Going to Alanon is doing something for yourself, to keep yourself physically and mentally healthy. You're taking some very positive steps.