Sooner or later, I guess many of us hit the wall and have to admit, I'm in over my head and I want help or I want out. I've already tried the "want help" route for a long time, with no success -- for many years. I live with mom and up until recently, had shared POA. My sister managed to snatch POA under dubious circumstances and my other siblings are absolutely worthless and of no help and still expect me to spend all my time outside of work taking care of mom. Since sis took over, Mom isn't getting the medical care she needs, we are constantly battling to get mom to see her doctors and have access to things she needs, and the battle to remove sis as POA is beyond my reach. I have part-time help, but they do not work the hours I work, so mom gets left alone sometimes when I'm at work, and that means overnight, quite often. Oh, I have the luxury of caregivers here some hours when I am home; I know that makes some of you envious; but it's not when we need them here! Mom has already fallen several times. I happened to be home last night for her most recent fall, and that was my wake up call. What if I wasn't here? I can't get sis to add hours or change the caregivers schedule or to check on mom herself, even though she lives nearby. Any of those would be reasonable solutions, but they are not going to happen.
I need to "quit" my caregiving role -- my health is suffering in so many ways, and I have no life of own at all, get very little or no sleep, and I want to go back to just being mom's son again. How do I legally "wash my hands", and how do I cope with the reality that mom will likely suffer as a result of my actions? Is an email to sis and my siblings stating I'm done as of such date sufficient? Forget calling APS, mom's lawyer, talking about my own illness or expecting any reasonable response from sis with POA or my family. None of that will work. I'm the youngest and have routinely had to take on all the things no one wants to do. Sis won't even provide money for food for mom, and the only reason we got the caregivers part-time was because mom's neighbor threatened to call the police on sis to report medical neglect. If I thought I could go on and stay healthy, I would, but have come to the conclusion that it's just not possible. I can't leave my quit date open-ended, as family will just take advantage and stretch it out for as long as they can. But I don't want mom left unattended, either. The agency told me "behind my sister's back" they could have someone here starting tomorrow 24/7, so finding the help isn't a roadblock or reason to delay this past the weekend. Mom has the resources to pay, but sis controls the checkbook. It is going to have to be "forced", but I want to do this appropriately. I've thought about it for a long time and have already pursued and abandoned all other options I could think of, so I'm not going to change my mind.
You say that there has been violence (against your mom?) at your sister's ? Mom must feel strongly about sis to threaten suicide. No way to get poa changed?
Bookluvr, Very very good post!!
You must not do what you have said you can't do, otherwise this pattern does not end and Mom does not get care. But yes, your living in the home is a complicating factor making you still responsible, and there is no reason not to bring her to the ER for this kind of thing. If they try to prohibit her getting medical attention, document, call APS again, AND call an eldercare attorney and find out if they can be removed for failing in their duties. The system may be broken, but there are limits to how far they will let things go...and Sis is pushing them.
Sophe, great advice, wish I could just detach myself and go about my merry way, and believe that things would work out, but I now know for certain that it won't and that no one else IS going to step in. I do not think I could live with the consequences if I just walked away without at least trying to make sure mom is getting taken care of. Yes, they know that and are manipulating that to their advantage. This past couple of days was supposed to be the start of that time off, and look at how it turned it out. I'm taking mom to see her PCP today, whether they like it or not. As far as I'm concerned, failing to take her for follow-up on Monday after Sunday's fall was the last straw. Please also remember that I live half-time in my mom's home, so it's not quite as simple as staying away, at least not yet. I am still determined to get out from under this, one way or another. Doubt I'll be able to rest and be at peace with this until an independent guardian is appointed. I just wish my siblings would get off their lazy butts and cooperate - we'd be better off if we voluntarily selected and appointed our own choice for guardian. Mom's lawyer has had several ready to take over, for over a year. I do not understand the indifference, I keep hearing that no one is ever happy with court-appointed guardians, and because sis is so obsessed with money, you'd think she'd be doing everything she could to prevent that from happening. I suggested sis and her husband get involved in a dementia caregivers support group -- do you really think they'd respond to that? Of course not, their response was that they didn't need it because "they don't have any psychological problems". Ha! Talk about denial.