My mother lives with my husband and I in our home. My husband and I are both unemployed. We are living off of our retirement funds. We rent out a room to a roommate who is paying 600.00 a month with rent increases every year. He provides his own food. Mom is paying 500.00 a month and she refuses to pay any more. We supply her food, cook her meals, we take her to and from her doctor appointments, I do all her laundry and put it away for her, She does not qualify for medicaid because she keeps giving money away to her grand daughter who doesn't even thank her for it and in my opinion is taking advantage of her grand mother. After utilities are taken out of the 500.00 mom pays, and the groceries and the gas for transportation her rent is around 2 to 3 hundred a month. My husband plans on going back to work but I need to stay home with my mom. How can I convince my mother that she needs to be helping out more. She clears over 1100.00 a month .
Mom brings in plenty of money a month. She still insist on paying all of brother#1's housing costs and some of his living expenses (has not worked more than a month in all of his 53 years on this planet).
When we first agreed to bring her in, she was living almost independently. She has, within 18 months, declined to near helplessness (mostly laziness, some physical). Because of this, we have had to give up travel (we used to travel extensively). Running errands or going out to dinner becomes a tactical operation. I am woken up in the night because she can't get into or out of bed.
If she were not to pay rent, her money would go into savings and eventually her estate to be split evenly 4 ways between I daughter who sacrificed and three sons who don't even call or visit.
H3ll yes, I am collecting $800 a month rent.
If you're struggling financially, you can't afford to take on another person and totally support them, especially when they have that much money and they won't share it. People get certain amounts in their benefits for a reason, to support their living costs. Federal benefits are there to support the necessities. What you may want to do is get her into her own apartment for starters. This will help remind her how much it costs to be able to have one's own home. This would be good for her educationally. Experience will teach her the real cost of today's living. I strongly agree with suggestions on putting back on cable and other areas. Just cut out all nonessentials as mentioned here so she'll see the pinch from being a tightwad. On top of all that, it might even help to make some tightwad statements and crack some tightwad jokes. That way, it may shame her into carrying her share of the household expenses. If she's going to be a tightwad then she's not going to enjoy any privileges. For instance, if you go on an outing, don't include her. If you're throwing a party, exclude her and don't allow her to participate in anything whatsoever. On pizza night, make her pay two or three dollars per slice if she wants any of it. The overall idea is that if you're doing anything fun or extra, don't include her at all. This will teach her how not to be a tightwad and it will definitely show her how life really is when you can't spare enough money for extras. If she wants to live like a tightwad and not share in household expenses, then she shouldn't participate in anything extra that the rest of the family is doing. There are consequences for greed, and those consequences should be in force and reflect the fact she's being a greedy tightwad. For the amount of money she's getting each month there is no need for her to say she doesn't have enough money to contribute to the household since there's more than enough money for her to do so. If she wants to be greedy, I'll let her be greedy with consequences to show for her choices. It costs far more than $100 per month to cover shelter, utilities, food, and other essentials
You really got my dander up there TooYoungForThis...
I was saying...in this case, mom only has 1100/mo coming in...not enough to live alone on. So she's move in with daughter and sounds to be quite needy since she has to be taken too and from Dr. appts, have daughter do laundy, cook for her, etc. (thus daughter feels she needs to stay home with her). My dad is the same...he can do things for himself, but in trying to do so he makes a terrible mess, blows things up in the microwave, boils things over on the stove (and forgets to turn the stove off), and, more importantly, occasionally falls and can't get up without help and mixed up his medications morning noon and night. So my daughter in law stays home and watches after him like a mother hen, and in turn, he pays her to do so. I feel DrRock deserves the same. 500.00/mo IS NOT enough. She'd be paying a whole lot more if she were out on their own and the daughter and son in law would not have their lives turned upside down. It's not a matter of her not loving or caring about her mom. I'm guessing you aren't caring your mother is well able to do for herself and is in pretty good health, that you don't have a mom living with you who didn't save a thing toward their retirement in the 70 plus years she's been alive, and now expects to live totally off you?
I don't think anyone in here believes that... In this case mom only has 1
My Dad is like your Dad, he also frets about if he has enough money. When my Dad gets the rent bill for Independent Living he obsesses over it big time, until I remind him how much it was costing him when he lived at home and had around the clock caregivers. Then he settles down until the next bill comes. One way to stop that is for me to have the extra copies of bills and statements sent to Dad stopped, I wanted to keep him in the loop, but now it is time to end that practice.
I actually think that paying $500 for one room is pretty acceptable. How much does she eat? How much laundry can she possibly have? Do you do her laundry together with your own laundry, or does she have too much that has to be done separately? If you do hers with yours, then you're not using more water or more electricity for the dryer. What utilities does she utilize that cost you more per month than if she didn't live there? I find it difficult to believe that your mother costs $200 to $300 per month between food, gas for transportation, laundry, utilities, etc. She'd have to be eating a heck of a lot of food, using a heck of a lot of electricity and be going to a lot of places for that much money.
When you were growing up, for how many years did your mother buy your food, make your meals, do your laundry, drive you around, pay for the electric you used, etc? Did you pay her for it? Did she charge you rent for the bedroom you slept in?
Is the grand daughter your kid or your sister/brother's kid? How old is she? Perhaps you could suggest that in exchange for the money she gets from grandma, she chip in to take care of her---drive her to appointments, cook her meals sometimes, etc.
I don't think it is your mother's fault that you are unemployed. And why do you have to stay home with your mother all day, every day? Is she bed bound? Is she unable to take care of herself? Making meals, grocery shopping, doing laundry are things that do not occupy 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
It is not your mother's responsibility to pay for your living expenses. You are luckier than most in that you have some retirement income to live off of. Most people don't.
I would not charge my mother rent to live with me. And she does live with me. She does not increase my living expenses at all---if she weren't here, my expenses would be the exact same. However, she gives me money without me asking for it anyway----she says that if she were living alone, she'd have to pay for stuff anyway, and therefore she gives me the money she'd be paying herself. We both buy food----I buy the majority of the food----, do our laundry together, etc. The only thing she wants is a cable box to watch TV---I would get rid of it if it were just me because I don't watch TV. But, that's the least I can do for her---my parents put me through college & I never took outing loans, my parents bought me a car when I was 16 years old, my parents took me on vacation twice a year (didn't leave me home like a lot of my friends' parents), lent me money on countless occasions, etc. And I am going to be petty and charge her for a bedroom? Nah.
So what did I do...I did the same you did and turned to this forum. I got a lot of great advice (37 posts worth) but the best, and the one that worked with minimum of modification to fit their situation, was the letter I've put below. It was written by Forum Member "MaggieMarshall" The letter worked like a charm and now it's two +years later and dad is still living there. That's not to say it solved all issues, but it did solve the issue of money once and for all which helped a LOT!.
Here's the letter by Maggie. It will need more modifying to fit your and your Mom's case since it had been written to fit mine, but the idea is the same and it it shouldn't be hard to modify it for you uses.
Dear Dad,
The reason you should be paying your way, dad, is because everyone pays their way. In an assisted living facility, you might be paying $1500 a month or more--if you even QUALIFY for assisted living. If you need full-blown nursing home care, that figure could be $5,000 or much more.
If you live anywhere other than with _____ and _____, your needs will be secondary to the expediency of staff. Nowhere on EARTH would you get the loving attention that you get here with ______.
_____ and _____ have given up their privacy and peaceful life to give you the greatest gift of all. A circle of love that cares for you and keeps you safe. You're so loved here.
What were you doing at their age, Dad? Were you caring for an elderly parent, helping them keep their independence? Were you sleeping with one ear open so you could hear their footfalls in the middle of the night and get up to make sure they were safe? Were you helping someone to the bathroom five times a day? Fixing their medicines? Taking them to the doctor? [List a bunch of stuff here.]
We both know you weren't. _____ and _____ are giving you a precious gift. Honestly? Money can't even buy that gift. But giving them $1,500 a month [or whatever] shows them that you value everything they're doing for you. It pays them back in a small way for the sacrifices they're making every single day to care for you. It's the very least you can do.
You [and mom] saved all of your lives for a rainy day. It's pouring outside now, dad. Time to help the very people who are holding your umbrella.
It is my sincere wish that you agree to help out _____ and _____ by paying $$$$ a month toward your care. It's the right thing to do. [If you pay his bills for him, continue with this....] Starting August 1st, with your permission, I'm going to start showing them how much we appreciate all they do for you.
I love you dad. We ALL love you. I'm so happy for you that _____ is in your life at this time. You raised a wonderful son. And daughter, of course. ;)
Maybe show her the bills as they come in, so she can get a reality check?
Yep, give her the option to move, it will be a huge shock to see what really living on her own costs.
If you are of retirement age and living off of retirement funds, that is one thing. But if you are too young to be retired, then maybe you should both be working.
As far as mom's rent goes, be glad she is paying anything at all. A lot of people don't even get that much help.
She might be happier. Talk it over.