My mom has been out of her house for a year. She is very confused and can't make a decision. I asked her permission to start packing up her stuff and possibly move towards selling house. She still thinks she will be home someday. She can’t come home to live for she is safer where she is. We been having this same conversation for a long time. I don’t want to feel guilty and just start packing up stuff anyways. I need peace and guidance on what to do. I’m very saddened by it all the house has been part of the family for over 50 years. I understand why she doesn’t want to let it go. But I feel its time because the house sits empty with no one living there.
1 - Empty home of valuables and store in secure location - no matter whatever else you do. These items are what would be considered part of your mother's estate when she dies.
2 - Rent out home either empty or furnished. If renting as furnished, do not expect that others will "cherish" the furnishings like your mom does. Maybe a family member needs a place to stay and this could work for your mother and for them.
3 - Divide up furnishings according to whomever mom what things to go to... or as others want items.
4 - Sell furnishings on Craiglist or eBay.
5 - Sell home to a company that does estimates and quick sales or through a realtor.
6 - Wait. Your state may require the court to appoint a legal guardian to deal with your mother's assets. Make sure the home is in good repair and that it is cleaned regularly.
The best thing is to sell the house if no family member wants to live there.
When I was a volunteer many times there were residents determined to leave the seniors home and go home. Many times there would be hard core arguments with the staff.
I would just talk with them about the house as if they were a child still living there and gently guide them back to their room. It is best to have family photo's there and we would talk about the old days. They would forget about going home.
Do not attempt to use reason and logic because they cannot understand it. Go back in time with them where they feel comfortable and show them a photo and ask questions about it.
Thankfully her facility had a notary. When she joined us, I asked if she had to confirm mom knew what she was signing or just witness - the answer was just witness!! Mom's hearing was really bad, so she didn't hear any of that. I passed the document off as some kind of insurance paperwork or something like that. I had been doing her finances, taxes, etc so long, that she likely trusted whatever I was doing!
I still think this is wrong, but it's what he said had to be done. Just a little head's up, as you might have to get her to sign the deed. If she's easily confused, pass it off as new insurance for the house or something along those lines. Clearly if she can read, she'd notice it was house related. SOME kind of fib should work, should you have to do this too (atty told me ALL other documents regarding the sale I could sign as DPOA, but not the deed.)
As with others, it took me a long time to get everything done. Little help from brothers, 1.5 hr drive each way and 25+ years of "stuff" to deal with. Some "stuff" is clearly trash (mom was saving the oddest things!) Some things have little or no value. The neighbor did ask if there were items we could donate to their church rummage sale. Mismatched glassware, various other items, yup! Boxed and left in shared garage.) Brothers took a number of items. I didn't want much of anything. My plan, when I bought this place, was to get it fixed up and then go through my "stuff" and clear out what I could. Mom's dementia got in the way. OB dumping so much "stuff" here after they got what they wanted - most of it should have been trashed or left out with a FREE sign!!! Just more crap for me to deal with. Now I also have everything that was left when she passed. Augh. MORE crap to weed through. We donated some items, but the worst was all the clothes, shoes and handbags! Had I known she had all that, I would've pushed harder after my son's wedding (OB stayed there, contacted me via text on my way to the wedding asking what to do, mom picked out something but can't fit in it! Luckily his daughter was with me, so she did the texting, but geez, use a brain cell or 2 - pick out something else! What did he think I was going to do at 60mph on the highway!!!)
Anyway, getting rid of obvious things and other things no one wants will clear out quite a bit. Donate clothes no one wants. There are places you can donate furniture to, ours even took mattresses! Let family decide if they want items. Personally, if you have no room for it, take a picture for memories and sell or donate it. YB took a lot from the storage unit we had so I could get rid of that, and now he has a unit chock full! His problem, not mine!!!
Watch George Carlin's show on "stuff" - it kind of puts things in perspective. It is all just "stuff." Many items may bring back fond memories but that doesn't mean we need to hang on to it. Unless something is clearly of value, understand that most of us own things that are not really antiques (mom's furniture was a good case in point - probably 60's, so not really antiques and most likely mass-produced, so a dime a dozen. Same for all those "collectibles." Check online - most aren't worth what they cost to buy!)
Once cleared, cleaned, spruced up and repairs are done, sell it for the best price and put the proceeds in/or open a trust for mom, to cover her needs. Wisely invested, this can bring in income, maybe even more than renting would net, AND is a lot less work or headache than renting a place!!
NOTE TO ALL: Once that house sells, there could be tax implications, regardless of that exclusion they allow. Mom's was a Life Estate, sold before she passed, so she only netted a small amount based on IRS life expectancy charts. However, it was enough that 2 years later Medicare jacked up her cost, because it increased her income that year and they have a 2 yr lookback. It will revert the next year, which I could see in the projected SS, but sadly mom passed before she could benefit. ALSO, you won't get SS for the month they pass, even though they still have expenses AND the payments are for the previous month - for instance, Jan 2021 payment is really for Dec 2020, but if they pass ANY day in Dec, they don't get the payment. Pension was the same. IT SUCKS and I plan to contact my Congress reps.
I completely understand your pain!
My Aunt has Alzheimer's. After my Uncle passed, I had to move my Aunt into ALF/memory care from the home she had lived in for 45 years.
She needed the proceeds from her house to live on, so the house was sold. It needed more repairs than she could afford and she was not safe to live alone. It was the most agonizing decision to make!!
If Mom truly is never going back, it seems to me that the cost of hanging on to the house may be needless. Taxes, yardwork, utilities and maintenance can be expensive.
Hopefully Mom has a POA in place!
BEST wishes and (((hugs)))
The professional help will deal with "her wishes" no matter what is "reality". You will not only run out of "how to deal with" and your relationship could deteriorate to verbal abuse and worse.
My Dad died in September from COVID and until literally the last minute, we thought Mom would have to go into a nursing home because he provided a lot of her care--even though he was in a wheelchair. (She is too--stroke--but it worked for longer than anyone expected. They also had daytime care and my sister and I split weekend duties.)
This has been their only home; my sister and I grew up there, so I feel that part--as well as in our case, 58 years of "stuff." Mom's back home, we've been cleaning and sorting and she's OK with that. But when it comes time to tell her she has to leave...Dad got out "easy."
My condolences for the loss of your Dad. Caring for elderly parents is heart wrenching, especially during a pandemic. My caregiving days have passed and what I've learned, helped me to make plans for my care. My in-laws (passed within a week of each other) and my Mom (my Dad passed 10 years before her) managed to live in their homes (over 50 years each) up until 3 months of their deaths. Something that we'd all wish, no? My Mom would absolutely REFUSE to let me organize or discard/donate ANYTHING in her house after my Dad died. It was so sad and frustrating at times. It would really upset her to the point of her crying. At that point, I knew I could never "move, organize or touch" her things while she lived in her home. When she finally ended up in a nursing home for the last 3 months of her life, I was so busy making sure she got the care she deserved that clearing out her home took a back burner.
After she passed, I found my brother (who lived all his life with her) a beautiful senior apartment complex to live in. Mind you he was basically a 2nd pair of eyes for me, but really didn't do any active caregiving. That said, he was not going to help me clean out Mom's house of 50 years of "stuff".
After he was settled in his new apt, it took me (alone) a year and a half to go through EVERYTHING and donate, discard and ultimately paint, fix up and get the house ready for sale. At that point I was 58 years old. I worked on this 5 days a week, 8 hours a day, all the while caregiving for my elderly in-laws in THEIR own home. Fortunately they only lived 2 streets away from my Mom's house. It was very stressful to say the least. There would be some days that at the end of my day of cleaning that the memories of everything I touched in my Mom's house would make me just pull in my driveway and sit in my car and cry. So I hear you.
A mere 10 months after my Mom passed, my in-laws passed within 7 days of each other. They, too, managed to live in their home up until 1-2 months before their deaths. After cleaning out my Mom's house and selling it, I immediately had to turn my attention to cleaning out my in-laws house (with the help of only my husband) and fixing it, repainting, etc. for eventual sale. That house, too, had 50 years of "stuff" and memories that drained me emotionally. I loved my in-laws so very much and I think their house was tougher for me.
My advice is to take your time to clear out the house, re-live the memories (good and bad) and know you did the best you could have. Your Mom is in a safe place for her. Having a loved one in a nursing home has its own caregiving challenges. Don't leave your Mom's home empty or unattended too long. An empty house can deteriorate quickly. Plus homeowners insurance may not pay if they find out no one is living there should something happen.
I am now in the process of really coming to grips with the reality that our kids aren't that keen on "inheriting" all our "stuff". (I've lived in this house for over 32 years.) I know the few things they would like as a remembrance of us, but the rest? That's MY issue and MY burden. I don't want them to have to do what I had to for my Mom's and in-laws houses.
So I guess after this long drawn out response, I hope this gives you insight and "permission" to make the journey of going through your Mom's possessions and feel it's okay to do so. Sending {{{HUGS}}} to you.
My Mom passed away in December and I realized that going through all the personal things and selling the house while she was still alive was one step toward letting go. I was so glad I had that behind me so I could grieve her loss without also grieving the loss of the house I grew up in.
Everyone's decision is, of course, a personal one that is best for them and their family. I wish you peace in whatever you chose to do.
(Mom's back home; at the literal last minute we were able to find 24/7 aides.) It was the only house they/us kids had ever lived in. We're still cleaning and sorting and Mom's OK with that. Hey, all the cleaning means there's no time to grieve...
I can only share my personal experience with my parents’ home. My mom passed in 2012 (Parkinson’s disease and pneumonia). At the time of her death, my dad was in nursing care (prostate cancer that spread to the hip and possibly other areas—he passed in 2016). Because we knew that he wasn’t returning home, we began to make plans regarding the house. I was POA, and the legal documents stated that I could make financial decisions including sale of property, etc.
Because my dad still had most of his mental faculties, I wanted to show him what the cost was for “maintaining” his empty house. I knew that if the house remained unoccupied, there would be a much higher insurance premium to pay. Once I showed him the bottom line, he agreed that it was time to sell the house.
The first thing I did was clean up some of the spaces and had a realtor come in to give us some ideas on possible updates we could do that would bring a higher resale value. We also had an inspection done, so we wouldn’t be surprised by major problems (there were several). Dad had enough money that could be used to update his basement and make it a liveable space, so we planned for that. There are 5 kids in my family and I discussed all of this with them. It wasn’t required, but I wanted to include them.
Before the remodel, we hired a company to do an estate sale. I had all my siblings decide what items were of sentimental value or that they just wanted to own and I had them remove the items before the Estate Sale. Whatever was left after the sale, the siblings rummaged through a second time and choose items for themselves or their kids, and the rest we donated.
Next came the remodel, which included touching up the trim on the outside of the house, updating some landscaping (my husband did this, since he owns a garden center), repairs made to a fireplace, treatment for termites and pests, some roofing needs, and completely painting the interior of the house to make it clean and fresh looking. We also worked through the checklist of recommendations by the home inspector. Once completed, we had a realtor come back to arrange for selling the house.
Once the house was nearly ready to sell, my brother and I took our dad through the house so that he could see the updates and have his moments (as we all needed) to recall fond memories and recognize that another family would now make their own memories in the house. It was a sweet time, even though months later Dad had forgotten that we put the house up for sale.
None of this is easy for those who have had fond memories of their family home and all the gatherings, parties, friendships, holidays, etc. But holding on when it’s past time to let go, is even more exhausting and emotional.
We sold the house to a young couple. My daughter and I revisited the house about 2 years later. The owner was so sweet to walk us through and show us the updates they had made. They had a son and the owner was so thrilled to be in this house raising her son. She said that she wanted this home to be their forever home and hoped to fill it with several children in the coming years. New family memories in our old family house—couldn’t be a better ending!
Soon after my sister and I moved our parents, we sold their house. (After retirement, they moved into the house in which my mother had spent her teen years, which they still had 13 years after her widowed father died.) My father had asked me a year or so before we moved them if I wanted to live there, and although it was a nice place to visit in the summer, I felt it wasn't the most practical place for me to live so I said no (too far from most amenities, considerable upkeep, and rather long, harsh winters).
We sold it to their next-door neighbor who wanted it as an investment to rent out. (I received a few estimates, and then we just sold it directly to the neighbor at a fair price, which they agreed upon the next day after walking through it, so this was a very simple process.) We deposited the proceeds from the house into our parents' trust account for their care. I figured it made more sense to sell something that requires money for upkeep, etc. than to sell stock that generates income. My memories of the house have to do more with visiting grandparents than parents, and once none of them were living there, it became just another piece of real estate. (I've moved enough times that I simply don't get emotionally attached to places, and I've never owned any real estate so this wasn't the best place for me to start, and renting it out isn't so practical when living 400 miles away.) The proceeds from the house were useful for paying for our parents' care (by the time it was sold, they both needed nursing home care) while the stock dividends also helped. I visit that area each year, and my mother asked about the house, and I could honestly tell her it looked "happy" from what the former neighbor says and how the tenants have put their own touches on the outside.
I feel we did the right thing and everybody involved "won"--the house went to someone who wanted it and appreciated it, the money went for our parents' care, and now that both parents have passed, my sister and I will have the stocks (for our own old age!)..
Absolutely! The only down-side for us was the Life Estate the EC atty set up. Great if you know your LO has a limited life left AND can remain in the home until the end. Not so with mom (and yes, it was tried, failed miserably, thanks to her!)
Although the bulk of the funds went to us at sale, we put it all back into the trust. Her SS and pension covered less than 1/2 the cost of the MC, but despite taking quite a bit every year, initially to cover the condo AND MC, it's almost like we didn't really touch it! The 2 year chart shows the balance to be almost the same now as 2 years ago! So, it is earning income, probably more than a rental, with a lot less headache and work!
Given the average rental in the area, the RE taxes and condo fees would have sucked down most of the rental fee. Hiring a management company would have likely taken the rest. We had considered renting, but worries about landlord issues (repairs, deadbeats, damages) were enough for me to say NOPE!
We had no ties to this place ourselves and honestly, after almost 2 years of clearing, cleaning and getting repairs done, I was SICK of the place and never wanted to see it again!
There were other funds used to open the trust, but considering the cost of keeping the condo for 2 years after she moved out, paying for the balance of MC and supplies, etc for four years, currently the remainder is MORE than we each got at sale, so I have no complaints about doing it the way we did!
The smart move, which jacobsonbob mentions, is set that aside for your own potential needs down the road! No clue what my brothers will do with theirs (just trying to get them to say how they want it distributed is a pain in the butt!), but I suspect they won't have it when it's most needed! We don't know what's in store for us in the future, so I want to be sure there are funds to cover my care, so that my kids won't have to worry about it!
Or, let her move back in and hire a Live In.
For now, shouldn't be in a hurry to sell her home.
You can get income by renting it out.
If no one plans to live there, it's probably best to let it go. If it's close by, devote a few hours/week to clear out anything that is clearly of no use, pictures of the house/rooms cleaned up, for memories, offer furniture to family, including you, if anyone wants items, then sell or donate the rest. Pack up smaller memorabilia and papers that might be needed, then sell it to another family who can make their own memories in that place!
It was not emotional for me, as we never lived in the condo - that was bought after we were all out of the house. I got so sick of the place (1 3/4 years several times/week to get it all clear, clean, repaired and sold!) I never want to see it again!
As another poster wrote, "Your indecision on what to do isn’t about the house itself... it’s that selling it would make it ‘real’ that Mom is incapacitated and life will never go back to how it was before."
I went through a similar thing with my father, who had vascular dementia. Interestingly, I just stepped in and "did what needed to be done." But my older brother was in denial, and kept thinking that we could just have aides come in to assist him with his care and he would be okay living alone in the house. He seemed oblivious to the fact that it was "unsafe" for dad to do this as he was getting more and more confused with each passing month.
Remove the nicer stuff and say that was all the firemen could save.
We have downsized my aunt/uncle from a 4000 sq ft farm/house, to a 2 bedroom IL apartment. They took WAY more than they needed, and have some of it in storage. It's hard to see your beloved possessions go to another person, but sometimes it's necessary. I am a Bible Believing Christian and I like to think of it like the parable of the talents--we need to use the gifts we've been given and invest them, not just store them up.
Your indecision on what to do isn’t about the house itself... it’s that selling it would make it ‘real’ that Mom is incapacitated and life will never go back to how it was before. That you will lose her eventually. And those are hard things to accept.
Thing is, the memories and love you had in the house won’t end! You can keep those forever. The house is just a frame around a picture of your life, if that makes sense. Take the picture out of the frame, and it’s the same picture, yes?
mom has dementia she can not make a decision.
If she has been declared incompetent she legally can not make a decision.
Family decision time about all the "stuff"
Divide up what family wants. (try not to kill each other in the process.)
Pack up what is to be saved.
Sell what no one wants
Donate what will not sell.
Sell the house. Must be at Fair Market Value.
Money to be used for Mom's care.