My place is just too small for both my Mom and myself and it's starting to drive me nuts. Since my Mom sold her home we have the resources to buy a home versus the apartment I have been renting which would give us more room and I would have privacy. I have been house hunting and found a home that would be perfect for both of us yet I'm nervous about purchasing a home, it's mostly cash so our expenses would not be much, about the same as what I have been paying for renting my place. I just need more space! My Mom and I are constantly bumping into each other and I have very little privacy. Thoughts?
While I appreciate your need for your own space I wonder what your plans are for the future... do you plan to care for her until the end? It would be unfair to move her now unless you are absolutely certain you will not need to move her again when her care needs increase.
Also, you have sibs, so you can not really use mom's money to buy a home without some push back from them, either now or in the future after she passes on.
With all her equity tied up in home ownership you will have less ready cash to pay for home care when she needs it.
If she may be applying for Assisted Living, Memory Care or Nursing home Medicaid coverage, I'd be careful of using her funds for your home, since it could effect her eligibility for financial help. I'd see an Elder Law attorney who knows Medicaid laws about that. I'd make sure of how it needs to be handled if you do decide to purchase.
There are so many things to consider. Also, her behavior may change as she progresses through the various stages, but, I wouldn't count on more space, making her her easier to live with. It's not her fault. Just the way the illness makes people.
And I'm sorry about the loss of your brother.
I would also make the decision based on more what you know and can put on paper, and not what your mom might want. She may not be thinking clearly and not really in a position to offer sound advice...considering the dementia. Eventually, she may not really understand the concept of privacy of having her own room.
I'd also consider that while her condition may appear to be slowly progressing, it could change suddenly and you be in a situation where you cannot leave her alone at all and she may need constant care due to incontinence, wandering or bizarre behavior. She may also become bedbound and not be able to turn herself. I'd try to budget how you would afford a new house, home maintenance (if the furnace goes you have to replace it) and in home help for her.
I'd still get the attorney consult to get information. We never know what the future holds. I'd make sure that I was protected.
It's a lot to consider, but, it sounds like you are weighing the pros and cons. That's smart.
That said, buying a house is not a great idea during times of uncertainty. I think you could make a much stronger case for renting a larger space that accommodates you both and where your mother can age in place.
You also need to be realistic that you yourself will not be able to care for her 24/7. You need respite and to run errands and you will need to hire help.
That said, are there bigger spaces in the center of town where you live? It is much easier to care for someone and to find helpers when you live close to services like transportation, grocery stores, a hospital, etc.
But getting back to Medicaid. I don't understand why caregivers are cautioned about spending money on basic living expenses for their parents. If you moved into a mansion and bought a Ferrari to drive her around in, that of course would be outrageous. It's your mother's money and, in my completely Medicaid-uninformed opinion, your mother needs somewhere to live that's not in your apartment.
Also, I'd keep in mind that if you get a new place, you might need things like handicap accessible bathrooms, grab bars, large doors, etc. I'm sure others here can tell you what you might need to have installed to make it possible for her to live in the home. Many dementia patients become wheelchair bound and need room for that.
In addition to a caregiver agreement, would a roommate agreement help in this situation were Medicaid ever to be needed?
I owned a home a long time ago and I remember all the work that went into home ownership. I like renting because if there's a problem I just call the landlord and it's fixed.
My only private place is my bedroom (I have a 3 bedroom apartment). My Mom and I both have our own bathrooms which is nice. I think my mistake was when my Mom sold her house she wanted certain pieces of her furniture and that's cluttering up my apartment leaving us no room to walk around freely without an obstacle course.
After reading all the comments I think I should just get rid of most of my Mom's furniture in order to make my apartment clutter-free.
What about my Mom's money? Should I put in my name since I have POA (financial and medical)?
Thanks, Jenna
You're at a crossroad right now where the decision is up to you. You may need more space from your mom by way of a bigger home. However, what if putting her into a facility would actually be much better? This would actually be the better way to go if she has dementia, which will only worsen with time, and it sounds to me like she may already need a facility. If you think about it, committing to a home is a very big responsibility. You'll have different expenses that you didn't have renting on top of taking care of your mom. In order to keep your home, you'll definitely need lots of money in the bank in order to pay property taxes for starters. Not paying property taxes, the IRS can take your home. If something breaks, do you have enough money to fix it at that time? Let's say the furnace goes out as mentioned here. Can you immediately get that furnace fixed with you and your mom living there? Let's say you need some other major repair such as the roof or worse yet the foundation. Are you financially able to fix those major things? If your home needs insulation or someone breaks a window, do you have the finances to actually fix it right away especially in the middle of a storm or worse yet, winter? These are questions to ask yourself because you need lots of money in the bank in order to even have a home, or you'll end up living in a deteriorating home only to end up homeless later when it's condemned at some point
Contrary to what others have said, renting is a drain on resources that you can never get back. So I would have your Mother, in her own name, purchase a home for herself. You can do the choosing and sign papers for her with a POA (assuming you already have that). Medicaid understands that a person has to have a home to live in.
1) a house takes a lot of maintenance and that means, time energy and money. As it is time, energy and money mostly go toward mom right now so realistically it would be another huge commitment that will make my life tougher at this point;
2) If I were to move now to a larger place outfitted for the disabled and mom's needs, is that where I will want to live when mom passes away? Will I then need to move again?
3) Now for mom's sake I need to be near to conveniences, but my dream would be to live in a quieter more rural settling. So, will I be short-changing myself with such a commitment that does not meet my future desires and really will not lend much to mom's life at this time?
4) The change would be very hard on mom with dementia. Just being in the hospital or rehab for a couple of weeks totally messes with her head and she becomes much more disoriented, insecure and doesn't know where she is supposed to be permanently (e.g. always moving). She needs what is familiar around her and she needs her age old routines;
5) Given how tired I feel now, the thought of taking on a home purchase and a move when I think realistically about all that entails is overwhelming;
6) So very sorry for the loss of your brother. Grief is a funny thing - the way it plays with our emotional selves and our psyches. In a way, when our parents have dementia we already start to grieve the loss of the person we knew and loves and we grieve for what the illness does to them. It is a very hard time in life and more difficult for you with the passing of your brother. I'd say hang tight and try working on small things that might make your life and your mom's life better and easier. You didn't say much on the privacy part and don't know how small your apartment is now. I imagine it must be difficult to have a freer adult life, entertain friends privately, etc. which is a necessary part of maintaining your own "self" and mental health as you care for your mom. Maybe you can try to be good to your self and do things that bring you happiness, in addition to trying to care for and provide happiness and stability for your mom. God bless you and Good Luck!
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You might be able to set up a trust to hold title to the house, or the proceeds of the sale of your mom's house, which could give you a lot of flexibility. of which you are the trustee, and will inherit automatically without probate. You don't know when your mom's needs will overwhelm your energy and ready cash, and you don't want to put her through any more moves than possible. Talk to the Aging specialists in your community, a good elder care lawyer and accountant.
I know a couple who went around the world literally for a year & their health care insurance was 1/2 if they did not go to U.S.A. - it's a money grab as far as I can see - I'm looking into investing in it as that's 'free' money as I see it - I pay $2347CDN$ [approx. $1760.25 US$] for my mom's private room with meals, laundry, nursing care, meds dispensing [gov't pays all but $200.00 a year for her ... diabetes & all], physio 2x a week plus about 10 recreational interactions
Good luck to you all - fyi Canadian gov't info lines repeatedly crashed from 9 Nov on from calls from U.S.A. - get in line because we don't just take anyone you must show you will be an asset to our community - what you say is an invasion of your liberties is bullroar - here we no longer go broke taking care of a sick family member but if you want to have the liberty of going broke doing so then enjoy - I read so much about this that I am gobsmacked that you put up with that treatment from your gov't ...... staying this side of border for now & maybe for ever - M
Originally it was my Mom's idea to buy a house and we could use a larger place. I need to think of the future as far as my well being after my Mom is no longer living as well as my Mom getting the help she needs when I myself can no longer care for her (meaning when her dementia gets worse).
I would be happy in the "right" home with no stairs (I'm no spring chicken myself)... I'll take my time looking. Finding someone to help me is not easy as I live in a very rural area (which I love because of all the nature).. The biggest stress reliever was giving up my Mom's dog because it was too much for me walking him 3 to 4 times a day and walking on ice (they don't treat the dirt roads here with salt, only the main roads).
Elder Care attorneys are not cheap but they can help set things up to protect the patient and any assets. We finished up trust for funds and condo last year, and have just gotten a very reluctant mom into a memory care facility today! Don't know how well this will work, as short-term memory is shot and she has been so adamant about being independent and refusing to move ANYWHERE...
I do agree about being wary about buying - you may need those assets to help pay for in-home help or a place better than nursing home (last resort!)