Anyone have a parent who receives funds from the state for home health care but uses it for other things? Then expects his "kids" to do all the things so he doesn't have to "pay" someone and makes you feel bad because you don't have time to do it all?
I am sure you are aware that if you allow yourself to get sucked into moving in with either of them, you are SUNK!
As you said, they ARE manipulative.
Their complaints are not about getting better or being proactive or following through.
Their expectations/"goals" or "wants" are not what they want
--like Dad riding horses...those kinds of "wants" are total run-arounds [decoys]
--no matter what you try, they will not do it, will back out.
My Mom wanted to have a house off-grid, in woods--said she loved being alone; alternately, she was gonna find a new partner who "understood" her [read: drinking buddy she could lead around by the nose].
She wanted me to design something for her, but many long hours spent designing something, even if to her exact specifications, were rejected.
Finding other persons who could build what she wanted-or something close to it, were rejected out of hand as "too expensive".
YET, she was, in part of her, really wanting me to build her a little house.
[AS IF I could do that!!]
Other parts of her really hated being alone, really was scared to death of living in the woods where larger wild animals were, and reallyreallyreally loved hot and cold running water, heat, and a flush-toilet!
Near as I could tell, from her behaviors, what she really wanted me to do, was be there at her side, beck-and-call, 24/7, while she puttered--better yet, while she told me what to do as she watched and pontificated.
Someone in that frame of mind, will never be happy no matter what you do, no matter how close what you do conforms to their stated their wishes.
That is a dependent/codependent behavior pattern.
When they lack the other half of that relationship, they start coming apart at the hinges, until they can get someone near them to fulfill that dysfunctional role.
If you cannot fulfill that role, you become the devil incarnate according to them, target for their wrath and drama.
They complain LOTS, cry on others' shoulders, with huge drama.
They weave lies with truths so finely, others' fail to discern what is true.
How they see life around them, does not match what is real
--yet they believe their stories 100%, in order to defend their bad behaviors to others, while targeting one [likely you] as the person causing all their troubles..
No amount of cajoling, reasoning, or doing their bidding, turns them around, UNLESS they really want to get better.
They don't.
You can avoid being the target by avoiding moving in with either of them.
And, by keeping your job, keeping yourself the functional person you have worked hard to develop into.
You can, I understand, call in an "Elder welfare check" to 911 services.
When you dial 911, it goes on record.
Records are important later on, when you may need to move one of them into an assisted living place, for instance.
You let the 911 operator know, you are "concerned for the elder because_________________"
An officer will go to their place, to check on them. They report back to you.
Be specific in your concerns, so the officer knows what to look for.
Since Dad rents, that can also be a push-point to get him closer in to the city...landlords do NOT like to be liable for injury to tenants.
Sometimes landlords ask tenants to move, telling them, for instance, that they need that unit to house a relative, or to do heavy repairs needed, or, etc.
It works best when an adequate alternate housing has been found that is ready as soon as the landlord gives the ultimatum
....if there is nowhere for Dad to go, the landlord might get in trouble with the State renter's laws--you might want to check those first, to find what loophole would work best.
Stick by your values--you are working within your limits, and not compromising yourself. Good job!
Next job is to find where/how to move Dad, it sounds like.
{{{hugs!}}}
Hope things go very well, and easier than anticipated!
I offer to pay for an exercise class for mom - no she doesn't want too. She does go to church but doesn't have any friends from there. She has no friends but she's a fun person. She is 57 and says she's done with life. won't go to a therapist - i offered to pay go with anything. i talk to her every week. I see her once a week or every other week. She wants to know when i'm moving back so we can live together. Yet she's happy i am engaged but not really since she has to "share" me. She moved to be closer to her grandkids with the $800 she had a few years ago. live with her son and get a job. Didn't work out so she moves back to my place and winds up staying a year. She has her own place and i want to see her happy but i am tired that its all on my shoulders- which i know its not my responsibility anymore but i hurt for her. I hurt for my dad. I'm tired of hearing what they don't want to do.
Thank you thank you thank you! i'm trying to remember that!
Sounds like there are some dysfunctional behaviors from way back also going on--it only gets worse with age and infirmity!
While it is very altruistic to help out aging and ailing parents, and it is super to help them stay in their homes,
often, they become hopelessly fixated on that, even in the face of need to move closer to town, or into a care facility.
When a parent starts up with the paranoia about banks,
[there are some rational reasons for that...but!],
and fears moving closer to town, perhaps other people need to get involved in helping them choose more wisely for their current needs
--the Doctor, the registered nurses that generally do the home evaluations, social workers, crisis lines, etc...all might help guide him towards a better solution than staying in his home without adequate care. .
PLEASE clearly understand the difference between
"helping out as able" and
"going into debt or screwing your own future by doing it"
Many caregiving adult children have gone into debt, lost their own homes, used up their own retirement funds, been unable to properly care for their own families AND themselves, etc., by getting emotionally sucked into caregiving beyond our means and capabilities, for aging parents who can manipulate us into a destructive oblivion as no other can--all while convincing us we are guilty, and not doing enough!
No State expects adult children to impoverish themselves to care for their parents. NO rational entity would expect that. State, especially, wants the adult children to keep solvent, to build savings for themselves, to prevent them needing State help later.
Dad saying your working is useless, is out of line!
It sounds more like he wants to get you guilted into doing his home health care--for free-- to just give up your job to care for him.
As a single person, you can have a tougher time surviving in the world
--you NEED your job, and whatever benefits it has--those kinda take the place of having your own little family of "backup personnel/resources" in your own home. Families can often miss understanding that.
You have an obligation to care for yourself first
--none of us are any good anywhere to anyone, if we cannot care for ourselves first; that includes saving for retirement, backup savings for our own emergencies, proper shelter, food, recreation, etc.
It is too easy for us to get bit-by-bit connived into giving everything we have [like the frog in a pot of cool water slowly warmed to boil it],
...to parents who do these behaviors--we were raised with them, therefore have a tougher time recognizing the games being played.
Dad lacks proper boundaries, and has unrealistic expectations.
PLEASE keep doing the good job of setting your own!
Keep reassessing where the boundaries really are, and if some corrections are needed at any time--the boundaries can shift daily
--seeing that and adjusting for changes, before a catastrophe happens, is tricky.
Many of us miss the cues early enough--then it becomes more difficult to correct.
Dad spending State funds earmarked for home health care, on other things, needs to stop. That can come back on him badly, if the State learns of it.
IF he is adamant to stay in his home, yet refuses in-home caregiving,
he is not thinking clearly,
OR, has decided he simply wants to die in his own home, one way or another--if that is the case, he will escalate in manipulating others to get what he thinks are his needs, met--and that can be at great cost to his family.
IF he has been manipulating you, he will likely have been manipulating others--and none know what others have been doing/providing, since part of the game is to keep any helpers from knowing anything about what others are helping with--it helps them get more.
IF he needs more legitimate income to achieve staying in his home,
perhaps a reverse mortgage might be a possible solution
--he would no longer own his home, but could stay in it til he dies or leaves to go into a nursing home, getting a monthly stipend.
BUT, if his health and age are too far advanced, a reverse mortgage is a poor solution--the bank would be getting a property almost for nothing if the person is advanced in age or illness.
SOME nursing homes or other elder care facilities, have taken on the ownership of a person's property in lieu of some payment for services...the person simply signs over their property to the facility. You would need to check wit one of those, to see how that is done, or if.
Mom needs social interaction and hobbies that take her time and responsibility! Empty nest feelings are tough--I know!
It might be as simple as Mom and kids keeping in touch via phone at least every few days or once a week--believe me, if my kids called to chat weekly, I'd feel over the moon! It has to be variable due to changing schedules.
We tried weekly Skype video-call with kid and family who live far away, but circumstances mean that doesn't always work out
--sometimes it is a couple weeks between--and believe me, those video calls are treasures!
Face time is precious, and helps maintain mental/emotional health of the aging parent, helps feeling connected.
Even if a kid asks the parent for their opinion on something, that is perceived as "you need me for something still"
--I am absolutely sure my dau. fakes that sometimes, but she's good at it--and it still feels great to know I am needed.
She is also very good at getting out of a call when she feels she needs to get off the phone.
Just a few suggestions.
Hope they help a bit!
Meanwhile, it sounds like you are working above and beyond the call of duty--keep reminding yourself of that!
{{{hugs!}}}
IF they choose to spend that money on stuff that the funds are not targeted for, they are out of line, and that funding could get yanked right away from them.
Examples:
---Woman lets boyfriend handle her welfare check; kids do not get proper supplies and care as result.
---Elder gets help paying for their home health care fro the State, but, instead of paying for health care, they spend it on going out to eat, or, clothes, or other things that are not health care items.
---Adult receiving money from State, to assist them with living expenses, can spend that money only on basic living expenses--rent, utilities, basic needs.
SO, if they use home health care funds [how did they get control of those, in the first place?!?] , that would be illegal use of funds.
Welfare usually pays home health care workers' agency directly
--that money does NOT go through the person's hands.
I wonder what that money really is??
IF you are being paid as caregiver, and that money is supposed to be paying you as such, it still would be issued to you, not your elder being cared for...that is my understanding.
States differ on how much money family members are expected to spend out of their own pockets.
But most agree: family members cannot be forced to spend money they do not have/cannot afford--States do not usually force family to become destitute while caring for an elder.
Sounds like you need some legal/elder counsel advice.
You might be able to get some advice anonymously--which might be a good idea--if it turns out your Dad is committing fraud by spending targeted money for things it is not meant for, discovering that, and putting a quiet "course correction" onto it, might be a good idea.
While I would not want to see her spend on frivilous things (QVC), if she goes on Medicaid they will do 5 year look-back on spending anyway (and life insurance policies are considered assets by Medicaid that would have to be spent for her benefit).
Whoever received these funds will be on the hook for paying back. Medicaid would have any life insurance policies (mature) cashed in and spent on Mom/Dad care before they pay.
If you are doing all the caregiving - let Dad pay you or help him get paid caregiver - sometimes they just don't know how to hire someone to be housekeeper or caregiver - maybe you could offer to help in hiring someone,
even if it is for just a few hours a week to start.
The amount of money my mother has wasted over the past decade on QVC is shocking.
If I were one of the kids, I would not do for free what he is receiving funds to pay someone to do.
Unless there is some really compelling extenuating circumstance here, like he uses the cash for a drug he could not otherwise afford, I might even be tempted to report his behavior to the funding source.