Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
We had a really great experience by having a meeting which an elder law attorney in his conference room. The lawyer was in charge, not a sibling. He kept everyone on topic, and focused on the needs at hand. If someone started a cross conversation, the attorney would demand we focus on what was the most important thing we were trying to achieve.
Also, before the meeting, we talked about no judgement about what anyone could or would do.
I could be reading this completely wrong, but it feels like when you said “agenda”, you mean your agenda.
We did not invite spouses, but that was no problem unless we were going to ask them to do something.

I am going to show my prejudices, but if you pressure your siblings to give of their time in caregiving, often it will be their spouse that does the actual work.
The attorney meeting was the best thing us siblings ever did to get a focus and advice outside of our own opinions. It brought us together as a unit instead of a bunch of individuals. We did say if someone did not come, they would not have any say in the decisions we needed to make. 5/7 came.
I highly recommend you do this.
It is like herding cats though. We range in age from 70 to 47, and are from 3 different mothers but the same father, so you can imagine the different concerns, worries.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter