My mother lives with my husband and me. She has alzheimer's dementia, and is in a wheelchair. She's had a life-long habit of giving her money to my brother. Now I have control of her money, allowing her spending money. When I refuse to give my brother money out of her savings account, she gets angry, mean, and declares she wants to move out to an apartment. She is on the waiting list at the nursing home, but she says she's not going there, she wants to live alone. She clearly cannot live alone. When she leaves here she will go to the nursing home. We are in the process of getting papers filed for guardianship. In the meantime, do I show her the doctor reports stating she in incapable of living alone, or of making decisions? Do I just tell her the doctor said she can't live alone? She knows about the guardianship proceedings, but she doesn't understand them. She thinks a guardian will be another person at her beck & call - she will tell them how she wants her money spent & they will do it. She had extensive testing a year ago, and the neuro-psychologist went over the results with her. However, she doesn't believe she has dementia. The report had a minor error about her circumstances, so she uses that to mean none of the report is correct. I'm looking for some way for her to have peace with the decisions my husband & I make. We are not going to bow to her bullying. So, if she reads the report, which states in black & white she is not capable of making decisions for herself, will she back down & accept her circumstances, or am I in for a continual battle with her for the rest of her life? My brother knows we don't want him to ask her for money. He is too selfish to consider how it affects her & us. So talking to him won't do any good.
I don't think she will accept anything you show her in black and white. The guardianship proceedings are likely to make matters worse emotionally between you as she will feel you are taking total control where she will have little to no input. And then you will place her in nh. This will be upsetting for her. I'm not sure about the legal ramifications but you can check with your attorney to make sure you will have both financial and medical guardianship. If she is relatively coherent and capable, the court could assign a separate guardian for her finances especially if mom says she wants brother to have some control. Not to scare you, just be aware that these legal proceedings can turn messy.
If your mother starts to carry on about giving money to her son, maybe it would work to just tell her, "We can't do that anymore. The money is needed for your care." And then drop it. Keep it light. Smile. Nod. But subject closed.
Blessings and good luck.
2. Get someone else to intervene with your selfish, useless brother. An authority figure (lawyer, judge, pastor, priest, trusted friend) needs to bring him up short, face facts and help with her care rather than being a perpetual parasite.
Best wishes.
Take care of yourself.
Equinox
But to return to your question: yes, you ought to show her all medical reports, allow her to read it for herself, don't interrupt her or challenge what she says, but offer any help she asks for to understand it and encourage her to ask questions. You will need to do this on innumerable occasions and it will get tedious and frustrating - but it's still worth the effort. Do not expect her to agree with it, or to like it, or to accept it. It would be wonderful if, given time and your endless patience, she came to trust your and your husband's decisions as being simply devoted to ensuring her ongoing welfare, comfort and happiness; but she's a long way from that, by the sound of it, so all you can do is make the best choices you can and meanwhile accept her unhappiness with her situation. Thwarting her wish to indulge her spoiled child is not a good start to helping her relax, by the way; so don't unless you have a genuine duty to do so. It is her money, always remember that. I'm sure you didn't mean how it sounded, but the phrase "allowing her spending money" made my antennae twitch. It's ALL her money. Your role is to protect her from theft, abuse, insane reckless spending and all the other potential adverse consequences of losing mental capacity; but once that's achieved you must do as she wishes.
What you seem to be longing for, understandably, is that you will somehow be able to make her at peace with what is a terrifying, imprisoning condition. No, almost certainly she will never "back down and accept her circumstances." Would you?
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