Mom, 93, has dementia and living in ALF. Brother, 55, has been thorn in our sides nearly his entire life. He barely dodged prison and seems to be clean now from a long-term heroin addiction, is underemployed. He manipulates everyone, especially Mom, always about money. Strong and smart dad who stood up to him and ruled the roost, passed away and put me in charge; I have DPOA and have control of finances, thank God. I have done everything I can to protect her assets according to the trust. But she will not be denied helping her precious baby boy (she refers to him like he's a child). Because of several instances where she's lost money, I keep her supplied with $60 for her wallet, more than she needs living in ALF. Now she's nastily demanding, daily, that I give her many hundreds of dollars so she "can feel comfortable". Sis and I know this is all about bro, so she can shower him with all the money she wants to, at any time. Mom has a long history of enabling him which is just what he DOESN'T need, he needs to finally stand on his own, and get a real job. I have been forced to give him rent money etc just to keep him off Mom's back and arousing her intense anxiety about his welfare. But she wants to give him far more than what I give him. She loves him so much more than she loves me and Sis, who do all the caregiving and watch out for her welfare, and she lures him to visit with the promise of money. I feel I'm in a balancing act between keeping him satisfied enough that he doesn't dump his problems on Mom and cause her terrible anxiety, and keeping her satisfied enough so she doesn't cause me sleepless nts. My brother has been a huge problem especially since Dad died that I even hired an Elder Care lawyer to advise me. But this new large money demand from Mom is stumping me. Anyone have this issue and have found a happy medium? There is no reasoning with Mom, and her anger is driving a wedge between us, and I'm her primary caregiver.
This women is a resident of another country, has 2 children and they have never met. My mom is extremely against this idea and things blew up a few months ago and I told him that I would not allow him to bully my mom into something she was not comfortable with. I am the executor of the will, but I do not have a POA. I know he is plotting in the background to get this women and her kids here. I am not sure of his plans after that. I know he has sent this women money and has used various excuses not to pay his share of expenses. He listens in to phone calls between me and my mom and pretends he has changed and doesn't verbally abuse my mom as much. I beleive it is all a sham. I don't know how to protect my mom without being in her home all the time. I live about an hour away. Please if anyone has been in this position or something similar please comment. I have another sibling who lives 5 hours away but is a druggie with a gambling habit. I feel alone and don't know what steps to take to protect my mom. SP
Therefore, her DPOA does that for her.
The DPOA is to protect the elder who can no longer do that for themselves.
FAILING to do that, becomes a form of Elder Neglect.
No matter what she says, or how angry she gets, her manipulations are part of her illness. Part of the illness she has had all her life [co-dependent type?], plus now, it is magnified by her dementia.
It is common for siblings to sucker for her behaviors.
It is the DPOA's job to make sure all accounts are meticulously kept, in case of question, and to make sure the elder is properly cared for, no matter what they rant, yell, accuse, spit, bite, hit or whatever to try to get you to give in.
As DPOA, you are required to make sure her funds last long enough to take care of her, not your brother.
As long as you are doing that job in the most accountable way you can, pretty much nothing others say is meaningful.
They can slng legal suits all they want, but as long as you are being accountable with the bookkeeping, records keeping, they do not have a leg to stand on.
IF, OTH, you start suckering to giving more money to support your brother, THAT could get you removed as DPOA, since the funds are for HER, not him, and someone else could show that, and promise the judge to do it better than you.
Understand, children raised by dependent/co-dependent parents [dysfunctional], will all learn some or all of those same dysfunctions, and be very vulnerable to the mind-games they play. You are one of those children, and so are your sibs.
They all manifest it a bit differently, but its still "an elephant in the room".
IF you recognize this, and take steps to set realistic, rational limits on them and Mom, and for yourself, and stick to them, as well as keeping good records of what transpires daily between you all, things have a good chance to work out to keep taking care of Mom the way it was set up when more rational thinking was present.
Good luck! It is hard work, and can be emotionally draining. Make sure you keep your needs met, too. Only you can choose when things have gone to a point of giving it up.
Oh--and keep in mind, a POA can be turned over to a 3rd party, too--there are people who do that job for elders who have families that argue, are irresponsible, or otherwise not able to care for the elder. IF things get too overwhelming for you, that might be an alternate path for you to take, to protect Mom from brother's misuse of funds.
Ditto on you getting some time to yourself!
BTW- is there any way to open up the brother's annuity so he can access x amount monthly starting now? He may still try to sweet-talk your mom out of extra, but maybe he'd back off a little.
Isnteasy has set up a good system giving her mother $60 to spend as she sees fit. I think that she should try her best to stick with that; be pleasant but be a broken record and whenever the mom wants more money, just remind her that she can give as much of the $60 to the brother as she wants to, but "That is all that's available". I say, no more details. Just repeat "That's all that is available". Assure her that you are making sure her expenses are taken care of, but $60 is ... "all that is available". It often pays to have a trusted professional from the bank, lawyers office, or a friend of hers get your back on that.
My advice, this brother will be a thorn in your side until you are 6 foot under,
BTW- I want to thank you for reminding me that wishing I had siblings is wasted energy. It doesn't mean that things would be better if I did have them.
I don't have any practical advice for you, but but I would like to point out something.
It may feel like your mother "loves" your brother more, but I'm sure it only seems that way because (1) by being primary caretaker, you are seen as the mean parent, and (2) while your relationship with mom is that of a responsible and caring adult child, his is still that of a kid needing the parent to support him, and that will probably never change.
You are doing the right thing by protecting her nest egg, and that is for everyone's sake.
Can you just keep repeating to her that the money is in trust (or whatever) to make sure that it doesn't run out, emphasizing that this is so Brother will "always be taken care of" ? sometimes there is not changing a parent's mind, and I have found that as long as I know in my heart that I am doing what is really best for her, I have to just make myself ignore the complaining and just keep doing what's right. It's exactly like not giving in when your small child insists on having things you are NOT going to give them.
Making some decisions now might also protect you and your sister from your brother's mooching once mom is gone. He would surely run right through his inheritance and then, eventually, your phone would ring. My friend has a brother who was a similar sponge on their mom. Though he and she hadn't spoken for years, he didn't hesitate to harass her for money once his inheritance was gone.