A little background- my mother has been living next to me in my condo building since 2018. Diagnosed with dementia in early 2019. She has always been difficult, manipulative and selfish and wasn't a good mother. This has been hell and her dementia has progressed. She can still do ADL's and puts up a charade of independence, but her executive functioning continues to get worse. She can not live "independently" in her condo without me being next door. I could go on and I have a pretty extensive post history here, but basically I have been stuck. I had to put up a huge fight for her to accept having a companion aid for 4 hours a week (which she reduced to every 2 weeks) so in her mind assisted living is out of the question.
Awhile back I went to an elder care attorney to find out if I could force my mother with dementia into assisted living with a DPoA.... the answer is NO. I'm in Florida- a "wait for a crisis" state.
My life changed again with the news that my brother has terminal cancer. He will be lucky to get a couple years and that will be with harsh treatment. That is when the thought started that I wanted to move closer to him, I wanted to move to my adult son's state which is driving distance to my brother's state. 3.5 hour drive.
Now I have gotten more news. For the first time I am going to be a grandmother. I am over the moon with this news, and needless to say it really ramped up my desire to move to his state.
I told my mother the news of the baby, but my siblings do not know as my son wanted to wait until after the first doctor appointment which is tomorrow. Her reaction was ..... meh.
My DH and I have decided we are going to move to my son's state, which is Maryland. I plan to talk to my mother this weekend and let her know she will have to move, because we are moving. She can decide where she wants to be but her only options will be assisted living no matter which adult child she decides to live close to- staying here will not be an option. If she tries to play that card I will take her to court and force the sale which I can do as a co-owner.
My mom will not care that I want/need to be closer to my brother and my son. She will be so angry it will be horrible.
But I'm getting out of something I never should have set up to begin with, and this time around I will be MUCH less prone to her manipulation.
Any tips, because the truth is I dread this talk so much, but it has to happen.
Since I'm a little late getting to this discussion, this trip has already taken place. Why not just delay delay delay her return? If she can't get back to FL without help from sister, she'll be "captive" for a bit... Perhaps sister can "work" on her, show her places in TX she might like... one can hope...
As noted in reply to another comment, FL isn't the only state that doesn't allow anyone to be forced to move. We had the same situation here. Mom refused the aides, hired to try to keep her in her own place longer. Next step was to move (brothers half-hearted offered their places, not likely it would have ever panned out!) So, it would have to be AL/MC, which was, at this point, in her mind, the WORST possible place! AL had been in her own plans BM (before dementia.) Not now. The EC atty told me we couldn't force her to move and said we'd have to apply for guardianship. The big gate to that was the MC chosen wouldn't accept a "committal", but it's also time consuming, expensive and since she wasn't really that far down the dementia path, they might not have granted it!
Too many think POAs give us absolute power, but they don't. They are legal documents that allow us to sign documents, participate in medical care, manage finances, etc. Nothing more. We can't dictate where they will live or how they will live.
Sometimes what we did can work (fibs.) She had injured her leg (cellulitis), so that was used by YB to draft a fake letter from 'Elder Services' at the hospital. In it, she was given the choice to move to a place we chose or they would place her. She was SO mad, but she went with my brothers. There was no time to move her furniture, so I bought new stuff for her room (brought a few items later, like her rocking chair.)
If there's some scenario that would work for you, if "reasoning" with her doesn't work, fibs R us might be useful. You know your mother best, so is there something that might work, esp since she's in TX at the moment? Hurricane damage? Tornado damage? Flooding damage? These happen all the time in FL. Sinkhole? Snake infestation? If you can prevent or delay her return, and maybe get her set up in a nice facility until the "issue" is resolved, then keep delaying her return... maybe???
Happy grandma-ing! There's only one for me, and that will likely be it. I do wish we could get together more often, damn this virus!!!
(I'm sure you will, but just in case - ignore those who are accusing you of "dumping" your mother. We who have been on here long enough know better and you do too. You've done so much for her and put up with her shenanigans (what a crafty old biddy!) for a long time. You can still care about her and oversee her care if no one else does without being the 24/7 whipping post. She had her time, it's YOUR time now, time to be there for your brother, your son, your DIL, and the soon-to-be grandbaby!!
Worst case, get the attorney working on getting her committed. That *could* be how to make it her choice - choose a place, mom, or the STATE will do it for you. That's pretty much what YB's fake letter implied for mom. You did say she wouldn't want the optics of all that laid bare in the courts....
Fingers crossed for you!!!
I think the important thing might be to role play this a bit with DH or a friend and practice not reacting to her range, attempts to guilt you or change your mind.
In your shoes, I would rehearse a mantra "we will be moving by Dec 1; you have some options to examine" or just silence in the face of her anger.
Respond, don't react.
Good luck, Piper!
I'm planning on having this talk on Tuesday, or sooner if the time feels right. Wednesday my mom has a planned trip to Texas to visit my sister, so if she's feeling angry and enraged at me, then a break from me will be good, and my sister who is not burned out can hopefully also help my mom understand she needs assisted living at this point- and she has choices as to where she wants that to be.
On my end, I'm going to start the conversation with telling her about my desire to be closer to my brother- who is also her dying son. That is a cold, heartbreaking FACT. The baby news is actually secondary to this as much as I am grateful for that piece of joyful news. I will let her know right off that she is welcome to move with us, but that she will need to go to "senior living" (that's what I'm going to call it) and I will not budge on that, period. I'm going to explain that she will still have her "own" apartment, and she can come and go as she pleases, including going on visits with me to see my brother.
That's how I'm starting it, and leaving it. This is what we are doing, here is your option if you decide to move with me. I plan to completely leave out the part that she has made my life a living hell the entire time she's been here.
It's a true wildcard what she will decide.
Barb - if she indicates in any way that her choice is to stay here alone then I will go back to that same elder care attorney I already spoke to and find out what I need to do. One of the reasons I don't think it will come to that is my mother's pride and ego rules the day. The thought of me going to court with her and pulling out her dementia report in open court and outlining the recommendations that she have supervision, cameras, no driving, etc- Along with the revocation of her driver's license, the stunt she pulled in PA to keep driving, the DUI that came after, how she had to sell her cottage because she could no longer be there alone..... Nope- that would be her worst nightmare.
I will post an update when this goes down. Thanks again for all the help and support.
You want to move, so start with that. You are going, no argument. She can’t stop you. If she won’t move herself, she pays you rent while things get sorted out. If necessary, you also rent where you are going until the finances get sorted.
You are in Florida, you say a ‘wait for a crisis’ state. So the crisis is her being left on her own, which is a lot better than the fall and broken bones that many people have to wait for. Sure, there will be a lot of fuss, but the chances are that this will all take a while to arrange. By the time you have actually left, she may be more realistic. If not, when she really is on her own she is likely to change her mind soon. Or (and if the finances work), she may even make different arrangements to stay in Florida. That’s not bad either!
* You have a lot on your plate and it sounds like you know what you will do and be able to set clear limits with your mother.
* My suggestions are:
a) be clear (depending on her ability to absorb / understand what you are saying, keep it simple;
b) DO NOT argue which she will want to do.
c) Keep her options between 2 - give her photos or info on specific places and let her decide between two. The point is not to leave the 'choice' open ended.
- Know if there is a waiting list before you give / show her the options.
- If she is concerned about money, have this covered - to be able to discuss w her - if she brings it up.
d) If you start to feel beat up / chewed up and spit out when you tell her your plans, tell her you need to go back to your place for something (give yourself a 'timeout' to regroup) - then go back later or in a few minutes.
e) Agree with her that it is not easy to change, that it will be a change ("for the better" although that might open a can of unwanted worms). Empathize with her - let her know you hear her (if she isn't screaming at you), be emotionally supportive with a 'stern hand' - if she wants to fight and scream, let her and DON'T RESPOND.
- Consider her ranting as an emotional release she needs to get out and she is doing that the only way she knows how.
- Plan ahead for this 'reaction' - it sounds like you already have - and have a good foundation emotionally on what is to come and how you will handle it. You know how she is / has been / and will be-respond.
- You can visualize being in a protective bubble when she starts to scream at you - have a tantrum.
* I suppose if it were me, I would find the positives of her moving and leave her a bullet point list, if she might read it / understand it.
Lastly, I applaud you for doing what you want and need to do. Becoming a grandma must be very exciting. I send you healing thoughts regarding your brother's health. Personally, I feel you are doing exactly what is in your best interest, in your brother's best interest, your son and your mother. It sounds like a win-win-win-win. Even though she was go kicking and screaming. God help me, I might too. Change co-mingled with dementia / fear is certainly not easy on anyone, and someone who is used to being able to manipulate to get their way will be more vocal about it.
* I often suggest that if a person feels overwhelmed or stuck in the moment requiring a response to say:
"That is worth consideration, I'll give it some thought"
"I will get back to you on that"
"I don't have a response right now." And change the subject. (and be ready / prepared to what or how you will redirect her thoughts.
"Yes, it will be hard and (xxx) your family will help you adjust"
"Yes, it will be an adjustment." (Not go on and on. Short sentences than stop.)
Let us know how the conversation goes. Good luck.
Gena / Touch Matters
You still need to live your life, be there for your bro and enjoy your grandchild. Your mother sounds controlling and possibly OCD (Type A Personality) in addition to her dementia. Please know that there is absolutely nothing you can do to please her. When she seems her most lucid tell her your plans and if she balks the explain she will have to live the rest of her life alone and if elder care comes into play there will be nothing you can do for her. Explain you have done all you are will to do and wish her a good rest of her life and do what you need to do. Dire situations call for dire actions. Good luck and God Bless!
Llamalover47
This is not going to be a one time conversation because she is going to be madder than a poked porcupine. You get your messages clear and be repetitive:
1. "Mom, hubs and I are moving to Maryland."
2. "Mom, you can buy me out of my half of your condo or sell it and move to a senior community."
3. "Mom, look at these senior communities. I'm touring them next week and I want you to come with me because I want you to see what you're missing."
Take it one conversation at a time. Right now, the most important conversation is that you're moving and she needs to decide what she's going to do about your half of her condo.
I would maybe give a timeline re buying her out of her condo - she may 'think' she has to be out in a couple of weeks. It will be a shock enough that she has to uproot herself. Knowing she has xxx time may help.
I still believe offering her two options (care facilities) vs open ended would be a better way to start. She could string one along for months 'looking' and 'finding' the RIGHT one only to put off the enviable - moving - and daughter selling the property.
Too many here - learn the very hard way - extending their self to an ailing parent when there is no self left to extend and then they wonder what to do and how to deal with their stress(ors), exhaustion, etc.
- Many never learned to set limits nor feel it is 'okay' to say no and set boundaries. And then, the avalanche of dementia 'happens' and people must learn a very steep learning curve - to function. It is a cruel reality so many family members experience 'on the spot, / job' learning.
* It is hard to put our own welfare / well-being 'first' and yet the more we do that, the more available we are to others, including family. This society doesn't support self care 'before' an/other's-care.
Gena / Touch Matters
If her mental capacity is poor, why not 'take a trip' to the East coast with her in tow. Find a new place for you to live in the area near your son, locate a place for her, then send a moving truck to get everything. If she can comprehend making a permanent move, then just flat out tell her you're moving and ask what her preferences are (and they don't include staying in the condo unless she can afford to hire 24/7 care). Surely a doctor would back you up on the fact she cannot live alone without you next door.
Then just walk away. Do not stay as it will be fights and threats ( sure no apology for the hell she has put you through.).
she is safe and being cared for and that’s the most important thing for me. I do not let what she says to me about going home affect me as she is in the later stages of dementia. Take a deep breath, say a prayer, be strong, tell her what you are going to do , and do it!!! You will find so much love and joy in that grand baby that it will make things a little easier for you! 🙏🏻🙏🏻💜
But.
Then it will be done. And you'll be in a better position in so many ways. Concentrate on that. The horrible will pass.
Losing so much as we age plus losing our minds is unfortunately, a horrible reality for many. If a person is miserable now, they may always be miserable. I read years ago that the emotions, feelings, who we are when younger is who we become as we age. God help me. . .
I am almost in the same boat as you. Without writing 100 pages on how my mom wanted a boy 1st, had one, and proceeded to dote on him and ignore me. Guess who she isn't living with and being cared for by.....yup the son she devoted ALLLL her time to. She literally was shipped down here (NC) by my daughter because "something is wrong with Nana".
Fast forward, I resent the fact that I am burdened with the foolishness and mess and chaos that she always brings AND that it's magnified by her (Feb of this year)dementia/Alzheimer's diagnosis. My mother also puts up this façade that she can take care of herself. I give her the meds/vitamins cause I don't trust her. I prepare her meals cause I don't trust her nor do I want her in my kitchen. We never had the mother daughter bond we should've had and now, well.....I just want this to be settled and done. She's going into an assisted living whether she likes it on not. There is no one else to take her and she can't stay with me.
Now far as my husband and I were concerned, her moving in here was ALWAYS temporary. I laid the ground work and planted ideas as soon as she set foot in the door. Medication has made her a bit more bearable so, I have started giving her items from the list I made.
The list has ALLLL the reasons why she must move. I put every reason I could think of on the list. So far she has agreed to go.
Also, I don't know if your mom would be open to adult daycare but I'm looking into that also. Anything to get her mind focused on what's outside my house for her. I am so sorry you're going through this. When you create a home you expect to be happy in it. Not annoyed and aggravated by what is best described as 'outsiders'.
The adorning son should'a / could'a done - taken responsibility.
I doubt I should have done what you took on if in your shoes and that is the key here - in so many of these posts. We are NOT in another's shoes and we don't know what shoe fits.
We can only support the suffering family member / inflicted member - and hope that compassion and self-care are a part of decision making. Its the guilt that seems to get people discombobulated (oh, that is one of my favorite words). Seriously, take care of YOURSELF in order to be 'there' to take care of another. Don't lose your life caring for an elderly parent. They will be gone and at that point, so will you. Take care of you first.
Is it an option for her to move to Maryland?
The sooner you tell her the better so she can have plenty of time to think and decide.
Prayers
I suggest you just tell her that you are selling your condo and your portion of her condo in order to buy property near your son. Tell her that she will need to move or buy your portion of the condo she lives in by a specific date. Explain that if she can not or will not buy your share, then it means she will sell the entire condo after that date. Have her sign an agreement to that effect.
Tell her that moving into senior housing whichever state she decides to live in may be a wiser choice for her future. Explain that if she stays in Florida, you will visit only ____ times per year and will not be able to do the things you currently do. Explain that if she lives in your new state, she may not live with you and your husband. Tell her you are willing to help her find senior housing in the new state. If she wants her own house, she will need to work with a realtor on her own.
The reality is that you can't "make her do" anything unless the authorities step in. You can suggest options for her but you can't make her take them. It is always wiser to just explain what you will do and give her options. Even with poor decision-making, nobody likes to be forced into a corner. If a crisis emerges, then you may be in a place -legally - to "make" the decisions for her.
1. Someone on your side in the room.
2. Someone with some "authoritative" stance who can stand up to your mom and tell her "no".
3. Someone who can advise you on what to do if mom goes ballistic and DOES take this to court.
I would be in favor of going back to the eldercare attorney you saw who said you can't force her into care, even with your POA.
I would want to explore the ramifications of resigning your POA. And how to prevent your mom from moving next door to your new home.
If she tells me that she will not agree to sell, then I will be the one who has to get a lawyer and I will. I'm not leaving her here alone. Thankfully I can force a sale in FL as a co-owner a judge just has to agree. I doubt my mom would take it that far.
I just need the courage to have the conversation and hope my sister will help in getting my mom moved to assisted living no matter which state she choses to live.
I appreciate the tips given!
You tell Mom "DH and I are moving to MD. You can go with us or stay here. If you stay here u will need to go to an AL because I won't be here to do for you. If u go with us to MD, I can no longer cater to you. I AM going to enjoy my grandchild. So u need to go to an AL there."
If she says she can be alone, list all the things you do for her. I hope she is still capable of understanding what your move means.
Let him/her handle the logistics of where your mother is going to live--on her dime of course. The lawyer is going to have to be involved in the property transfer, yes? Just get him/her involved from the get go.