Update: Moved my 84 year old mother to Memory care from a different company in April and she seems to be doing much, much better than the AL we moved her into after rehab hospital after she broke her arm. She hated the AL and threatened to get a lawyer and 1 time tried to escaped. She went to the desk almost daily to ask to call the police because she was kidnapped. Anyway, none of this has continued at the memory care place so my sisters and I feel good about that move. I am remote and my 2 sisters are local to her.
My mother has stopped asking about when she is going home but she has mentioned to the activities coordinator that her goal is to go back to her home which she lived alone since my dad passed in 2021. This is not the plan and the memory care place is aware.
Her house is paid off but is vacant, We keep the air conditioning on and the yard taken care of but just wanted to get advice about when we should bring up the topic of selling the house to her. My sister has POA.
My mother specifically asked my sister with POA to keep her in the loop about such decisions and has asked what is going on with the house while in memory care. We all just say " Nothings going on with the house" because we are all traumatized from her behavior in the AL place.
Her memory is in the mid-range of decline. She will forget conversations an hour later but she might remember a visit from the day before. She still remembers her daughters and their husbands names but has forgotten the grandkids name.
I think it will traumatize her to get her approval to start preparing the house for sale but just wanted get some feedback since I have received such good feedback to my questions in the past.
This is what DH and I did. DH unplugged the refrigerator and and appliances. I had a light set up in the living room that went on at dusk and off at 11pm. Mom always kept her stove light on, so we did too. I left the water on and in the winter left heat at 55. Mom had no a/c. But if I kept it on, it would be on the highest possible temp for comfort if being shown. If you can, have a neighbor park their car in Moms drive. Have mailed dlvrd to sister. Lawn mowed so it looks like someone is living there.
When Mom asks about the house, fib. She will never return and you should not have the responsibility of it.
So I will focus on working with my sisters to clear out the stuff.
There are repurcussions to keeping and to selling. If mom is self pay then this will give her the needed extra funds for her care ongoing. If she is on Medicaid she can keep the home, may not want the funds, and there will be clawback by the government when the home is sold.
The home will be difficult to get insured, difficult to keep up without funds unless rented; a family member may be able to move in to caretake.
All these legal "nice-ities" need to be known. An attorney, elder law in your area, can help you make decisions.
None of this now really is in your mother's control. She KNOWS WHAT IS COMING and that is why she keeps asking. The POA handles these decisions for your Mom now in her best interests and your Mom will be informed. She will GRIEVE. DO grieve along with her, because is this last loss not worth grieving?
That means possibly that you have to sell the house and place the funds in an account that will be available to pay for her care.
The POA does not need moms approval to sell the house.
If she asks about it you say what you have been saying and you can add these phrases.
The house is being taken care of.
The house is in good hands.
We are taking care of everything
All of these statements are true. Even if the house is sold the statements are also true.
(If the house is sold just hope that no "do gooder friend" of hers comes to visit and spills the beans. But if that does happen you can just say that her "friend" does not know what they are talking about)
Sell it as soon as you can...a vacant house is or can be trouble. Anything from someone breaking in to squatters and just neglect (I think houses know when they are vacant and they begin to "die" if that makes sense)
You all need to realize that you don't need mom's approval for anything now. ANYTHING. You can ease every situation onto her and discuss with her as if it makes a difference, but it does not. It only stirs up things that are better left alone.
The family could now be getting her house ready for sale, such as cleaning out the attic and basement, getting rid of old clothes and knitting needles and that figurine she bought on her trip to Niagara Falls in 1995. You do this without her knowledge. In the end, she won't care. It seems sneaky, but that's how you and the fam need to do things. Mom has dementia. That rules all.
Dementia prohibits a person from being able to make decisions or process decisions made on their behalf. Since the vast majority of dementia sufferers are obsessed with "going home" in the first place, what earthly good would it do for you to discuss selling moms home with her???? So she can cry and complain incessantly and then require drugs to calm her down?
Please let common sense prevail here. Do not apply our rules of normalcy about "lying" to folks afflicted with damaged brains. Come up with whatever vague story you need to in order to keep mom calm about her house, that's the only goal: Keeping them calm.
Best of luck.