Hi everyone it is nice to be here. I have a question about agitation with my mom and dads bank book. My dad has dementia and always thinks me, my sister and my mom are trying to steal from the bank book and tries to hide it in the house. We are afraid we will not be able to find it and when we say let mom hide it somewhere, he gets mad and accuses us of trying to steal. I hope someone here has advice on how to deal with the paranoia and agitation. Thanks
Let him have the bank book. Make sure you have a spread sheet of the account numbers.
Let him have all that. Why do you need it? I haven't used a bank book since I was a kid. I haven't written a check in 10 years. Everything is digital these days.
In any case, my husband had the same issue. I gave him an old checkbook from an inactive account that looks like the real one that I use. He is still happy, and so am I.
If he is aware of his mental health decline... Have a shared account or a Financial POA. This way you can use as needed.
Besides, you won't need a bank book when the time comes - all you'll need is proof of identification. Let him hide his bank book if it brings him solace.
To some commenters, many older people don’t use online banking.
When my mother could no longer handle her finances, ( she thought she could but we knew she couldn’t), we put my daughter on her accounts and my daughter monitored them online. My mother knew she was on the accounts but didn’t realize she could monitor online . That way if she double paid or forgot to pay, we caught it.
My mother constantly accuses us of stealing as well. That’s due to the dementia and not being able to keep track of things. To their frustrated thinking , they can’t be confused so someone must have stolen it lol🙄. Just change the subject or walk away, you can’t convince him it’s not happening . Mom always trusted my daughter though so is there anyone your father would trust to help him?
Fortunately for us my mother’s ALF won’t allow cash but I want to get my mother a refillable gift card with a small sum on it so if she wants a pizza or something she can get it. That way if she loses it no great loss but she won’t feel so limited.
For your dad, I’d open a new account with your mom and one of you on it and close the old one or just keep a small sum in it in case he uses it, like $100. I assume your mother is on his account. Then he can have that check book while someone else does the actual banking
What I did was have a checkbook that she knew about--but I didn't remind her of it very often as I didn't want her to access that bill-paying money. I kept about $300 in her account with her bank book. The book was always in her Mom's-all-important purse. If another of us kids took her to the bank, they always told me what the money was used for, taking them to lunch, filling up their car with gas, etc., as a way to ensure the money was properly spent (since a granddaughter like to beg and plead for money).
If Mom was ever afraid her money was gone (she grew in a dirt-poor family and she went hungry so us kids could eat) I'd hand her her purse, she'd dig out her bank book and we'd review it. I'd also show her the checkbook and that all her bills were paid. That would ease her mind, and I always assured her she'd never be without money. Then she'd reminisce how hard life was for her (no complaining, just factual).
If you do not have a POA sell it to your dad that just in case he gets sick and is in the hospital or something worse happens so you or/and your sister can help to pay any bills or take care of any issues if need be.
That has seemed to work so far, she may not remember but she doesn't want to admit that ;-) So far so good!
I understand dealing with dementia patients is frustrating and KUDOS to all of you who are patiently dealing with the slow loss of your parent or loved ones memory. I chose not to totally restrict moms spending as, I feel, it is her money and as long as she uses it to entertain herself (she loves eating out, going to movies, buying trinkets) then it is all good. Luckily, my father left enough to keep mom well cared for.