My neighbor is 86. She has no one, except people at her church, that help her out. She fell and was in the hospital and then nursing home to recover. Another neighbor and I helped to take care of her dog. Once she was home, people from her church looked in on her and helped. Somehow, about 3 weeks ago, she has singled me out and comes over to my house, ringing my doorbell 3-4 times a day asking when we are going shopping, or when we will do something together, or wanting me to fix her TV. My office is in my home, so I am busy during the day. I have told her when I would be done working and that I would be over to see her after work, only to have her show back up an hour later asking why I can't come over now. She yells and screams at me when I tell her I cannot drop everything to visit with her.
How do I get her to stop and leave me alone? I feel like a prisoner in my own home. I understand from people who have lived here awhile, that she has been angry and difficult for years. I am new to the neighborhood and feel singled out. Even making a set time to visit with her is not enough, because she wants me over every day.
Here's the thing, she sounds like my mom who really needs to move into assisted living but is stubborn and refuses to do so. Instead she is living in her house, constantly asking neighbors and friends to help her and everyone is getting burned out. I am in another state and am trying VERY hard to convince her she can no longer live at home and every time a neighbor helps her it doesn't help my cause. She needs everyone to say no to make her realize she can no longer do this anymore. I'm taking her to go visit assisted living places the next time I visit if I can convince her to get in the car and actually go with me. Her stubbornness is driving me nuts. Meanwhile, she is a very self-centered person who has no problem constantly asking others to do things for her.
My husband and I wound up in a similar situation. Our neighbor across the street was an amputee and in poor health, and his wife was very frail and didn't speak English or drive. Every time he fell, they had to call an ambulance to get him up - until my husband once told them to call him instead of the ambulance and he would come help. Next thing we knew, they were calling him for doctor appointments and errands. The wife would catch me in the yard and ask me to come help her with things. Once I was inside their house, she wouldn't want me to leave because she was lonely, but I couldn't communicate with her so it was very awkward. When she grabbed my arm and stood in my way to try to keep me from leaving, I got a little freaked out and never went back. I'm ashamed to say I would start watching her house as I approached my driveway and I would make the block and wait until she was inside before I would park at my own house and then I would rush inside before she could see me and come outside to stop me. I dodged her for months before they wound up having to give up their home so he could go to a nursing home and we don't know what happened to her.
We tried to be gentle in separating ourselves from them, but they didn't understand that we needed them to schedule appointments on certain days or early or late in the day to minimize my husband's time off work, and they didn't try to be considerate of our limited discretionary time in asking for our help, so we wound up having to build a wall around ourselves and telling them no over and over again. We felt like jerks for doing it, and really hated ourselves for it, but now that I have become responsible for my mother's care, we realize how important it is for caregivers to protect themselves first and foremost and set boundaries up front so that they are best able to take care of the ones that depend on them. We probably would handle the same situation differently than we did, but we didn't see the problems coming.
This is indeed a sad situation, but by allowing her to impose on her neighbors, her own long-term situation is not being properly addressed. Refusing her help will ultimately force the hand of those better equipped to help her situation.
Do not answer the door. There is something wrong with this woman. Who approaches a stranger this way. If you are in an apt complex, report her to the office.
Oh well...
If you are working from home do not answer the door during working hours. If you were working in an office you could not answer the door...same applies WFH.
With the price of gas above $5.00 a gallon tell her that if you take her to the store you will have to charge her.
If you wish to put a stop to other things tell her Tech Support will also cost her.
If you want to be "nice" pick a day of the week that is convenient for you and "give" her an hour or so to visit. Take a break, have a glass of Iced Tea and relax. Keep one important word in mind...BOUNDARIES. No one can take advantage of you unless you let them.
If she has no family and you wish to put a stop to this or are concerned a call to APS might be in order as it does not sound like she should be living alone.
Working from home
Get in touch with that person and tell them that she can no longer live unsupported.
Call APS and report her as a vulnerable elder.
Send a certified, return receipt letter to the management office/landlord and report that you are being harassed by a tenant.
See if you can find a family contact to call/email/write that she is in need of care.
Call the local police non-emergency number and ask for a "wellness check".
You telling this woman you'll see her every other day or 3x a week or whatever won't be enough; even if you tell her you'll see her daily, THAT won't be enough; then she'll want to see you 4x a day or even hourly, then you should move in with her, etc. Dementia makes no sense, and everybody loses who comes into contact with it, for the most part. That's been my experience with it, having a mother who suffered with dementia for 5+ years. It's awful.
Why, I wonder, is this woman living alone b/c she should NOT be doing so. Dementia needs to be tended to 24/7 by caregivers, either in home or in a managed care setting.
You should call APS and report this woman as a vulnerable elder who's living alone with dementia, IF she is living alone, and IF she has dementia.
If nothing is done by APS to see to it that she's moved into a safe living environment, I guess the best thing for you to do is move away. Or talk to her family if you ever see them come around. But if they cared a whole lot, they'd probably have seen to it that she wasn't living alone and/or had a caregiver coming around to look after her, IF that's not already happening.
Good luck with a difficult situation :(
A similar thing happened to a friend. Helped carry a bag of groceries for an elderly neighbour one day.. morphed into being selected as no #1 support person in a quick flash.. calls, doorbell, requests for groceries, driving to appointments +++.
In that case, a relative's number was obtained & family then stepped in.
While your neighbour's living situation is not actually your responsibility, it is awful to think of elders alone without care in our neighbourhood. This does not mean you have to provide it.. but consider how to get this lady onto some sort of radar for the assistance she needs.
Letting her church know if you can.
Calling APS does not sound unreasonable either.
She may even still be having effects from her recent hospital stay. Many elderly people get a level of delerium from falls & hospital stays. Some don't actually return to their pre-fall mental state.