My Dad has 100% VA disability due to severe asbestosis, my Mom though not disabled, won't do much. Both of them sit around in pajamas all day long and are depressed, and yes, they are both on depression and/or anxiety meds - not helping much. I helped (did all of the paperwork, phone calls and related emails) and my Dad get his VA disability, a ramp and a walk in shower. (He hates the ramp and now hates the shower but at first wanted both. I am at my wits end.) I pick up their commodity boxes and take them to his medical appointments. I manage his meds, ordering and checking on refills for him. I, as well as my daughter, fill water jugs from my well for them. My daughter cooks, cleans and runs shopping errands for them. Neither one of them will keep an appointment with a lawyer to do their wills or POA. Every time an appointment is made , they cancel it. I just went through a run of 24/7 caregiving with my MIL who had severe dementia and passed last March. We had POA for her and it was hard enough to negotiate all of her caregiving needs with that; I cannot even imagine what I have in store for me if my parents are unwilling to do the necessary paperwork to help them when they are unable to help themselves. My sister lives here but is very self involved, she won't even fill water jugs for them and my brother lives in the southern states and cannot help. It seems to be falling on me and my daughter, at least the caregiving parts. The sad thing is that my Mom won't even make a meal, so if my daughter doesn't, it doesn't get done. Myself and my daughter are afraid that if no one gets meals for them they will both get malnutrition. My Mom gravitates to cupcakes, bread & molasses and other sweet things but not food with nutrition and my Dad does the same with cookies, candy & ice cream. It's like having toddlers again only grown up versions that are your parents and get mad at you for pointing out that they need to prepare and eat meals, not sweets bought at the store.... My Dad is obsessed with money - how much he has, what it is spent on, etc., and gets very ugly tempered about it. He also has panic attacks about attending any appointment or just leaving the house. My mother sits around all day and watches tv and reads. Did I mention that they both live in their pajamas 24/7? Their behavior both frustrates and angers me at times. He will be 80 and she will be 77 in July. They supposedly do not have dementia. What can I do?
As for getting one's parents to update or create Wills and Power of Attorney, we need to use "theraputic fibs" for their best interest. My parents had dragged their feet on their legal paperwork that was older then dirt. I told Dad his Will was so out of date that the government would take half of his estate. I know that was a fib, but it did get my parents over to the Elder Law Attorney to update all the legal documents :)
Do they like fruit? A basket of oranges and bananas sitting on the table might tempt them. Nothing to prepare!
Since Dad is very focused on finances, whatever creative incentive you make up should probably be about money.
A lawyer came to our house for my husband to sign all the paperwork. Maybe you could gift your parents new pajamas for the occasion!
You are absolutely right that getting the paperwork done and affairs in order will make your life easier and also make sure that their wishes are respected.
I'm one of seven children and none of us could convince Mother to do POAs or a healthcare directive. (We didn't care much about a will because we knew there was nothing to bequeath in any case.) One of Mother's nephews died. His children said he would not wish for his life to be extended artificially, but he hadn't put that in writing and there was no healthcare directive. So the hospital rules applied and he remained hooked up to machines for a certain number of days, according to the guidelines. Mom felt very bad about that and understood the value of making one's wishes known, but she still would not make out her own.
Not having that paperwork was never an obstacle for us taking care of her. It is pretty amazing, but the 4 girls never had conflicts, and discussed each issue as it came up. The 3 boys were OK with us making decisions. (We kept them informed.) The doctors and nursing home staff we dealt with were willing to let us make decisions. They did ask Mother if that was all right, but they didn't get that in writing.
So don't despair. This will all work out with or without the paperwork. But having it will be very worthwhile. I hope you can come up with something that persuades them to do it.
There is one piece of this that doesn't require a lawyer or even a notary. The healthcare directive can be a do-it-yourself project. There are many good forms available online, at no cost. And it has nothing to do with finances, which should be reassuring to Dad. After they've filled it out their signature (each on their own document) needs to be witnessed. This can be by a notary but it can also be by two witnesses. The witnesses don't have to see the content -- they just need to witness that the person who signed it in front of them is known to them and is the person the signature says it is.
Best of luck!
Without a will, the state steps in and gets a portion for their time. They then dispense as they see fit - I saw a woman get scr**ed that way because Penn wouldn't honor the NY will they had and her daughter received - and kept - 2/3 of the money when she knew it was all supposed to go to the surviving widow, her own mother.
A will is absolutely needed! POA? I didn't want POA for my dad when others were pressuring him to give it to me. When the time came, I called Hospice and he told them what he wanted and that was that. A week later he passed (he had stopped dialysis).
I bet you could find someone to come to the house for a simple will. You can even get the forms online and have them sign them - remember they must be witnessed - then at least you will be a little more protected.
Recently I found that the POAs my father and mother had done had expired a decade ago—-he kept telling me everything was fine, his paperwork was in order etc etc.
He broke his back, had to go to hospital, and THEN we found out that nobody had POA.
I laid down the law to him and asked him if what he wanted was to have the government decide what happened to him...he and my mother couldn’t get that paperwork done fast enough. I had it within 2 weeks and made sure I was named as a POA also as my mother is declining in memory as well.
The other route you could take is to apply for guardianship over them. This is time consuming and costly, however.
As they sit around in their pj's 24/7, I'm wondering if they're bathing?
Please see if their town has a Council on Aging, which should have on staff a social worker. That dedicated person could get the necessary documents done. Your parents will be more inclined to listen to someone other than yourself. I had to use my mother's town's social worker, because, after all, "I wasn't telling the truth." Of course I was telling the truth; she just didn't like it.
As for dad not liking the ramp and the shower, he probably thought of them as "old age," instead of needed assists. I hope when I reach the age of needing a ramp/assist that I will say "Oh, yes, please!" I don't want to become belligerent.
This site has very regular posts from carers of people in their eighties and nineties, whose bodies have outlived both their minds and their interest in living, with bitter comments about the medical profession who have engineered all this. Other carers are spoon-feeding elders for hours at a time, when the recipient keeps trying to spit the food out. Neither the time commitment nor the medical support was an option in Biblical times, when every family member had to work hard. Perhaps ‘fading away’ is the way God planned us to go.
None of this helps with your paperwork problems, but it might give you some consolation about other issues you are facing. There is a song that says ‘the sooner it’s over, the sooner we sleep’.
1) Our local municipal water quality is not the best. They have running water, our well has better water for drinking and food preparation purposes.
2) We all live in a very small town the nearest agency on aging is over 100 miles away.
3) Lawyers here do not do house calls, ever. Already tried.
4) Meals on Wheels sounds like a good idea!
5) I tried again today after taking my Dad to his VA appointment (an hour round trip) where they asked me if he had a living will or any other paperwork. His response was if something happens to me they will have to take care of whatever it is. He then changed the subject to something about the scenery. He is adamant about not discussing anything about death or dying and assumes all paperwork is only about that.
6) My sister will not participate in any caregiving for my parents, she thinks that they should be taking care of her, I'm not joking.
newyorker.com/magazine/2017/10/09/how-the-elderly-lose-their-rights
Short of having someone explain what happens with no will, etc., plus having them realize it may all be dumped on you to handle.. .not sure there is any way to change the situation. Those papers are just the responsible thing to have.
If nothing else, you may have to get their doctor involved, or social services. OR...is there someone they would trust that you could have talk to them, and even help them with the paperwork instead of you. I would try to make this a priority and then you can back off on all the caregiving (as much as you dare) and, perhaps, let their poor choices take them where they may. You can't let this drive you nuts to the point of endangering your own mental and physical health. I'll be praying you can come to the perfect solutions. Message me if you wish, and I will support you!
Given dad's fanaticism with keeping money, yet over-spending it, there doesn't seem there really will be anything left to leave in a will (except debt - and remember even if you get DPOA or guardianship, that debt will NOT be yours!) Of course if a will for either or both can be wrangled, by all means go for it, but it sounds like that is a losing battle, at least for dad - perhaps mom could be convinced to sign something (you indicated that you have taken her shopping, could you have paperwork ready and wrangle a visit to an attorney or notary with her during one of those trips, so long as he is not there?) At least you would have one...
Getting DPOA and medical POA is much more important. Again, given dad's reign on money and refusal to deal with death-type issues, this is also going to be a battle, probably a fruitless one. You can only do what you can do. If they are still deemed competent, and refuse to work with any of this, there is no need for you to stress over it (easy said than done, I know.) You CANNOT force anyone to do something - it is their right to refuse, unfortunately, even if it is detrimental. Getting worked up over something you cannot manage is not worth it. Be supportive, provide some good meals, etc, and whatever happens happens. Your hands are tied. (BTW, even sometimes with cognitive impairment AND DPOA the person's "wishes" will override yours!!)
Rather than focus on the death part of wills and POAs when discussing this with dad, as several have mentioned give him some info about what happens if he or mom becomes seriously ill or injured, aka the state can step in and direct EVERYTHING, including his precious money and where he or she will go to live! He has no POA over her, so the state can step in, same for him if she has no POA over him. Then ask him if that is what he wants. If he says yes, then about all you can do is continue to provide nourishing meals, perhaps using Meals on Wheels, if available (and if they would open the door for the delivery!) Although frozen dinners could be an option, if you prepare extra with each meal you make, portion it out and freeze it for later use. I do this for myself - just as easy, easier sometimes, to prepare a meal for 6 and freeze it, than cooking every day! This would reduce the number of trips you need to make to provide meals. You could still go to visit often, ensure they eat, but have more time to spend with them than working on food.
Another person suggested having an unrelated trusted person try to broach the subject. Perhaps someone from the VA? Do they have friends or neighbors they like? Does not sound like it, if they spend all day every day in the house, but perhaps there is someone... VA might be best - if they come in some kind of uniform, he might be able to relate to that person! Often family members can get shut out, or ignored. The perception might be that you want to take everything away! This is not the case, but he won't relent until he understands this.
Since it sounds like they do not get out on their own, where is all the "junk" food/snacks coming from? Certainly they can have snacks and cookies, etc, but do not leave the whole bag/package there, provide it with the meals you bring. Even ice cream can be left in single servings (plastic containers, or single bars.) This would limit how much crap they eat, especially since you indicated they WILL eat the meals if someone makes it for them!
newyorker.com/magazine/2017/10/09/how-the-elderly-lose-their-rights
Thanks to DownSouth for providing this to make us all aware of the problem. Of course this is a warning to us, too, to get our own paperwork in order. In addition, maybe we should do some homework before we even consider moving to a state or city to make certain this kind of abuse doesn't take place there.