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Have you discussed this with any of the other people currently involved in your mother's care? Would you like to say more about what's happening?
If your mom has already been declared incompetent to make her own decisions, are you the POA or guardian? Are you finding that making the decisions is too stressful or is it more the interactions with your mom that are wearing you down? Maybe you could try hiring a care manager to deal directly with your mom but reserve the right to make the decisions. Maybe you wouldn't feel so all alone if you had a professional giving you their opinion.
Unless you are going to walk away from a relationship with your mom, just giving the decision making power to someone else sounds to me as if it is going to make your life more stressful, not less.
In my state (Washington), there are professional guardians (charge the individual a fee), public guardians (paid for by the state in extreme cases where no other person is able), and lay guardians (usually a family member). In most cases, the judge wants to assign guardianship to a family member. Here, guardians ad litem are only temporarily assigned by the court during the process to investigate the need for a guardian. Primarily, the court process is lengthy because guardianship is essentially taking the person's rights away, so the court really has to determine there are no other alternatives first, and that the person is truly incapacitated.
Suppose she becomes so unruly and her Guardian places her in a really poorly managed facility not realizing how poor her care is, you say..”oh no, she can’t stay here......” Not your option anymore.