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My suggestion is once you get past the exhaustion and emotional bank, put your thinking hats on do your research. The internet is full of information, suggestion go to city clerks of your local town, google things about trusts and wills refocuss your attention and energies into securing yourself and your finances, and caretaking of your parent will become surprizingly less stressfull.
Peace.
I was attending a support group but quit when a woman started coming that had recently taken her mother in because her sister (who had been caring for her mother for years) was "stealing" from her mother. The whole hour always ended up being about her and how horrible her sister was for "stealing", but since we never got to hear her sister's side I always thought the woman was trying to make herself look like a saint for saving her mother. Anyway I stopped going to that support group because she made me feel like I was a horrible person like her sister by paying myself.
I do have three sister's two of which live nearby and one of which is retired (the one still working is more helpful than the retired one), but I have to ask for help if I really need to do something that doesn't involve taking my mother with me, help is never offered. The working sister will come stay for the weekend occasionally and help me out but I still don't really get "away" from my mother (still get up with her at night). However technically I am an only child as these sister's are her stepchildren (one which has not seen or talked to her in at least a couple of years), but her estate (real estate, no cash or investments) is supposed to be equally divided between all my dad's children.
So anyway, thank you for listening to my rant and thank you for making me feel a little better about taking enough money to make ends meet.
Yes, support groups can often end up concentrating on one person. The last one I was at where I was appalled by the conversation was a woman and daughter caring for husband and dad. Daughter had just had a baby and wanted to talk the entire time about how hurt she was because her dad will forget about the baby and baby's name. Then mother wanted to chime in about her and husband's diabetes. It was terrible, maybe they will stop coming to this group, haven't seen them since November.
Try to find another support group, in my city there are probably 30 or 40 of them. And, first and foremost, you should be paid for the care! I went back to school after a layoff 5 years ago to get a Master's degree for all the good it has done me! Finished it two years ago now, and occasionally I send in application packages, but not often anymore. I am not paid by my mom, and should be, but sister that controls the money wants to charge me room and board! I already buy all the food, to say nothing of planning meals, preparing them, then cleaning up after everything! Mom has plenty of assets, but sister is more concerned about what is left for her when mom passes. There are many, many similar stories on this site.
I don't anticipate getting any financial help from my 2 sibs that "cry poor".
What I have been doing is keeping a monthly log of all that I do, transportation costs, time spent taking mom to appointments, time spent taking her to visit people, etc---all of the things that a paid companion would do. I originally felt guilty "charging" mom for all of the things that I would do for her as her daughter but I needed a way to have funds for mom's needs when she runs out of her funds, which will be in about 6 months.
What I did to calculate how much to pay myself was to research the average pay per hour that a companion would charge. In my area, the range is $18 to $18 plus mileage charges. I "charge" mom $21/hr. after about 18 months, I have a bank account of around $10,000.....which won't go very far in the county that I live in. Plus, mom may very well live another 8-10 years based on family history. I keep a log of all charges and the deposit slips from the bank.I may have goofed by not paying taxes b/c it didn't occur to me, so I need to rectify that.
Is anyone out there doing anything like I am doing and how did you come up with a reasonable charge per hour?
That's the rub: if it were about money, we just wouldn't be here. So OBVIOUSLY it isn't - but if we weren't here, boy would it cost!
Ugh. Migraine already and I haven't even thought of a number.
You say you don't work all day because you are a teacher? My mom was a teacher, her days began at 5:00 am and got home from work between 4 and 5. She had to be at work by 6:30. I think that is working all day to say nothing of reading reports and papers, grading tests... Teaching is most definitely a full time job! And you have another one on top of it, caring for grandpa. DO NOT SELL YOURSELF SHORT and this sounds like you feel guilty about wanting payment. If he does help with household expenses, then that should be considered. But home care is extremely expensive. You say you have caregivers while you are at work. Consider what that cost is, then multiply that hourly amount by the number of hours that you have responsibility for him. It will be astronomical especially if you were to receive retroactive payment. If he helped with down payment on your house, you also should subtract that.
If you work, you still get the same hours regardless! This takes into consideration oil/gas heat, electric,etc too,depending on your contract. You can charge more per hour, thats the average low so I chose that. Remember, you have to pay taxes on it which amounts to approx 30% taken right off the top of it so save it in a separate account. You should have a caregivers agreement before you take any compensation signed by your mother or if incompetent, the DPOA. She needs to be ill as far as she cannot walk, dress, toilet herself, or be alone. Remember the most important thing of all, you are not taking your moms money, you are taking your siblings inheritance, and well deserved. If they dont help, they will get their equal portion of whats left, as will you. In my case, we went through all the money and there is zero left. Also, use moms money for her meds, food, clothing and anything for her use only. Good luck
PS you cannot take anything retroactive, only after the caregivers agreement is signed, legally, I was told. The hours other than the 8 hours you get paid for is considered daughterly duties (free) Remember, you have to keep track of everything and be her total case manager of her pills, etc, keep a daily diary to cover yourself should their be legal issues with the siblings down the road. Keep every single receipt, do a spread sheet or something on your computer.
The sticky bit of the road we're approaching, though, is my POA sister's dilemma over resenting bitterly that my mother, effectively, pays for my keep while not wishing to address the question of how much it would cost my mother to live anywhere else with anyone else looking after her. I'm pretty sure I'm the cost-effective option, as it happens. "Daughterly duties" - love it! - and all.
What makes sister's head explode is that because I actually don't care about the money I'm not taking any, which doesn't make sense to her, which means if she wanted to add up properly she'd have to suggest I do take payment, which means she'd be paying someone money without being asked for it, which is… not… possible… (system melt down). I ought to suggest a solution, really; but I quite enjoy watching.
AND, now I have a guide price. Thanks again!
Sadly, I think that translates to "costs less" in my sister's head - still, I suppose it's also a compliment in its way...
You are very fortunate to have increased your net worth with the help of your grandfather. With most of us, our net worth has decreased due to the responsibility. What some forget is that if parent was competent, they would be paying a child, but other siblings are more concerned about what remains at death. This is one of those discussions that occurs often on this site, and the majority feel that children should be paid, while many of us are not, and continue to work towards keeping our elders happy and comfortable. It is just one of those discussions that will always be the same, some are very opposed to payment, while others, strongly believe they should be paid. I am doing it because I want to, and it is the only way to keep my mother in her home. Will there come a time when I cannot do this any longer, probably yes, but it should not be due to my own financial hardship, rather it will be due to my mother's disease progressing to the point that I am unable to.
"I've been getting updates on this topic since I first responded. My grandfather lives with us and contributes to expenses and the mortgage payment. When I am at work, we hire a caregiver. I'm a teacher, so I don't work all day. I'm still struggling with the idea that perhaps I should be compensated for the at home care that I do. However, my grandfather helped us to qualify for our loan, so he helped us increase our net worth substantially. I keep that in mind whenever I feel that I should get paid."
"But really helping us get into this house increased our overall net worth by hundreds of thousands of dollars."
"The attitude that we should get this money and other heirs should not--why are you caregiving if you only want financial compensation? Get a job caregiving & put your pooping elderly relative in a home on Medicaid!"
"He might help me with renovations. He has pitched in when necessary. But ghoulishly draining his resources away for providing a room just isn't my style."
Really now. Who are you kidding? You just got paid. Royally. You just took a lot of money from your grandfather for your own benefit. I think maybe you need to step down off that pedestal that you're on. You just got more out of your situation than most people ever do. You're not going to 'goulishly' drain your grandfather's resourses? lol You just did. And of course YOU'RE just doing what you do out of the goodness of your heart, hmmm? Sure. If that was the case, you'd have declined any help from him. You didn't though, did you? Get off your high horse.
From a post in August. Spelling errors left as is.
Sorry, but I disagree. The money belongs to your parent. If you look at your parent as merely an obstacle to you getting your inheritance, that is sick and twisted. Your fiduciary duty is to protect your parent's asset while he or she lives, not to suck the money out because you feel you deserve more.
I did not come here just to get my own views confirmed, but the tone of some of these posts sincerely bothers me.
When I made the point that I do not receive pay, I got a response in all caps demanding that I should.
But then I made the point that I feel fairly compensated because my grandfather helped us qualify for a house and contributed to repairs, I was shouted down for being a leech.
I mean, where is the friendly, supportive tone that should be on a board like this? I clean poop, clean pee, take Grandpa to doctor appointments, and his own son does NOTHING. And yet, by not taking a salary, I am preserving that son's inheritance. And it does not matter if I do not like that situation. That is my fiduciary responsibility.
At no time have I ever intended to suck money out of Grandpa's funds in order to rob other heirs. They will get their fair share, although we do all the work and they do nothing. We do it out of love. And yes, frankly, we feel that we also have been compensated with the house.
Not to go into great detail, I should be clear that he has put very little money into the house. And many times, we have refused more. Numerous times, he has offered to pay off our mortgage, make huge improvements to the house, or gift the money to us. We have refused. Is that the way a leech behaves? I take care of his assets and make sure he has enough income from interest and social security to cover his expenses.
Sure, part of me feels that it's awful that his own son will not even visit or call. It's terrible. I can't believe it most of the time, and even Grandpa has said that perhaps he should change his beneficiary situation. But he never does.
So if I wanted to be a total leech, I could drum up some caregiver contract and pay myself. But I actually kept track of hours at one point, and I just don't see that I'm really doing all that much. I sit around, just to be home, because I don't want to leave him alone. He gets confused and can't seem to make his own meals, so I do that. Yes, someone else doing that gets paid $15 an hour. I still don't feel right taking that money.
But the bottom line is that if you feel it is only fair you need that caregiver contract, go ahead. My only point was that I feel fairly compensated in our situation, so I don't need one.
I just see a lot of self victimization on this thread. I get that it's hard. I'm smelling pee from the next room as I type this. But instead of moaning and complaining, and then deciding to get what's yours with some contract that this helpless elderly person truly has no choice but to sign, there are ways to come up with solutions and make peace with our situations and be right in our consciences.
I watched my mother destroy her own health taking care of her parents. So when she died, and I took over care of her father, I promised myself not to let it take me down like that. I will never by a martyr to this situation. But I also don't have this attitude that I'm a saint and somehow therefore deserve every penny my grandfather has. I don't think the inheritance situation is fair, but that's HIS wish, and I have to respect it. So I make sure I take care of myself, hire out as much as possible, and keep in mind that my job is to take care of Gramps, not seek revenge on his offspring.
Unfortunately, due to the economy and the broken healthcare system, many of us do not have the financial stability to support a disabled relative. Additionally, many people are in situations that require them to be home nearly 24/7, which prevents them from working, or allows them only part-time work. And lastly, many of us are caring for relatives that abused or mistreated us, and the "I do it for love, I don't need a reward" does not apply at all.
If you approached the topic with a little less judgement and criticism, I think you would receive a lot less negativity.