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"I'm being paid? Am I a W-2 or 1099 employee?"
"Here is the phone number of a careging agency. Please use your mother's funds to hire her the help she needs. I can only be available to visit one day a week, when my schedule allows".
She needs transportation she is healthy and active, she doesn't need a caregiver.
Thank you for bringing that up.
I have tried to explain that I am not going to be able to do what they want done. I am talking to deaf people apparently. They acknowledge what I say and turn around and send an email or text telling me that I need to pick her up or go to the grocery or.....
PS Is there any possibility of there having BEEN a misunderstanding? Might anyone in the family have somehow got hold of the mistaken idea that you are your friend's paid caregiver?
Her cousin told me that I was the only one that she could count on to help her.
Makes me very sad for my friend.
Say what you said here, you saw a need and because it was a friend you did not mind helping. You took the Card as a thank you gift. That does not make you an employee. And if it does, you have already worked off that $20. Tell them it would have cost them more than $20 to hire someone a day to do what you have done. Guess that saying fits in this situation.
"No good deed goes unpunished" Stick by your guns. Do you feel comfortable in telling ur friend what is going on?
It is funny that you mention the 20.00 paying for the meals that I buy her. I don't get out of a restaurant for less then 35 bucks a pop when I take her. She eats like she is starving and then takes the leftovers from both meals. I am happy to do it, I think that I would worry that she isn't eating properly if I didn't personally help her get groceries, bring her homemade frozen dinners and take her to eat.
I truly wish that everyone had someone that cared about their wellbeing and was willing to step in the gap.
Oops, she knows some of what is going on, but I really do not want to get involved where her children are involved. She loves them and she only sees them through that love. I am hoping to find a way to keep them away from what I do for her.
When you do things for people you expect thanks and gratefulness and all that stuff, but the REALITY is that when you do things for people they come to EXPECT that A) You are doing this because you WANT to and B) It is a given: this is what you WISH TO DO.
So now the question becomes WHY ARE YOU DOING THIS? Because as Dear Dr. Phil always says "You are getting something out of this" and I don't mean a 20.00 gift card which has very little to do with any of this.
Here is what I would do. I would say to the giver of the card "I so appreciate the gift of the card. That was lovely. But I do have to tell you that I am just not going to have the time going forward that I thought I had. I just wanted to warn you that I will no longer be available to BLAH BLAH BLAH".
End of story.
I will tell you a little story. I had a friend who had a girlfriend (gay couple). They were living together and my friend was the "caregiver". She earned the money as a nurse for the household. She took her friend everywhere, did everything for her, including the cleaning and the cooking. Then, suddenly, my friend became ill. And that girlfriend of hers? She marched right on out of the house. My friend went to a therapist who set her straight the cheap and honest way--honesty. She said to my friend, "You know, YOU broke the contract. This was the contract. You do everything, and she lets your adore her. Now you want HER to do something? That wasn't ever the contract".
So I will tell you, you wrote your own contract. Now, don't sign up for another tour unless you want a "thank you for your service" and a 20.00 gift card here and there.
Wishing you the best going forward. Do only those things you WANT to do for your own reasons, whatever they are. Stop doing them with expectations going forward. And chalk this up to a wonderful lesson. Life is full of them.
Just say no to their request.
Say no to EVERY request until they stop asking.
If you say yes to any of them, they may not get the message.
When they tell you have been paid, laugh and respond, no your 20 dollars was a gift. Say plainly, "I am not your employee "
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