My parents are in their late 60's and have health situations.
Mother -- Pulmonary Hypertension and on oxygen
Step-Father - Had open heart surgery a month ago
They live in a town home but can no longer afford to live there.
I am single and live in a town home.
They have asked if I would live with them.
We would both need to sell and then find a home for the three of us.
They have no savings and no retirement--so, they would not be able to offer much assistance towards the purchase of a home.
They have social security; so, they would help with a bit of the bills/mortgage.
However, the mortgage would be in my name only and based on my income.
I just don't know how to process all this and how to begin.
Mom and dad will need increasingly skilled care and there is no way you can do that for 2 parents in the long haul. There is no monetary benefit for either of you to do this. Where will your income come from? How will you manage a job especially when you will encounter one crisis after another and need time off to manage. Long term -- once mom and dad are gone or in residential care -- how will this leave you? will you have healthcare, savings, retirement income saved? Are you willing to give up all social life and friends/freedom you have now?
I suggest you work with local aging center and social services and research options for in -home care for mom and dad. You live on your own and help when you can. IF they are in there 60s they could go on a very long time and once you move in together -- it will be very hard emotionally to undue and move out.
DONT DO IT.
You are young and my advice is to look at all other options for your parents. Check with the Dept of Aging in your area and support groups. They each have information and resources that can help you out in this situation.
DO NOT QUIT YOUR JOB TO BE A CAREGIVER. You will give all monies paid into social security, company retirement, health benefits for yourself and YOUR FUTURE.
Remember you are not alone. This site offers plenty of advice and resources. Ultimately it is your choice but please weigh all options. This is not a short term fix, it is a life-long commitment.
Please spend a lot of time on here reading other threads about situations similar to yours before you do anything you can't change.
There are a few specific reasons this has been even remotely workable for me.
1) My mother has enough money to help purchase our house, cover her share of living expenses and cover a part-time caregiver.
2) my job is very flexible - I have been able to work at home part-time and I live only a mile away from work.
3) my husband is a huge help- and a really really positive person. I could not have done it without him.
If your job is not that flexible then you will have trouble. There were years I spent all my vacation and sick time caring for my mother - I am lucky to have had the time to use. I have also been lucky that I could take advantage of the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) which meant that I could take time off without pay and still be assured of my job.
But without her money and a flexible job? I would not have been remotely capable of caring for one, let alone two people. It will wear you down. You will become resentful. Your quality of life will deteriorate. You will end up in worse financial shape when you get to their age. There were times when my mother was very ill when I thought I was going to go crazy - she was waking my multiple times a night and I was trying to work during the day.
So don't do it. Find an Elder Law Attorney. Figure out how to get them set up without bankrupting yourself or ruining your own health. It may seem cruel – but if you work yourself to death for them then they are worse off than if you carefully arrange care for them now that doesn't involve you.
FIRST, spend $350 for an hour and a half of an Elder Lawyer's advice. It was priceless to me and I was able to save my Mom's condo property and bank account from Medicaid when we finally applied. It is the best money spent.
SECOND, we moved in with my Mom with dementia for 10 years all together - she is now 96. I love my Mom, but my husband and I got sick and could not make our own money (we are both self-employed so we had 'flexible' hours too). However, their care does get very complicated and you may not be able to work around it. It will be MORE difficult to pull out of that situation later on, when they are 100% dependent on you. It hurt me more to have to cut the cord to save ourselves. Had I to do it again, I would have chosen a different road.
THIRD, your life will no longer be yours. Believe all the people who have told you this. Yes, it may be the Christian-expected-thing-to-do on the outside - taking care of your parents - but you have to weigh that on the inside. It took me 10 years of selfless service in caring for Mom to realize that I was choosing someone else's needs out of love for the other, and destroying my own God-given life and heart's needs, thus not loving my on Self. This is not healthy on any level - including the spiritual. Our individual mission in this life IS to honor, love and respect our own greater Self, our Higher Self, as God lives within each one of us, as us!
No, no one can tell you what to do. Yet, do not act so quickly that you cannot study this situation from all the angles presented. Please consider all the experienced advise given to you on this blog and contemplate how you will honor your own God-given life. If your answer equals sacrificing it for your parent's welfare and not your own, then go forth once you are conscious of all details involved and have responsibly accepted all the consequences - on all levels of your being. If you have doubts about living with them, listen carefully to your own inner knowing. Although it may not give you a good intellectual reason for not doing this, it will save you. Trust your gut!
All the best!
My suggestion is they sell their townhome, go to an assisted living facility, spend their equity and income as long as it lasts and perhaps they would qualify for Medicaid...(I say perhaps, because they may or may not qualify...There is a threshold of needed care that must be met to qualify for Medicaid...
I would not for a moment give a single thought to their spending the proceeds from the selling of their dwelling. Life is difficult...When they run out of money during a period of private pay care, then seek a different trail....it is not your responsibility to give your life (literally) for a potentially very long time.
There may also be huge problems if their proceeds from the sale of their townhome are combined with your funds from the sale of your townhome and purchase a house in your name only. (you may want to consider consulting an elder care lawyer on this particular issue.)
Just kidding, but if I were your uncle, I'd consider "kidnapping" you to keep you from entering into such an arrangement...(Again, just kidding.)
Grace + Peace,
Bob
If your town has a meals on wheels program, you may want to look into ordering it for them but this may have to go through their doctors. If they don't have a microwave, you may need to see where you can get one fairly cheap and make sure it's in safe working condition. This will help with reheating hot foods that are packaged in serving size packs. Our area has a meals on wheels program for the elderly and disabled, even if you're just temporarily disabled if your doctor orders it. Another idea is to keep lots of canned goods and a can opener handy. Other nonperishables that need no refrigeration are also very helpful so you don't have to cook as much if you don't want to or don't feel like it or maybe even if you just can't. These are just a few ideas to get you started in providing for your parents to take care of themselves. Living on your own comes with a certain level of responsibility when you become adults because you're no longer children. If they are going to live on their own then they need to take responsibility that comes with independent living. There are assisted living programs out there and there's also home healthcare, make them use those programs if they need help. You're actually best to leave the caregiving to the pros who are specifically trained in this particular area
When I saw their conditions, I considered that they asked you because they don't want to go into a home, and their health didn't seem terminal at this time.
So then I considered what this might mean for you.
I would suggest a few things: I would contact a lawyer specializing in caring for elderly parents. Based on your state, you may be able to claim them as dependents. A link to look at: credit.com tax-breaks-you-can-get-for-taking-care-of-aging-parents
1. Mobility: your parents are going to be unable to go up or down the stairs as they get older. so does either town-homes offer that? If not, then what should be considered in a new place is if there is a bedroom on the first floor.
2. Independence: it's not your independence at stake; it's theirs too. The best way to keep people independent when you are combining homes (which you're doing) is to find a home that lets them remain independent from you. In my home, we have a one one floor house with a bonus room that was created into a full bedroom apartment for myself (an office, a full shower, and bedroom). We nixed getting a separate entrance, but my space is big enough for myself, and I don't feel like I'm doing the "grownup back in their parent's house thing). Depending on the amount you can afford in your name, it's something to consider as an addition to an existing house, and what you can afford. A realtor would help a great deal in this case, and you may qualify for tax breaks for creating a home with your parents in mind. (Going back to talking to someone about it).
3. AL / vs . pooling our resources: your mother and stepfather may benefit from having a caregiver come into the home; that's also something to consider and there are a lot of options available. I'm going to assume assisted living (AL) is not high on something they wish to do, but they have some very nice places. I'd look into those with them and see if that's something they'd consider as well. Pooling our resources was a better option for us; my parents are "able bodied" but their lifestyle never really destroyed my social life. I control my social life; and I'm sure you control yours as well. Because the mortgage would be in your name and what you can afford, you have the advantage of being responsible for "what happens" in a home with your name on it. Since it sounds like you're considering their request, you shouldn't consider what could happen as an adult. Your "teenage" residue of life prior to living on your own doesn't apply in this new family space: it doesn't in my home and it won't matter in yours. I think if your mother and stepfather have gone so far to ask you, they're aware of the situation they are placing themselves in, so there's no reason to fear what that could mean for you.
Kudos to you for even being open to discuss it and if you have a healthy relationship with your parents (who may or may not be demanding- only you know that), then all the better for you, and more admiration for you, because it's easy to not to consider the request than to give it any thought.
I hope you will keep us notified on what you've chosen to do.
Years ago, I moved back home with my folks when there was a lot going on in their lives, including my dad's health issues. My dad was about 70, and my mom several years younger. I believe that they actually lost some of their independence because I was around to do things for them.
Good that the home will only be in your name - but for all the legal aspects, Elder Attorney. Sometimes you can get advice for free.
P.S. Good Luck to you! I have my hands full taking care of one.
THE BEST advice for you now is see an Elder Law attorney.
I also would not move parents in with me, but you absolutely shouldn't do it without finding out the financial ramifications.
I also notice that your mom's spouse is your step-dad. Have you considered how you would feel about providing a home and caring for him by yourself if she passes first? Would you kick him out then?
it sounds like you don't have your own family, like the impression we're getting re love17, but if you did, I'd be very careful as to how you come across that they should also do what her parents are wanting her to do; and, also, her mother is not a widow
You can't compare supporting children with supporting elderly parents. We came out helpless. They had a working lifetime to figure out what to do when they became helpless.
All of us have compassion, I think. But it takes a lot more than compassion to take care of failing elders. It takes grueling sacrifice, often over an unsustainably long period of time. We understand that the OP may have great compassion for her parents. But we are trying to stop her from taking actions that might rope her into that grueling sacrifice in a way that may be impossible to unwind. We all start out with deep compassion for our parents. But the degree of sacrifice that is required is often more than we could possibly sustain, and it's important that the OP knows that before committing herself to something she may not be able to undo.
Please heed all of the advice above. Especially the elder lawyer. You cannot afford to fall into a unforeseen trap. Get good info up front.
All I have to say, to quote Linda, is that this is LONG! And SLOW! The tedium is stultifying. And when you really do get to the point of hands-on care, how old will you be? 65? 70?
I am 67 and have been caring for a sick husband for seven years. Now, he needs real hands-on care (I will spare you the details of intravenous meds and wound care) and more: he now needs help to take a shower and just called me UPSTAIRS) to make the bed so that he can go back to sleep--it is 8:46 a.m.
This is tedious, tough stuff.
Good luck. Be smart. Go to the lawyer.