Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
First question I am going to ask...and I ask this a LOT..
Is your dad a Veteran?
If so the VA might be a LOT of help.
If dad is a Veteran please contact his local Veterans Assistance Commission. give them as much info as you can. They can look up his records. There is NO fee for this service.
Your dad is young and may not qualify for some services until he turns 65. But you can contact his local Senior Service Center or Local Area Agency on Aging they may have suggestions for you.
The next thing you need to do is STOP funding your dad. YOU need to save the money you have for YOUR future, your expenses.
If dad qualifies you can help begin the process for Medicaid. I am sure a Social Worker at the Senior Center can help with this.

PLEASE do not move back home to care for dad. It truly is not your responsibility nor is it an obligation you have to take on.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

If he's as broke as you say, then he will qualify for MediCal or whatever government assistance program there is where he lives, and can go to a care facility, if needed. Don't get sucked into losing the best years of your life (slight exaggeration here, but the point is you're young, and you're just getting into the "real" adult part of your life) to helping him through the last of his.

Caring for someone with diminished capacity is like entering a black hole. It can become all-consuming, and you'd be surprised at how long someone can live with an illness like dementia or alzheimers. My MIL had a series of strokes and sepsis 6yrs ago. She can't do anything for herself, she can barely communicate, and yet she's still here. No improvement and no diminishment. Her mother was diagnosed with dementia 15yrs ago at age 80, and her doctor said she'd outlive us all because aside from her brain, the rest of her was in great shape. She's almost 96yrs old now, and still a handful. You'd be surprised at how long people can live under these circumstances. You can't be expected to help him for the next several years—the years when you can start your career, have kids, or whatever.

His bad life choices, and bad planning is not for you to fix now. You should move forward with your life. Your aunt should respect your wishes, or not, but that's her choice.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I wonder if the money spent at a gas station is for gasoline or lottery tickets.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
BurntCaregiver Dec 14, 2023
I wonder why the OP is on social security at the age of 29.
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
luna33: You should never use your financials for your father's care.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Stop paying any money for your dad's issues. Tell your aunt you are not liable for any money she "lends" your dad - whether or not you know about it. Please get him into assisted living or memory care - as his health deems - and make sure it is paid for from his resources. If he essentially has nothing, then make sure to have him enrolled in Medicaid and accepted into a place that takes Medicaid payments.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Tell your aunt NO WAY!!! That may be the end of your relationship with her but so be it. She has NO right to demand or expect you to abandon your life to care for her brother! Who does she think she is??

Do not financially support your dad.

Do not have your dad move in with you. If he tries to take you up on it, tell him that circumstances have changed and your prior offer is no longer reasonable for many reasons. He may be disappointed, but that's too bad.

You, OTOH, need to go to med school! Congrats! Take care of yourself. Get married. Work on your schooling and then your career. If you don't put it first you WILL regret it for the rest of your life.

Best of luck.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Its time for your father to go to memory care where they can take care of him. It will get worse because it always does with Alzheimer's.

Another thing is stop enabling him that includes the aunt too. All you are doing is letting him use his money for things when it should be finding himself a place to live with care.

The IRS bill would have went onto his estate.

YOU NEED TO GO TO MEDICAL SCHOOL. Don't give that up. You are not responsible for your father's care. You are only responsible for your care take care of yourself.

As far as the tax returns of your father for your scholarships I would tell the financial aid that I cannot get them and tell them that he was owing the IRS. I believe your father either didn't know how to fill them out or he just didn't do them for him being $100,000 in debt.

If you are worried about him asked for DHS or other agencies to do a welfare check on him that may get him in a place faster than you can. That may get him the help he needs.

I am with the others on here don't have him live with you that is asking for trouble.

Take care of yourself and continue to go to medical school. If any of your family was in the military try that route for scholarships.

Prayers stay true to yourself stay on your route for career.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

A simple NO. You will destroy your chances for a good future both in your career and marriage.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Your father's finances have zero to do with you getting financial aid. You have no reason to use his taxes for scholarships or grants. You've been a legal adult for 11 years now. I don't know who told you that.

You have no obligation to save your dad due to his lack of planning for his retirement. What your aunt chooses to do is her business.

Contact Adult Protection Services and hand over his care to the state. If you don't have power of attorney, there's nothing you can do anyway.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report
PeggySue2020 Dec 15, 2023
My county aps doesn’t respond to those under 65. But more to op’s point, aunt needs a dose of reality.

Med school takes four years in which you don’t get paid. Then there’s four years of internship and residency in which you’re paid middle class and also start paying off your 300k med school debt.

Which you’re doing so you can finally earn at least half a million for life.
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
Apparently, students are considered "independent" once they reach 24 if applying for LOANS but if applying for institutional aid (grants, scholarships) they will look back into a parent's income history through tax records to see if the applicant grew up "disadvantaged".
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
MJ1929 Dec 15, 2023
No, my daughter is a college admissions counselor for a major state university. Grants and scholarships come from the school's endowment and are distributed as they see fit.

Sure, some of their scholarships could be for lower-income students, but by the medical school level everyone is going to need help with tuition and no parent is obligated in any way to assist a 29-year-old with tuition regardless of how wealthy they are.
(3)
Report
See 1 more reply
You go to medical school. Congrats!
Your aunt does not understand how women today need education, career and there is nothing selfish about it.
Just imagine if you become caregiver, 20 years from now, your career, family, marriage. Would you have it all at 50?
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I received this pearl of wisdom from a very good counselor, "Feeling guilty and being guilty are not the same." That single line helped me cut through the confusion of emotional fog. Rational decisions are needed here. Your dad needs to be saved from himself. Your aunt sounds like she also has the beginning of dementia. I've gone through this with my mother. After the advice, regardless of what my mother said to me I finally stood up to her and went through with all the paper work necessary for her to move into memory care. The physical distance between her and me paid off. We are creating new memories that are much kinder. Caregivers know how to control the environment to minimize fits, they get medication on time, etc. If you want to have any positive memory of your dad in his last days, you would want that distance where you can moderate the visit, and caregivers will do the rest. My mother is on medicaid. I have medical POA. I am not guilty because I made the best decision possible for her care. I continue to visit her, monitor her care, etc. Save yourself from all the noise around you.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

As Nancy Reagan used to say (you're too young to know)

"Just Say No"

Walk away.
Do not argue.
Focus on your own life / development / goals

No need to explain yourself.
Everyone is responsible for themselves, including your father.
If he spends $$$ that he doesn't have, then he suffers the consequences
OR
perhaps he needs to get a conservator from the state to manage his money.
This is up to him to decide. And that person is NOT you.

You are 29 and taking responsibility for your life and decisions.

Your relatives are DECADES older and are not, and trying to dump this responsibility on you.

Do Not Allow Them To Do It.

Stay in therapy and focus on your own self development.
And feelings of guilt or whatever comes up.

Realize that your aunt's expectations are HERS. She needs to own her feelings and 'expectations.'
You are not involved nor responsible for how she thinks.
This is her stuff.

Learn to set boundaries - as you are (wanting / trying to do).
Love and respect yourself.
Love and feel compassion FROM A DISTANCE for others. Don't allow yourself to be sucked into their psychological dysfunction.

Gena / Touch Matters
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I work with and communicate with my dads "Case Worker" that he was assigned when he went on Medicare. Let them know the situation, get your dad's affairs in order, living options lined up, his medical desires (what does he want? DNR? fight for him to the end live on machines?), does he want to be buried or cremated, does he know where he wants to be buried or where his ashes should go, is this something you can pay for now? It might be worth talking to someone in palliative care that could give you directions or options. Does he have a will? If you have money set aside for his care you can put it in a trust that your aunt can't touch. There are a lot of ways to take care of your dad without having to physically be there. I know I did not used the correct terms with all of this, but while he is still around, ask him what he wants, this will take a huge burden off of you when he passes.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Many good answers here. I just was to add RIDICULOUS! You have a right to your life!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

How are things going, Luna?
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
luna33 Jan 5, 2024
Hi Barb, please see my reply above!
(0)
Report
Luna, glad to see from your recent comment regarding SS that you are still engaged on this thread. I wonder if you have any updates for us, or thoughts on suggestions on the thread?
Helpful Answer (3)
Report
luna33 Jan 5, 2024
Y'all are so sweet for asking for updates :)

I haven't talked to my aunt since she got mad at me and I wrote this post. I talked with my therapist (several times, lol) about the whole thing and my emotions surrounding her disapproval. I'm beginning to feel better about setting boundaries with her. I have realized that out of everyone I know (all friends, all other family), she is the only one who is not supportive of me. She also has a bad track record with the rest of the family. Many family members don't talk to her anymore, she has loaned my cousin money and they got into a lot of drama years ago.... so this isn't an isolated issue. My therapist basically told me she is projecting big time.

Relating to my dad, I talk to him on the phone a lot to see how he is doing and am going to visit him back home in a few weeks. I guess the biggest issue I am grappling with is whether or not to call Adult Protective Services.

The issue with me calling APS is I would feel so guilty :( My therapist suggested that I hire a CNA/RN home health caregiver to come over to his house and provide companionship....and then if they think APS needs to be called, they are mandatory reporters, so they could make the call. Then I wouldn't feel guilty.

I found a home health agency and am planning on meeting with the RN manager, with my dad, on Jan 22nd at his home. The plan is for her to assess what kind of care he would need and go from there. I don't know what to expect with that.

The biggest fear is that I will be "on the hook" for paying for in-home care for many years if I start it now. My other aunt (not the bad one, this aunt is on my mom's side), told me not to start paying for the home health, and to try to have my dad pay for it out of his social security. Realistically, i can't pay for it right now, but the issue is that I don't think I can *force* my dad to pay for it either, and he's in denial that he needs help.

So if anyone has advice on that, I am all ears :)
(0)
Report
luna33: Just now locating your thread.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Original Igloo here: So Luna, the med school you were accepted into, is it a private medical school rather than a State school? Which application did you have to do for this specific school? That CCS is a red flag to me….

Please PLEASE realize that no University can make the parent or family of a student pay for the students tuition or fees. The parents or parents extended family can have their names on a frickin building on campus but ZERO that financial aid office can do to force them to pay tuition, fees, books, etc once that student ages out of legal dependency under IRS regulations. It’s age 24 for taxes and age 26 for health insurance. Your 29 well past any of that.

Any fin aid who is telling you this is blowing smoke up your skirt.
OR is used to only dealing with the usual 20, 21, 22 yr old college junior or Senior freshly accepted into medical school for next year.
At 29 you are a real outlier for entering med school. Really try to find a fin aid person who understands that you are basically 30 with no $, no resources & need to borrow tuition, fees, books & living costs X 5 yrs. It’s going to be mid 6 figures $$$$$

Very serious borrowing. Life altering if it goes wrong.
It’s not the maximum 4 years of Stafford loans kids can easily get for college at under 28K all in for 4 years.

At 29 the cost on borrowing to go to professional school is all on you and if you get married then onto your spouse should you default.(Personally I would not get married.) & this is why I’m asking if this is a private medical school as they are beyond way way way higher in costs and not necessarily on par with State medical schools on ranking. You see it in how successful they are in match day & then on fellowship placements.

I’m not talking Colombia, Brown, Harvard, Grossman level of private medical schools. There are lesser private schools out there. None of the privates have costs capped except - as far as I’m aware - for the privates in Texas (like Baylor which is a top ranked) as Texas under State law has a cap on professional school tuition but has a tight OOS limit (& why junior year kids switch into TX Uni’s if they want to go into medical, dental grad schools as the tuition is way lower, it’s strategic grad school gamesmanship).

On living costs, if this is an older medical school, it may have an off campus fraternity with its own building. If so perhaps look into that for a place to live as they tend to have a older huge HUGE home that’s divvied up into dorm rooms with a kitchen with staff so there’s daily meals, a library (it’s a bar), a reception room (usually w pool table, gaming, WiFi), parking and usually a pretty nice pool as well. Are now co-Ed. Phi Chi is the bigger one with chapters all over. (My first hubs was Phi Chi & AOA). It’s really cheap housing and walkable to medical school. Their alumni seems to really support chapters. They are NOT at all like frats in college like what TiKis or KA is. Absolutely not college Greek at all.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
luna33 Jan 5, 2024
Hey thank you for this info! So to clarify, and I will try not to brag, but I have been accepted to 4 medical schools so far, one is my state school which I would have in-state tuition, the others are private. One is Ivy-League, another is ranked #25 in the nation right now. I interviewed with some schools that are top 5-10 med schools in the nation and will hear back from them in February. Fingers crossed!

I just want to call attention to the fact that these schools do require the financial information of the parents. Here's a link for proof from Duke for example:
https://medschool.duke.edu/education/health-professions-education-programs/doctor-medicine-md-program/financial-aid-doctor

They basically acknowledge the fact that it is crazy expensive and say that it's a "family decision" to attend a private MD program - which is BS in my opinion. It's basically encouraging nepotism in medicine....which is wrong for so many reasons.

I mostly have this figured out now, thankfully. I was able to pull my dad's tax transcript from the IRS website, which is basically a differently formatted copy of the tax return, and the schools are willing to accept this document. The loans will be expensive of course, but I am hoping that since I will be going to an at least top 25 program in the country, I will have no issue matching into a competitive residency program.
(0)
Report
"my aunt is refusing to send me any of my dad's tax documents that I need to submit to financial aid to be considered for scholarships/grants."

I forgot to address this is my previous post. IMO your Dads income has nothing to do with you at the age of 29. You have been an emancipated adult since the age of 18. Even though I worked and was ready to put my kids thru 4 years of college, I don't think it should be a have to thing. At 29 I don't see where Dads income should come into you furthering your Eduation. Have you no income of your own since you turned 18.

Is it just these grants and scholarships need to see you don't have a rich Dad? Really, I don't understand why at 29 your income is the only one needed. Who paid for your Education up to now? If u, don't see how Dads income means anything.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I mean I don't know your aunt personally and I could be wrong, but she keeps asking you for money and the money kept getting higher, you had a limit on what you'd give which is understandable. Now you set a boundary that your aunt does not like,she is now trying to guilt trip you into caring for your parent who seems to be spending money on things that does not seem to help him. I'd question your aunt on why you are providing money, which is not being used wisely and why her reaction was for you to be the carer,when you are obviously the bread winner paying for everything, if you gave up what you have worked hard for where are you going to finance yourself and also your father already gets benefits in order to fund him,so where is the money that she gets from you going? If she does not have a good enough reason,I'd take no notice of her and not pay her a penny but thats just me.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report
AlvaDeer Dec 31, 2023
Welcome, needausername:
I would love to read your comments, because from what I can tell they are good. But I cannot possibly read anything without punctuation and capitalization.
Up to you if you continue to write in this manner, but I think much will be lost in our missing your good comments and input.
Welcome, and have a great New Year.
(3)
Report
See 2 more replies
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter