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My mother did not have assets. Moreover, she could not have owned a pre-paid funeral and still been able to receive Medicaid so we (my siblings and I) bought it and put ownership in my name. I honestly don't know how anyone can have any assets left over after using everything up on health care! My mother certainly paid for my father's funeral expenses (even though he was cremated it was still a Jewish service as well as a Masonic service). She did have a gravestone and some of his ashes buried in her plot. By the time we thought it time to arrange for a pre-paid funeral for my mother, she no longer had the assets for that.
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If your mom wants anything besides being cremated then she needs to pre-pay and write up her wishes.

My nephew passed at 21 years old and my family had no money for anything, I offered to pay, told my brother to do some arraignment, nothing extraordinary and nothing over state lines, he calls me with the name of a FH and screams that it will cost about 25k. What? No, I'm not paying to sooth consciences, none of them had any contact for a couple of years and now they needed this. When I said that needed to be revised to a simple and cheaper service none of them would talk to me, 3 months later the Medical Examiner called me and said the family needs to do something or the state would cremate his remains and dispose of them, essentially flushing them down the sewer. When I left msgs for all 9 of them to this effect, it still took my brother 6 weeks to get me the paperwork to be able to do anything. I have a firm believe that if you don't want your remains to be handled this way, you better make arraignments, as families can get nutty when someone passes, obviously at 21 who would but his dad just went away, I guess he thought if he didn't deal with it, it wasn't true. However, when we had the celebration of life, he didn't even show up and his mom found out on the internet by finding his obituary. Long story to say let her know what can happen if there is no arraignment and no money with siblings at odds. Let it be her choice and leave it there. 

I had my nephew cremated and his remains separated into enough portions that his parents and siblings each received a bag with a note that said "Take me some place special that we shared together, remember the good times as you say good bye" all of his 7 siblings loved that they could do that privately and personally. My brother, nothing pleases him, so at least the kids were happy.
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Wow, isthisrealyreal. As they say, no good deed goes unpunished.

My mom died with no pre-paid arrangement and no written wishes. She died suddenly but not totally unexpectedly — if that makes any sense.

I was not the only stakeholder in Mom’s life, but I was her only biological child.

I had to think fast and (initially) front all the money. Ultimately, no one was 100% happy with the arrangements I chose. INCLUDING ME. 

And the price tag is nauseating. What a racket. Simple cremation costs entirely too much. Then the prices escalate from there.

At the same time, I totally understand the “ostrich routine” that the old folks pull. Don’t want to have an uncomfortable convo. Don’t want to admit that their Exit Fantasy is outside of the family budget. Now let’s factor in the faith-based shoulds and shouldn’ts. 

UGH.
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Funerals can be as cheap or expensive as you want. I checked not long ago and in California you can get a person cremated for as little as $650.00. Cremains are returned in a cardboard box. You can scatter the cremains. Have the service at someone's home or in a park, make it a potluck if you need to. If in a park, you will need a special use permit. If you don't have any money, just leave the body, the soul is gone anyway, with the county and they will take care of it. You don't see a lot of bodies laying around, someone is disposing of them. There is a cemetery near me that has a beautiful rose garden. For $350.00 you can scatter the ashes there. If you want the name on a plaque it is additional.

My late sister-in-law was a quilter and they wrapped her cardboard box with her favorite fabric and put her in her spot at the cemetery. I felt you CAN take it with you.

If you have money, the sky is the limit.
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I can see how prices can get out of control. One is grieving and then all the arrangements need to be made. Just picking out the casket can be emotional. My Dad would have been ok with just a pine box.

I could have cut back on the Mass cards as I realize with each generation they became less and less popular. The church had printed out a very nice handout with a photo of my parent on the front. I really didn't need a signature book, but I know those can be helpful if a lot of people would be attending the service.

I also didn't have any reception afterwards... I was just too exhausted to even think about having one.
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tam1046, thank you for providing additional information to help us understand the situation better. In answering your primary question, I still think, like most others, that it makes sense and would be wise for your mom to plan and pre-pay her own funeral expenses. But often historical family dysfunction and dynamics combined with the stresses of aging and care giving, result in misunderstandings, hurt feelings, and less than sensible decision making. If at all possible, I urge you to initiate having a family meeting, or two, or three -- in person is preferable but telephonic is better than nothing, and with a professional mediator if it is likely that such meetings will otherwise become immediately accusatory and overly defensive. If your mom is reasonably competent, she should participate in at least one meeting or part of it, but you and your siblings should probably allow some time to talk things out among just yourselves, as well.

As I understand it, your mom is currently legally competent but does have some physical incapacity and needs some assistance (incontinence, transportation, etc.), e.g. a level of care that would cost her $3,500 to $5,000 monthly in an assisted living facility. Most importantly, you said she is "happy and at peace." Based just on that limited information, it seems likely that an investigation by Adult Protective Services would result in finding that her living/financial situation is good and not at all abusive.

Maybe your brother could provide your mom's care for less or even for absolutely no financial compensation, as many adult children do, but in your family meeting you should discuss what is fair for him and wise for your mom, given that she may need to apply for Medicaid in the future when her level of care exceeds what your brother is capable of providing, e.g. a level of care that will cost $6,000 to $12,000 per month in a facility. Whatever your brother is charging your mom now or in the future, it should be via a contract/caregiver agreement that conforms to Florida's specific Medicaid rules.
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Thanks so much for all of your responses. Family meeting sounds very reasonable with reasonable siblings, which is not the case in our family. 3 out of 5 siblings do not speak with the brother that is caring for her, which little do they realize is only hurting my Mom, by limiting contact with my Mom because of my brother. You see, they feel that my brother took her far away (from MN to FL) for his own personal and financial gain. I happen to be the only one who has spent enough time around my brother and my Mom and know that he is taking very good, kind care of her. The other's have visited once since she has been (going on 4 years) here in Florida and spent limited time with her due to their hatred toward my brother. They are not seeing the day in and day out of all the care he gives to her. I'm an RN and have a lot of experience with caring for older adults. So many parents would be so lucky to have the care my brother gives to my Mom. My Mom's only wish is that her other children would understand and accept that she is happy in Florida and at peace. As hard as it was for her, she has recently stepped up and has begun to make the final arrangements regarding cremation, burial plot, and monument plans and provided payment. I now realize how hard it is for people as we age, to start realizing their own mortality as they age and plan for end of life decisions and planning as to not leave the financial burden on her children. As hard as it is to accept our own mortality, it is the responsible thing to do.
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The three siblings who believe that your bother took your mother for his own financial gain is likely trying to gain even more by asking for money from them to pay for their mother's final expenses. If he understands that, then why is he trying to begin WWIII by asking for this money. Has he been one to seek to boss his siblings around?
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Blackhole:

You are so right about the burial prices being out of reach for a growing number of families.

Also you are right about the dead parent, sometimes, unrealistic wishes, for the funeral and burial.

My cousin's father wanted a two-person walk-in mausoleum. 

They simply could not abide by his wishes because the price tag was: $120,000-$585,000, just for the mausoleum.

My cousin, an only child, feels guilty about that, but I do not think he should. The father's wishes were unrealistic, and if that is what he really wanted, he could have and should have pre-paid.
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tam1046, your unfortunate family situation sounds all too familiar. In my case, I'm the "evil" brother, but I was the one to suggest a family meeting with my 7 siblings of which the 4 who thought I was evil did not respond to the idea. Those 4 rarely visited our dad after my wife and I moved him into our home 4 years ago and only one of those 4 has visited him (just once) since I moved him to a memory care facility 9 months ago. But those 4 were the ones who asked me to provide the guardianship and conservatorship reports I filed with the court -- I sent them copies even though I was not legally required to do so and they gave me absolutely no feedback on the reports and did not even thank me for providing them. Luckily, my dad rarely remembers any of them, so their absences don't distress him at all. Most often he thinks I'm his dad, but sometimes I'm one of his brothers, and less often he sometimes knows me as his son. Unlike your mom, I don't think he's happy, but he is safe, comfortable and seems at least content, if not at peace.

Back to your original question of whether children should pay for a parent's burial -- a few years ago, before I became my dad's guardian and conservator, I suggested to my 7 siblings that my dad's assets should be used to pre-pay at least some of his future burial expenses. Only one of the 4 siblings who regard me as evil responded and as my dad's trustee she opposed the idea, so I didn't pursue it further at that time, but now as his conservator it's back on my to-do list, along with a 1,000 other things.
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Funeral costs are so high even when doing a simple Orthodox Jewish funeral: simple unadorned pine box, body wrapped in a shroud. But then come such things as the cemetery is required to vault the graves (most likely due to the geological necessities) and then there are all the state added requirements - I honestly don't recall them. The gravestone at least comes about 10 or 11 months later so that's not an immediate add on. As I said previously, we pre-paid it. It took us a few years of depositing the money every so often. At least at the very end the funeral home did not add on the additions because of inflations to our last payment.

According to one website, the variation of allowed limits from state to state are between 5,000 USD to 15,000 USD. I believe here in CT it is even lower than 5,000 USD.
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I feel that anything that my brother does to try to appease the other 3 siblings who dislike him, falls on deaf ears. It is hard on him (even though he says it doesn't bother him) to have his brothers and sister feel that way about him. He focuses on what the most important issue is, which is the care of my Mother and what SHE likes and does not like and her happiness and comfort. The other 3 siblings, sometimes I have no idea as to when and where they lost their sight and prespectives regarding my Mom. As people in general, they are all about me, me, me, which is sad considering all of what my Mom made her life about, which was her children. She bent over backwards all her life for her children. I wish for a minute they would stop and recall this and change their attitudes regarding coming to see her and communicating with her in her later in life years, before it's too late to do anything. In the end, all of their current behavior will all be for naught. I totally understand bicycler's post, you hit the situation right on the head, I feel for your situation. Damned if you do and damned if you don't. Hang in there and hats off to all of your time and care for your father. Very admirable.
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tam1046, this is an amazingly serendipitous forum. You asked a straightforward question about whether adult children should be expected to pay for a parent's burial costs for which there were lots of good answers and apparently that's helped your mom's decision to plan and prepay for her burial. But we also got into discussions about family stresses and dysfunction arising from a parent's aging and increasing need for care. In both our cases, our parents (your mom and my dad) are probably in the best places they can be, but some of our siblings are resentful and have decided to not only stop communicating with the caregivers, but also have pretty much stopped communicating with the parent, let alone actually traveling to visit the parent. Rational thought is lost to total dysfunction, unless, of course, their thinking is more about our parents spending their inheritances rather than our parents' well-being, in which case it actually is rational, but sad.

Like your brother, I had to focus on my dad's well-being and had to stop trying to appease siblings who did not help and instead only questioned my actions while refusing to believe any answers -- I simply did not have the time or energy to appease them while providing my dad's care. Like your mom, my dad (and mom) lived their lives helping their children, even when they were elderly and it was hard for them to help, and now some of them go on cruises and travel far and frequently, but never or almost never to see our dad.

Thank you, tam1046, for your kind words and the understanding you've gained by observing the care your brother provides your mom. I suspect some of your insight comes from being an RN -- all the nurses who've helped my dad and me have been great.
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