Monday, October 27, 2008

“Your Parents’ Money”

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On Sunday, 10/26 I read a great post over at Wide Open Wallet about our parents, their finances and if we should care how they spend it.

This is a very touchy subject to the elderly; I’m not sure why exactly, other than they have a deep-rooted fear of being broke with no place to go. These feelings can stem from a great many things, and in the case of my elder, it’s because a younger sibling of mine told my elder (at least according to my elder), “When you run out of money, you’re out of here.”

My Mom (while she was alive), and my Dad purchased a home that my brother and sister-in-law were renting but were soon to be evicted from. They lived in NM and my parents lived in SoCal. Mom & Dad sold the ‘family home,’ moved to NM, bought the house that my brother was being evicted from, and allegedly, then paid my brother rent to live there.

About 3 years later, Mom got sick and passed away. This was allegedly when my brother made the statement about Dad running out of money. Now Dad is so paranoid about not having any money that he contributes nothing to the household at all and he never has. He contributes absolutely no financial support, even though he likes certain cereals, certain fruits, drinks a certain milk, etc. These items add to the grocery bill, but that doesn’t matter to him at all.

Conversely, he does pay his own way in that he pays his own auto insurance (I paid it for about 6 mos.), he buys his own clothes when he replaces anything and has his own spending money. He buys his own medications, pays his own medical bills, etc., but I do think that at some point, his financial upkeep will become my responsibility, so I feel it’s my “right” to know where he stands financially.

I will never kick him out or put him in a home simply because he has no money. I believe that it’s wrong for any child to do that to a parent, yet I hear and read of family putting family ‘out on the street’ when their money runs out. What kind of child, or parent for that matter, can do that to their own family? That’s certainly not the way I was raised, yet my brother actually allegedly said that very thing to our Dad. My brother is a rare breed of selfish, know-it-all, ungrateful, hateful, lying, vengeful people, so while a part of me was stunned he would say something like that, deep down I guess I wasn’t really surprised.

The fear that he has also stems, no doubt, from having lived through the great depression, remembering what it was like to earn $1 a week, having a $90 house payment in 1959 that he worried about being able to make and looking around today to $4 for gas, paying $25,000 for a car (which he did, by the way), his $90 house payment “then” not even buying groceries “now,” and I understand to a point how and where his fear comes from. What I don’t understand, and find very hard to accept, is that he can listen to me lament the this and that of my finances, and not offer a dime in help.

This past week alone, I’ve had to dig into my reserves and pay out in excess of $1,400 to keep my Big Rig on the road, yet Dad doesn’t say a word nor offer up money. Maybe he doesn’t understand that if I’m on the street, so is he!

So how do you handle situations like this, or have you been able to get your elders to openly discuss and divulge where they stand financially, and what, if any, impact their passing might have on you and your family?

Saturday, October 18, 2008

“My” Elder









Every article I’ve read lately, that discusses this very topic of mine, unfortunately, paints a picture of those caring for elders that are in ill health, have no money of their own, are deep in debt, totally invalid, can’t drive, see, walk and a myriad of other ‘ailments.’

Let me assure you that I’m among the most lucky, in that my elder, who will be 92 years young in a matter of days, is financially secure, still drives, reads, carries a cell phone (paid for by me), receives Social Security benefits, has a pension, and is in great health for a person his age. His bones ache every now and then, but at 92, ‘something’s gonna hurt,’ I tell him. You can’t have it all, though I know he’d like to.

I’ve noticed lately that he moves a little slower in the mornings, but by noon it seems the stiffness has left his joints, mainly his legs. He seems to think (and remember, he knows it all!) that a little Physical Therapy will take care of that, and he doesn’t/can’t understand why the doctor doesn’t just order that up. I’ve explained to him that you pretty much have had to have been in an accident, had a stroke or something else debilitating enough to “warrant” PT; they don’t just throw PT sessions around. He wants to be able to touch his toes, and can’t understand why he can’t.

He has problems putting his socks on in the morning, and has on occasion asked either my daughter or me to put them on for him. He wants us to get him some baby powder on our next trip to Target or Wal-Mart, because he believes the baby power will help him put his socks on.

I just finished reading an article on how an 84 year old new retired woman had no pension due to her having worked decades for the family business. It turns out the business wasn’t worth much when she sold it, so her 50-something daughter bought the house next door to her own, and moved her Mother out to live next door. The 50-something has gone into debt to see to it that her Mother continues to enjoy some modicum of independence, yet she’s basically putting her own life on hold in order to do this. She’s the one in debt; she’ll have to work longer now and put off her own retirement; she buys all the food, does all the cooking, and makes ‘extra’ so that Mom will have something to eat all week; she no longer goes on shopping trips with friends, and the word vacation is alien sounding to her now that she’s gone into debt for her Mom.

Is this really what we’re supposed to do? How did it get this bad for our parents, and how, as a society, can we fix it or come to a happy medium where no one feels any financial pinch while giving back to our parents what they unselfishly gave us to begin with?

What are you doing; what are your tricks; where have you had to sacrifice and cut back; are you supporting your elder in other ways as well? What suggestions do you have or what do you think we can do to fix this?

Let’s hear from you,