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Since my grandparents passed, my mother has lived with me. My mother is fully disabled with MS. However (and I am not the only family member who thinks this) there is likely some Munchhausen syndrome going on. Pile this on top of her narcissism, and I am heavily lost in the F.O.G.... I am engaged to marry next spring, and our first child is due in November. My mother has weighed heavily on mine and Fiances relationship. There is constant stress that I am not willing to deal with anymore. I have spoken with my mother as well as her lawyer (her financial conservator) and expressed that the time has come for her to find her own way. I cannot deal with the tension anymore and I want to start my family without the negativity. She is and always has been a VERY toxic and manipulative person. She refuses to do ANYTHING to help herself. She doesnt pay me rent. She constantly asks me to do things for her that she is capable of doing herself. She hoards in her bedroom which is gross and Ive spoken with her about multiple times. Doesn't bathe. She smokes like a chimney. ect ect....
So back to the point... I have spoken with her and the lawyer... We have discussed low income housing, purchase of mobile homes, etc etc. I have done a bunch of leg work myself to find homes for sale, view said homes, find apartment applications and so on. Now an important fact is that my mother received a large windfall from my grandparents. Roughly 180k which is now in a trust and managed by the lawyer. Right now it seems the lawyer is deadin the water regarding getting my mother somewhere on her own. I dont want to put my mom out on the streets. (fog?) BUT I fear my due date will roll around and my mother will still be in my home. This is NOT an option. Im at my wits end and am not sure what my next course of action should be? Formal eviction? Agency of aging evaluation?
HELP!!!!!

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Neither your mother's doctor nor her lawyer will be looking out for YOUR interests. As long as your mother is living with you, they don't have to be concerned, right?

Secondhand smoke is a health hazard, so she really needs to be out of your place by the time your baby is born. She is already jeopardizing your health.

Your mother is taking advantage of you (which I am sure you realize).

Are there any other siblings?
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In order to fully understand your position/options going forward with your mom, you might want to consult an elder attorney of your own. A letter to your mothers attorney from your attorney might make mothers attorney realize he is going to have to do something different. That you are going to take action. A 30 min consultation might be all you would need to understand what is needed. You may have to evict mom to get her out. It's good you have been looking but you need to know bottom line what is available to your mom financially to move forward. Congrats on your upcoming marriage and your baby. I hope you can get this straight soon for you and baby.
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The house is yours, yes? Then sell it out from under her. You might want to ask your lawyer if there are any legalities you would have to observe in your jurisdiction, but I'm sure you would be able to sell.
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I agree with JeanneGibbs! We are cheering for you!
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My own parents were in a tangle exactly like this. Grandma was a huge burden, and no one else would help. My uncle (her son) had POA, but his sole interest was to make sure all the money was saved for his inheritance.

Finally, my folks called a family meeting and announced they were move out at the end of the month. Family (uncle in particular) had better figure it out fast. Then, they promptly took a 2 week vacation to Vegas. They had been grandmas full time, live-in, free caregivers for over 15 years when they pulled the plug.

It worked. Suddenly POA had to step and and move grandma to a facility asap.
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I inherited the home from my grandparents when they passed in early 2013. My mother had been living with them for years. So I sort of inherited her too lol. Her name is not on the home in any way. She has Medicare I believe. I always get medicare and medicaid confused. I have a call into a lawyer for a consult, but even her receptionist seemed confused about my situation. If she could afford the home I have said multiple times that I would leave and she could have it... but... she cannot afford it and cannot manage maintaining it. She needs a small apartment. Or condo. Or perhaps assisted living. In the end I am so over her manipulation I just want to get away from her... I hate to say it but what she chooses as a living option, Im not really worried about. As long as Im free of her
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The inherited house came with unseen strings attached.
The F.O.G. is reaching out from past history, expectations of your Mom and you way before you were born.
Yes, sell the house.
Provide for your Mom as best as you can, and move on with your life. It is a caregivers responsibility to see that she is cared for, NOT necessarily doing the hands-on caregiving yourself.

Best of everything in your new life.
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Yup, we are your serious cheering section.

There is a thread on this board about a woman in a similar situation. I need to look for the thread. You might learn from what she did.
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Katiekates post is a good example of what is at the core of a good percentage of the problems we read about here at AC.

It's seems most people- well maybe not most but it looks that way to me - are first and foremost concerned about what's best for them. That's not necessarily a bad thing - except when it comes at great expense to someone else.

So many agendas seem to center on "what makes me most comfortable", "how can I continue to live as I please", "what's the best/easiest way to save me/get me more money?"

Left as collateral damage is the family member- the caregiver who is trying to do what's best - the right thing for the person,  who a lot of the time, is at the root of causing the problem - throwing the very person whom is their best chance for survival - under the bus.

Honestly, I just don't get it. And I think that's probably a good thing.
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