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For a year now I've been the primary caregiver for someone in my neighborhood who has advanced COPD, a catheter, and other health conditions. By default, the other neighbors bailed out since they felt he was too much of a pain and high maintenance. He is single and the few relatives live an hour away and also feel he is too much of a pain. I started by taking him to medical appointments when he had more mobility but for the last year it has been hell. I am in my early 70s myself and I have to go over each morning, give him a basic cold breakfast, get summoned back a couple more times, then get him take out dinner and serve it to him. Then he often wants me to stop back again and keep him company. I am not saying I comply with every request. Tonight was the worst, I came back with dinner and the stench was awful. He could not make it to the close bathroom and had to go in the commode. I just about got sick. I applied for and got him coverage under his long term policy but half the time they call in sick and don't do much. I told him tonight he would have to consider assisted living or hospice care in home, as his doctors have suggested but he won't hear of it. He always tells me that if the situation was reversed he wouldn't let me go into a home. If so, well, he's better than me. We are just neighbors! Taking him to a doctor tomorrow that is an elder-care office. They also have social workers. I want to get hold of one of the social workers and tell them and the dr that this has to end. I am not a saint and don't want to be one. I am really resentful that I have been placed in this position. I have read that hospice can be covered by Medicare. I wonder how that dovetails when the person also has long term care coverage. Either has to have a live-in paid caregiver, hospice, or assisted living. I and his sister have power of attorney but if a person is of sound mind you can't force them out of their house. I think I just have to pull back and not make it so easy for him. I think some of his mobility issues are self-imposed, he could move more but just sits on the couch all day and sleeps there. Sorry this is so long. Kind of funny story is that his priest came today and had not seen him in a while, he was horrified and wondered if we should call 911, I said Father, he is like this every day.

First of all, there are two things you need to put right out of your mind as in right now this minute.

1) Never allow yourself to be guilt-tripped with the 'If the situation was reversed, I'd do it for you' crap. No he wouldn't and that's mighty easy to say when there's no possibility of it ever coming to be.

2) He won't even discuss the idea of going into residential care (a "home") or have live-in caregivers. That's because you've made yourself his care slave so he doesn't have to. If you emancipate yourself and refuse to do for him, he will have no choice. His POA sister will have him placed. Either he will go willingly or unwillingly, but he'll go one way or the other.

I was an in-home caregiver for 25 years and now am in the business of it. Early on in this work I got taken advantage of plenty of times when needy clients and even their families got pushy or clingy. Let me tell you something, when you have no boundaries these people they will take blatant advantage of you.

You may have to be a bit harsh and cold towards a person and their family to get them to respect your boundaries and terms about caregiving. Do it.

Start today. It's obvious you aren't going to abandon him outright. So now there's a schedule. You make one visit a day for a set amount of time. No more. You do not take his calls after your hours (let it go to voicemail). If there's an actual emergency, call the paramedics and meet them at his house. Call the POA sister nd tell her that this is what you're doing today and she should probably come to town and stay for a bit until it gets worked out.

I learned something very valuable from experience in this line of work.

Caregiving has to be done on the caregiver's terms. Not the care recipient's.

Remember these words because they will serve you well.
Good luck.
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Reply to BurntCaregiver
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WendyElaine Aug 3, 2024
Super advice!! Yes, no one is going to step up as long as this woman has taken it on. Other solutions will be found if she steps back, and she should. A person in such need of care is like a person drowning—they will grab onto anyone nearby to save themselves. This is instinct. But we also know how that can turn out—the drowning person takes the saver down with them.

Continue to be the kind and caring neighbor—but with boundaries that are suggested and on your terms. He is lucky to have you. But he is not entitled to you. Save yourself so you can continue to be of comfort to him but do not carry all the burden. It had been my experience, caring for someone I love and do owe a duty to, that no matter how much I gave, it was not enough. That has changed, thankfully. But even in my situation with a beloved, I do not owe my whole life. Nor do you.
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Having to clean his poo would for me be the last straw. In fact, we’re I a no relative, I would avoid being sucked in by this straw.

Contact your co poa, his sister, in writing, and tell her you are resigning not just poa but any responsibility for this man who won’t accept help. It’s not fair for you to “look in” (sounds so tame) and there’s a literal s show to be cleaned up presumably by you.
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Reply to PeggySue2020
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This man paid DEARLY for long term care insurance! Resign your POA immediately and tell him to USE his LTC insurance in Assisted Living and get hospice to come in as well, paid for by Medicare. Hospice at home or in AL is a few hours a WEEK, that's all. Him telling you if the situation were reversed he wouldn't let you go into a home is nonsense! Talk is cheap. A "home", in reality, is like a lovely hotel with caregivers available as needed. Which he's already paid for, for petesake. We should all be so lucky to have Assisted Living paid for in our old age. His complaints and guilt trips are not for YOU to worry about.

Resign immediately and don't look back. Your own health and wellbeing takes precedence over his.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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Famattjr, I agree with everyone else here that you are more than justified to get yourself out of this outrageous caregiving nightmare ASAP. But, as a people pleaser myself and as a former volunteer and helpful neighbor, etc., I can totally understand how a situation can get completely out of control pretty fast. Also, as we all know, no good deed goes unpunished!

Anyway, just wanted to acknowledge your kindness and neighborliness and wish you all the best as you extricate yourself from this situation.
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Reply to SnoopyLove
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Famattjr, not sure where you researched APS but, your information is not complete.

Adult Protective Services is for any adult living in a potentially dangerous situation. Without you propping your neighbor up, he is living in a dangerous situation.

Getting out of these situations is gut wrenching. We are called to make choices that go against our own makeup and we are often guilted by those we are helping.

I would not listen to the nonsense of he would never do it to you, we don't know what we would really do until we are faced with being in the shoes of having to do or not do something.

He is using words to manipulate you, tells me he knows he is crossing lines and trying to guilt you into being his slave. So far it has worked for him but, you have the power to change this.

I would encourage you to look up F.O.G., it is fear, obligation and guilt and is used by people to get others to dance to their warped tune.

Call APS and speak with someone that can do an investigation to get your friend the professional help he needs.

You matter too!!!
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Reply to Isthisrealyreal
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No, what you need to do is NOT like "seeing someone dying in the street and just walking over them". It's like seeing someone dying in the street, then contacting the police to come, get them, and take them somewhere appropriate. What you are doing now is like kneeling next to the person dying in the street and giving amateur first aid.
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SnoopyLove Apr 13, 2024
👏👏👏
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Nobody can force you to be this man’s caregiver. You are in charge of your life, not his. Stop giving your life’s steering wheel away then complain about where you end up. Call his relatives and tell them you will no longer be involved with his care. It’s completely in your control.
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Reply to RLWG54
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Who told you that what YOU want doesn't matter?

Who told you that YOU are not entitled to a life?

Who told you that what this man wants isn't as important as what YOU want?

Who told you that YOU have to be at someone else's beck and call?

??

If the answer is YOU, (and you know it is!), then tell YOURSELF to make a plan TODAY to be out of this situation in 14 days.

If APS doesn't respond, YOU call 911. Tell them that this person is a danger to himself by not letting anyone but his slave in the door. They will arrange for SOMEONE to help, even if it's for a ride to an ER. Tell them that you are about to leave town.

Then, YOU take a vacation, leave town, and block his number.
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Beatty Apr 3, 2024
Yes yes & more yes!

The Leave Town Test.

Hey Neighbour, I'm heading to <insert> (a beach shack/mountain cabin/big city )next weekend. You'll have to arrange some OTHER help.

If a 'caregiver' or this case, a 'Neighbour who kindly looks in' cannot leave town for a weekend - the balance & has gone very wrong. A Master-Slave pattern is forming.
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Ok I think I see now.

"What people don't seem to acknowledge is that if I withdraw, there is nothing".

Famattjr, this is what you wrote. What you feel. Please re-read it several times. Then ask yourself *Is it true?*

What if you didn't show.. ?

My guess is your neighbour would;

- phone other neighbours/people he knows well
- phone his care agency manager
- wander out to the street looking for people
- sit in his home awaiting the next paid aide to arrive
- call 911 himself

So it is NOT true that if you withdraw there is nothing.
That is FALSE.
An all-or-nothing statement.

Is that falsehood holding you prisioner?

I will rephrase: "If I withdraw, OTHER solutions WILL be found".

(Even if that is you standing at the front gate refusing to come in & calling EMS instead. I know this because I have DONE just that very thing).
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Reply to Beatty
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You told him he needs to go to assisted living “ but he won’t hear of it “.

Perhaps that priest could talk sense into him.
If the priest wanted to call 911, Obviously he is in poor shape and needs more care than you can provide .

Let the priest call 911. Then when he’s at the hospital you tell them you can not provide the care he needs any longer. Let them get him placed in a facility . Tell them it is an “ unsafe discharge “. Do not pick him up and bring him home no matter what the hospital or your friend says .

I read your replies . You said you want to wind this up responsibly . Calling 911 so he can get the care he needs is responsible . If he refuses to get in the ambulance , that’s on him .

If this man is competent ( no dementia ) ,
you are not stuck . You can tell him you can not do this anymore and walk away and give up POA if he is not cooperative . Let his family deal with this or APS,

The local County Area of Aging could also be called to the home to assess and get this man the care he needs. Tell them he has long term care insurance and he is refusing to go to assisted living as suggested by his doctor and that his needs are growing and you can not provide what he needs.
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Reply to waytomisery
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Beatty Apr 3, 2024
Good question.. why didn't the Priest call 911? Did he change his mind? Or was he talked out of it?

Famattajr, really look at your motives regarding that day.

There was a golden opportunity to seek help from others yet you declined it. Why?

Fear? Misplaced guilt or shame? Your neighbour said no?

Your neighbour trusts you.. ok.

Who do YOU trust to help? If not a Priest or Paramedics.. Who??
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