Since my mom broke her hip and is in assisted living my dad wants to pare down the house since she is an organized hoarder and is very difficult to deal with when getting rid of anything. Their safe is on the floor and hard for them to access so I got them a portable one that can be put in a drawer or storage chest. My dad gave me a bagful of paperwork to be shredded which I took home since it was easier for me. Knowing mom’s history of hiding things I went through everything to make sure I wasn’t throwing away anything important. Bad idea. I came across various paperwork that proved my sister’s and my suspicions. Over time they have given my brother close to 200,000 with instructions not to “ tell the girls.” We never imagined it totaled that large amount of money. We are crushed. In addition, my sister and I have been helping them so they can stay in their home. My brother does NOTHING.....other than to load up his trucks with things that he wants. My parents estate is not huge, but comfortable. However, it will only last a couple years should long term care become necessary. They are 89 and 90. Ironically I have POA.
Question is should we approach them or let it be? Damage has been done but it truly hurts to know one child is so favored. He had a good job and his wife worked, just had a bad habit of living above his means. Yet me and my sister will be the caregivers moving forward. I’m not sure if I will be able to put this aside and pretend as if nothing happened. Has anyone else experienced favoritism and how did you deal with it?
Mom was pissed because at the time she had an opportunity to buy a home she had been renting when I was still in school and living at home and they wouldn't help. I love mom with all my heart but she hadn't spoken to grandma in about ten years after an affair was found out and would only talk to my grandpa. The grandparents had worked things out and Grandpa had begged her to forgive grandma. She was stubborn and wouldn't. So I didn't get to have the Christmas dinner with my grandparents etc. Which she would just brush off. I had to go around her and my aunt's back to see them. My uncle who is the youngest had had several failed rehabs but had come to a point that he was homeless and hustling for his drugs. He had even stole from his parents on several occasions. The sisters knew about this. None of them would ever think about helping him because they said he had been given more opportunities than they got growing up.
Its not a happy ending. Uncle went to rehab and was clean and working for a while but relapsed shortly after and whithin a year he over dosed and died.
The sisters were sad but their underlying attitude was he got what he got because he was a bad person. They never talked about him after that until they found out just how much money he had "borrowed".
He was my favorite uncle when I was growing up. I knew he had problems but he was kind and genuine. He just couldn't beat his addictions. The fact that my grandparents had to sneak around to help him broke my heart. When mom and her sisters through such a fit about it pissed me off.
Im not saying this is anywhere close to your situation but some of the other posters may have had something similar.
I just tried to point out that some of us have experienced it from the other side.
I’m so sorry to hear about your uncle...I had a favorite uncle myself growing up and alcohol was his demise. My Nana was devastated .....yet everyone else trashed him. I only saw him as a good man and loved him dearly. Families......joined by love and separated by heartache.
My parents were 70 at the time....my brother was 35.
Best to you, op. I hope you stay with us. I periodically have to take a break.
My three sisters and I had no idea what was going on. If we had known, we might have been able to intervene by having Dad declared incompetent and have a conservator appointed to handle parents' finances. Dad died at age 72 and left nothing to care for my disabled mother. She has lived 30 years since his death. My older sister took over her care. Mom had just Social Security and a small teacher's pension to pay for elder daycare (my sister was employed) and the expenses associated with the care of a severely disabled senior.
My brother has not visited Mom even once since Dad's death. He calls my sister often asking for a "cash advance" on his future inheritance. He does not accept that all of my parents' money is gone and there is no inheritance. He accuses my sister of squandering their money when, in reality, my sister has spent all her own retirement fund caring for Mom.
Mom has been in a nursing home the past two years with Medicaid and Medicare footing the bill. She is 94 and we are on death vigil. My brother is waiting at a distance for his inheritance. He believes Dad left everything to him, the only son. Imagine his disappointment when he realizes there isn't a single penny for him to inherit.
You are obviously a very strong person.....and have gone above and beyond. Hopefully, soon you will find the peace you so well deserve.
I don’t know how all of this will resolve itself but you have shown that you have intelligence and very responsible. I have faith in you. You are the voice of reason. You know that.
Nothing separates people more often than "money matters" so remember it's "family that matters" and move on. You'll be glad you did years to come.
You need to open a new acct. with your parents, and have your name on checks (and keep the checkbook.) One or both can watch you pay, check your work, whatever it takes, but as POA you have to get started.
People that do the things he has done, don't care about anyone but themselves and their latest flavor of the month.
Years of deceit and gaining trust. Never surprises me.
Not my story but belongs to a friend, who is still not at peace with it. She’s youngest of 5 and the second oldest, Stevie, was beyond the mom’s favorite. Always lent $ for idiot business ventures, bought trucks, paid his kids summer camps, his dogs vet bills, etc. The others got a $20 and handwritten recipe card from mom for Xmas & birthdays. Over time he probably got 150k out of the folks and this on a single salary blue collar job as her parents were frugal. Oldest sister needed bone marrow transplant so they did a HLA on all the kids cause with 5 odds are 1 or maybe 2 will be a match. Yeah, no HLA possibilities for Stevie as he was a half sibling.
Yes, you should approach them. What's up with the tall lie? Wow.
Unreal, isn’t it? If that story doesn’t make one scratch their head, I don’t know what will!
He needs to be in prison! Horrible.
Now I have POA, and Mother lives with me and my family, but I collaborate with younger brother on big decisions. I don't want him to be surprised about her finances if something happens to me.
She lives alone in a house across the street from me & I don't believe she's safe since she can't walk good & uses a walker. If there's ever a fire she would not be able to get out of her house alone. OB also had her change POA removing me.
There is no use feeling "hurt" or "angry" over what your parents did in the past or whether brother "deserved" any of this. It was their money and their decision to do what they did, including keeping it a "secret" from you and your sister.
You need to focus more on going forward (keeping the 5 yr look-back in mind) to circumvent bleeding of their assets. The only reason I can think of to bring any of this topic up with your parents is to discuss what would happen if there is ever a need for Medicaid (focus on any current money being paid out, not the older stuff.) Even if they have a nice little nest egg, and (hopefully) own their home mortgage free (so sale/assets could be used to cover costs), depending on how long they might need to live in any kind of AL or bring in-home services in, those assets could be depleted in their lifetime. Depending on the area you live in, that could happen sooner rather than later! They DO need to understand that their finances need to be reviewed and managed wisely, and that no more funds should be provided to your brother, either directly or indirectly (aka his children/former wife.)
I would also be concerned about your brother because of your statement: "My brother and I talk about once a week....his main concern is that I have POA." Clearly he is concerned about having any supply cut off. He just *might* attempt an end-run and have that changed, so BEWARE! You did mention that your mother has mid-stage dementia? If that is true, do you have any documentation for that? If so, both your POAs could take effect for her AND you could likely get rep payee for her SS, if she has SS income (although if dad is still competent, he *might* override - get him in your camp!) Then if you talk with dad and can convince him to authorize you to be POA now for him as well, you have a chance of taking over the finances. Work with the attorney who set everything up and/or an EC atty to review all documents and update any as needed. Attorney fees can be taken from THEIR assets, not yours. If a new EC attorney is used, generally you can get an initial consult (~1 hr) free of charge - just have all questions and concerns drawn up to cover as much as possible in that time!
As for compensation for assisting them, do be wise if you decide to do this and have a legit document (care contract) drawn up/notarized that clearly specifies what the services and payments will be. This will also be needed for Medicaid. If not, they will consider any payments you and your sister receive as "gifts" as well.
As for POA (both), these *ONLY* take effect if the party/parties are deemed incompetent OR they authorize it. You cannot just take over finances or deem that they should move to AL. Despite having dementia and it no longer being safe for our mother to remain living in her condo alone, our Elder Care attorney told us we cannot just "drag her out of the house." Obviously that was not the plan, but she was adamant that she was fine, independent, yadda yadda and refused to consider moving ANYWHERE, and despite AL being in her "plan", she was dead set against the idea when it needed to be done. EC attorney suggested guardianship, but facility would not accept "committals." In the end, we had to come up with a ruse to get her to go (YB's plan was used - I stayed out of that!)
So, start with let the past be the past. It can't be changed. Work with your parents (start with dad while mom is still out of the picture) now and get them to either understand the money drain has to stop and/or allow you to take over the finances. Get as much documentation or enlist financial planner or EC atty to explain Medicaid and the penalties of "gifting". Work with EC attorney to review/update documents as needed. Show how much AL costs! If mom can be deemed competent, have any/all assets set up in a trust (irrevocable if possible) to protect them.
Dealing with the emotional aspects...it's tough and stirs resentment. I don't know an easy answer to it aside from realizing you can't change it and will make yourself potentially sick if you don't accept what has happened. Good luck.
Jail would be perfect from all you have said, 3 hots and a cot at some one else's expense, no responsibility, no bills, just sit around and continue to be a deadbeat. Sounds like a match made in heaven.
Time to put a stop to your parents paying for their sons deadbeat behavior and get that exSIL to go after the responsible party.
Ding-a-ling hear them ring, not bells, shackles that your brother will be wearing when he goes to court for unpaid child support!
My story is somewhat complicated. The will stated that my brother was to receive my dad's share of the family business (worth millions) and I got the house. Well the business started going down and the real estate started going up. So they downsized from this house to use the funds to help the business. Eventually my parents moved in with my family and had no house because it went into the business. Then I found out after I had been caring for them for years, that they did indeed give my brother what was left of the business and since there was no house, I got nothing.
Do what do I do now? My brother walked away with a small fortune and I got zero.
I had to weigh things and went through a myriad of feelings of anger, jealousy, hurts and abandonment. But I had to look at my life compared to my brother and that's where I took solace.
I started to count my blessings instead of focusing on the unfairness. That took years, but it eventually was settled in my heart. I am grateful for the life I have.
There's so much back story on what motivated my dad to do this and it eventually unfolded over the years. My brother was threatening him and before my dad died, he showed me the emails. It turns out my brother was unstable due to heavy drug use....someone who threw his dream life away, playing golf every weekend in Carmel, driving luxury cars, living in a sprawling ocean view home, kids in private school....to losing it all to drug addiction (both he and his wife) and doing time for dealing.
He eventually took his own life.
After his death. I got a call from my nephew. He told me that his dad (my brother) said that there was a life insurance policy for $650k on my dad which was to go to my brother and his family. I guess my brother coerced my dad into this. I found out that as dad approached 80, he could not keep up with the payments and let it go, but didn't tell my brother. I told my nephew that I didn't know of any policy and that there was no more money coming from grandpa....sorry.
Its been 10 years since his death and my dad died a year after my brother. I care for my mom now. I have the most amazing husband, children and grandchildren. Money is ebb and flow. We struggle financially, but we are content and I would not trade that for a million dollars.
I am rejoicing that you received true riches in this world.
Thank you for sharing your story, it helps to know that money can lead to total destruction.
I think that you should let your parents know that you know their secret. Once the secret is out, hopefully that will help stop them from giving him any more money.
All of us have stories. I know an old woman whose favorite line is, “Have to do what Jesus says, go after the lost sheep.” They are lost because she never taught them how to be independent! Some parents set an example of what not to do. I am fully aware that all parents make mistakes. But some never learn from them. She is a huge gambler at casinos. Her sons are too. Her deceased husband took out a mortgage on their home to gamble. That’s just crazy! She came into lots of money, husband in Vietnam war and she got a settlement for over a million dollars She gambled over half of it away. She’s going to spend it all. So stupid. She won’t buy a cup of coffee because it’s too expensive but she will drop $1000.00 in five minutes gambling!
I cringe when I hear her misinterpretation of the Bible. Once I told her that Jesus does not want us to be a doormat. She got very mad. Oh well.
She has sons and a daughter. She lives in the upstairs part of her daughter’s house. She is lucky, can still go up and down stairs. She buys her son new trucks, fixes things in their homes, new roof and so forth. The daughter never asks for a dime. That’s how I am. I go without because I would rather handle my own finances, plus I could not handle my mom laying a guilt trip on me.
You were responsible and paid it back. Good for you. You are the type of person who paid it back as much for you as your parents. Some people don’t have the attitude that you have.