I left my job, my girlfriend, my friends, basically my entire life to come take care of my mother, I was a CNA so it only made sense i guess that I would be the one who cared for my mom. Well my sister refuses to help physically or financially with my mom. I have been doing it for 3 years now, ive asked my sister to help-, told her its her turn to ttake care of mom, even begged her to help over the last couple years, but she always says the same thing "ill see what i can do" and then i dont hear back from her again until next time i ask again a few months later.. I have not been working for 3 years, I am broke now, my cna license is expired now, and I want to know if i have any legal right to go after my sister for some compensation of caring for our mother. She doesnt seem to understand the sacrifice i made for our mother, she would i think if it had been her to take care of mom and she had had to leave her job// do i have any legal options to collect from my sister?
We hear a lot about how we will be rewarded for caregiving -- like good karma or something. But many caregivers wind up on the other side with no job, no money, and no retirement savings. The sad truth is that when we are caring for our parents, many people see us as mooching off of them. In fact, the parents can even see it that way themselves! If we were caring for someone else 24/7, we would get room and board and probably around $3K a month. But when we do it for parents, we usually get zip. Our clothes and skills get old -- we get old. Our siblings can enjoy the benefits of our staying with the parents. It means it is something they don't have to worry about. They tend not to appreciate that there are any sacrifices being made.
The healthiest thing we can do is take care of ourselves and don't worry about siblings and what they think. They certainly aren't worried about us. Why should we worry about them? I like Macada's advice. It makes sense to me. You are your own person again now.
This is a lesson to others to contact an attorney early on if you intend to care for your loved one so that proper care responsibilities and compensation considerations are taken into account as early in process as possible.
I'm main caregiver for my mom. I don't caregiver in the sense of living and providing for my mom, but I'm the only one who has maintained any contact whatsoever for the last couple years. Estate is divided. I keep good receipts and record keeping for any days off, travel expenses, hotel, etc i encounter in trying to help mom. I plan on seeing this is deducted from proceeds.
It is sad you have sacrificed so much, hopefully you have peace from that. You have lost both your mom and sister so it's a lot of grief, I hope you seek counseling or at least support group to get thru these feelings.
See All Answers