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1. Option: Mom is in skilled nursing with dementia. You don't ask people in the situation for money and you don't make them worry about you or ask them to take care of you when they now NEED care. Pure and simple. Done. Why are you even considering that it might be OK - because your mom, with dementia, and your entitled, sponging sister insist they should be able to keep doing it? Above all, remember mom is where she is because of dementia and her placement of guilt and blame is not going to be any more sensible than it ever was - it is going to be even less.

2. All right, Maybe there is some reason the requests are not just totally out of line. I can't think of what it is, but you have written to us in the form of a question suggesting that maybe there is some doubt in your mind. Write out your budgets. Document what is spent on Mom's needs if you haven't. Figure out how much you could actually give, and maybe give it non-contingently on begging, OR - maybe you really need to put it into an emergency fund instead in case somethng more serious comes up. Find out how much Mom can actually afford to give away and let her have that pleasure - if it is 35 dollars a month 10 to charity 25 to sis, fine; if it is realistically a litlte more, fine; bearing in mind as already pointed out , that large amounts given away can disqualify someone for Medicaid if they need it. NORMALLY, a person gives their SSI check to the care facility and is allowed a small personal allowance. But, maybe there is something more going on.

$200 for a pet deposit if it was really just one time might not be too much - but if it is $200 now then pay my water bill or I'll be evicted then pay may cell phone bill or I won't be able to call you, uh-uh. Get an elder mediator involved to help you play bad cop. Enlist help from the facility to block requests for money. Make sure you and not mom or sis have all the checkbooks and credit card numbers.

If all that fails, if sister still just irresponsibly keeps begging and imposing on Mom and you, tell her she quits asking for $$ or you will report her to APS for abuse of a vulnerable adult who can't say no to her, or you will get a restraining order. Not sure if either of those things are practical, but if the sponging has to stop before someone is irreparably harmed, then it has to stop.

Sorry you are faced with this. I am in a similar spot with my daughter who has almost no income because she and her beau are volunteer firefighters and have medical problems. I pay her medical insurance until she can get PPACA coverage, and we put some gas in their tanks and donate a little to the fire company. I'm waiting and praying for the drama machine to run down. LOL. I had to pull the plug on some inappropriate use of my credit cards and that was painful but I did it. I have said no to a lot of things, and yes to others. We take them out to eat with us once a week and they can bring a friend or two but not the whole fire company. Not easy - as they say nowadays, "I feel ya."
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BTW, some kids have the idea that their parents are secretly sitting on millions. My alcoholic brother had this idea. It wasn't true. My parents were secretly sitting on thousands.
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It reminds me of my alcoholic brother who bled my parents all of his life until his death. My mother could never tell him no. Some years she gave him over $10K. We would tell her to stop, but she would say, "He's my son." There was nothing anyone could do to stop her. Sad to say that the family was relieved when he died. No one knew what to do with him. I hope it doesn't get to that point with your sister.

The things that really stood out to me is that she is living in one of the most expensive states in the nation, though he is unemployed. She receives disability, but still has pets. It sounds like she is living far beyond her means and expects others to supplement her.

Macular degeneration can be a serious handicap, but she is receiving assistance and needs to adapt her life to it. I worried about what would happen to your mother if she needed to apply for Medicaid. All that money given to your sister would be viewed as a gift and could disqualify her for receiving help for a while. You need to talk to your sister about this. Maybe she'll also start considering your mother and look for ways she can live within her means.
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She will never stop asking until you stop giving it to her! Believe me, I have seen this go on and on in my husband's family! It wasn't until his Mom passed away, and his Dad came to live with us (11+ years now), that his (then) 50+ sister and brother quit asking for money from the Old Man. My husband out right told them both to quit, and now they would have to go through us, to get to him, as the Old Man won't answer the phone, and they both live out of state and haven't even been to see him in over 11 years! They will even still try now and then, but we have "trained his Dad to say No, as the money that he does have, needs to last him the rest of his life. Its an awful position to be in!
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Don't let her manipulate you any more. She's creating a wedge between you and your mother, which I'm sure is her exact intention, and she's using your mother to guilt you into helping her.

This needs to stop or you're going to be subordinate to her needs for the rest of her life. Unless she has physical problems and can't work, she needs to grow up and be responsible for herself.

Be aware though that she'll attempt to further alienate and manipulate your mother in order to get to you. Give some thought to how you want to prepare and protect your mother, but let your sister grow up at last and be responsible for herself.
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