Dear Auntie Linda, My mother is eighty-five years old. She lives very close to me. Her mind is sharp, but she is a hoarder, smokes, and wastes money on Bingo. She can barely make it on her Social Security Check and my father’s pension. I feel bad for the neighbors. They know I keep trying to help her clean her house up, but she won’t let me. She gets meals from meals on wheels and the containers stack up if I don’t go in and get them out. I know she would have rats otherwise. I have also tried get her quit smoking and get wasting money on Bingo. Even when she wins, she gives it right back the next week. She just gets mad at me. I would love to be able to enjoy a cup of coffee or a meal at Mother’s table like I used to. Also, don’t be so sure her mind is so sharp. Sounds like she’s slipping. Trying to help
Dear Trying. Though it is difficult to put up with, your mother is eighty-five and not going to change her habits. Unless her hoarding is putting her life in danger, there is nothing you can do. If it flows over to the outside of the house, the neighbors will probably report it and the city will get involved. Don’t even bother with the smoking and Bingo. How hard this must be for you. Auntie Linda
Dear Auntie Linda, I am fifty-six years old. I am a college graduate, but foolishly never pursued a career after my marriage. I worked part-time when we first married, but my husband could support us, so I looked for a while, then got comfortable not working. My husband lost his job in his early fifties. We went through his retirement pretty quickly. Now he is sixty-six, on dialysis, has a terminal brain tumor, and is going into a nursing home next week. He is only expected to live for weeks. I don’t know what I will do. It has been downhill financially for us for years. Our house is decrepit. We have no income except for his social security which will go with him when he goes to the nursing home. Our house will be seized for taxes after January 1. I have no income, no family, and soon will soon have no home. I don’t even have decent clothes to look for a job. Where do I turn? Terrified
Dear Terrified, This is indeed an awful situation. You do some skills. This is a well-organized letter. Though your degree may not be recent or in a field that will get you a job, it does show you can learn. If you don’t have clothes, get to Salvation Army, a local church, or women’s shelter to discuss your dilemma. Lots of places help with job placement and help people get a leg up looking for a job. Your local job service can help with placement. If needed, you might find a live-in job such as an apartment manager, nanny, care-giver, or home-maker. A live-in nanny who would home-school and travel with a family would be an excellent job. Good luck. Auntie Linda

I could relate to all the above. Large, extended family! Excellent writing!
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Think we all have this, don’t we.
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😊
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Lol, my mom 86 is totally out there! We buy her things, she gets rid of them for she hates to keeps things. She forgets we buy them and is still waiting for them!
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That’s tough. They are gone, but they aren’t
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