Thursday, October 31, 2019

Thinking about a friend's problems


Please note: I have edited a lot of the original information from this post, in order to respect the privacy of these individuals as much as I can.  However, the underlying problems are common to many families, as my brother's family is similar to the one discussed here.

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A while back, I participated in a three way phone call between me, JS, and her financial advisor.  If you could have seen JS over the past few days, she's been about a hair's breadth away from her own nervous breakdown.  And this is all because of a daughter who needs the help that her mother can no longer give.

First, some background:
  • JS - A woman who turns 65 in a few weeks.  She is a widow of 12 years, has 2 adult children, lives in Connecticut, and has just taken a job in Brooklyn as a school principal. The school of which she's the principal has been mismanaged for years, and the board of directors wants her to clean the place up.
  • ES - JS's daughter.  She is 20, has done poorly in the few college courses she has taken, and has been an albatross around her mom's neck.  She throws temper tantrums whenever her mom tries to steer her towards taking on responsibility. 
  • FA - The financial advisor.  She's a CFA, and seeing her in action, I feel that she's giving JS good advice that JS is hesitant to act on.
JS barely has enough resources to retire, and she has been worrying about what will happen to her daughter if she pulls the ripcord and moves to Florida to retire.  Her daughter shows no signs of taking on any responsibility, avoids doing so after making commitments to do so, and will throw temper tantrums if one attempts to hold her accountable for her lack of success.

A therapist told JS that the best thing she could do for her daughter would be to "divorce" her.  She needed to hear this from more than one person she could trust. What can be done for ES when her mom moves to Florida?  What services are available to ES?  What remaining responsibilities does JS have, now that ES is legally an adult?  These are questions that must be addressed, and JS will need help to do so.

FA has figured out a way to extract enough money from JS's resources to allow her to enjoy retirement in Florida.  She also suggested that JS give ES an allowance to help bridge a gap between what ES may earn in a minimum wage job and what she'll need to pay her basic bills.  Loans may be taken from life insurance policies, money taken from annuities, and Social Security collected from her late husband's benefits.  FA is putting JS's needs first, over those of ES.  And this is the right thing to do.

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It will be a rocky path for JS and her family.  A mother's most important duty to her daughter is to see that her daughter can function without help from mom.  And if this means that the daughter is forever alienated from her mother, so be it.  Sadly, there is a dysfunctional codependency between mother and daughter.

I think that the daughter must be forced to grow up.  Does one keep enabling her as some people would suggest?  Or does one use "tough love" as her therapist and financial advisor would suggest?  I'd choose the latter and hope I'm right....


2 comments:

Pat Scales said...

The term "tough love" is accurate and often the only way to move things forward. Birds push their offspring out of the nest. they either learn to fly or else. Through out the animal kingdom the offspring have to learn to fend for themselves.
It is nice to have a safety net but nicer still to never have to use it.

Marian said...

Pat -

There's even more that I don't mention in this blog post, such as the relationship of JS with her son, and how little tools her kids have to challenge the world ahead of them. Although her son is much better prepared to challenge the world, he also has several tools missing from his adult toolbox. At least, he will learn from misfortune if he is lucky.

Recently, JS has been asking me to come with her to see a psychic in Massachusetts. When I find that I have an open weekend day (a rarity until recently), all of a sudden, she starts having excuses, such as having stomach problems. I think she wants to talk about her problems, but is afraid that I will tell her the truth. She doesn't want to hear me say that she has to do a two stage move to Florida. First, she has to move closer to work, so that she and daughter can live closer to work. (In the daughter's case, this must be in a place where she can find work and get there via mass transit.) Stage two would have the mother moving to Florida, leaving the daughter in New York with a job and the responsibility of fending for herself.

M

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