Sunday, June 17, 2012

Craigslist to the Rescue - Moving, Giving Away, Finding People to Help Mom

In the process of moving my mom and downsizing her belongings, we have placed a bevy of ads on Craigslist. (Why not Freecycle? I adore the groups that let you offer things for free and post free things wanted. But their requirements to arrange a time / place with the taker at a certain time or arrange for pickup -- and get dinged if your item is gone for that reason -- with sometimes people flaking, is just too much work when you're in a hurry at least in most of my experience.)

To offset the moving costs and help us clear the apartment out we placed the following ads. Perhaps you might find them handy as a checklist!
  • Many free and for sale ads - While it may seem scary to have strangers coming to your house, for the most part if you take care to have a quick phone chat, you will most likely end up with good folk. The people you might find most repellant are actually resellers who may descend on your parent's place like a hawk spotting a field mouse -- with great intention, velocity, and without regard to anyone's feelings.

    Note on selling books and records: If you have valuable items, selling direct online may be a better bet. The stores often pay 40% or less than they will sell them for. If you check Craigslist you will also see people selling books for other people to sell online. That's a lot of middle men taking a bite out of your potential profits. There are iPhone apps from online stores like Half.com that make it easy to scan and upload books for sale.
  • Ads for local haulers or laborers to load our moving truck - The other option people suggested was picking up day laborers at Home Depot. Those stores are few and far between in parts of Los Angeles so screening people who responded on Craigslist was easier and more certain.

    We weren't using a moving company and found renting a truck gave us the time and space flexibility we needed. Unfortunately the street was too narrow for the Pod company's equipment to fit to load and unload the Pod or we would have gone that way.

    Pods let you load up a huge mobile storage unit basically then plop it down to store and pick it up when you're ready to move without loading and unloading.. (Important to check!!)
  • Ads for ride share companions and people needing things moved to where we were moving

    We drove several loads and we were able to offset our  cost a couple of times by moving boxes and various large items which would have cost the other person a lot of money had they used a regular mover. It was a good deal for us too.
  • Apartment swap ads and wanted - You may not think about it but if might be able to have someone else live in the space your parent would have been moving to, could you swap with someone who wants to move to your area and allow your parent to live in their space -- at least for a while? It could be a great win win for everyone, worth considering.
I'll add to the list of ads -- but for now I am off for the final move! Yes the final final move.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

The Big Last Day Tackling Moving My Working Elderly Mom - No Decisions Made

The answer: With great difficulty.

Today is the big day, the last day -- and fourth time -- we will have a moving truck to pack up loads and loads of papers, lingering furniture, and maybe 100 or 200 boxes of books. How someone amasses such things is a mystery. I may end up building a fort with the book boxes.

The hard part is there are many valuable books so we need to spend our time and energy (really all you have in life) to pick through. Then either dedicate time to selling them online, finding somewhere to put them, or hiring someone to sell them.

Not to mention, the energy, money and time to transport the books to a safe place for storage (oh, more money).

Back to the topic at hand.

Moving a Parent From the Community, From Work Connections, From Life...sometimes it is a must do and it is never easy.

Usually the older we get, the more inflexible and set in our ways we become. It seems like a dirty topic in the media no one talks about. Many seniors have no money. Many parents would be out on the street if their kids didn't take care of them.

That's our situation. All the money spent on things and income from still working only a hope and a prayer, rarely coming to fruition.

Our Relocation Decision Path

  • Move in with me and become my dependent for a tax break. The IRS rules are actually more flexible than I realized. (If you are taking care of a parent--  especially if they are in assisted living which can totally overtakes the cost of college -- be sure to explore making them your dependent if you can save much more than any income they may be making over $3,500 such as due to stock returns.)

    In an ideal world your parent will find it a fun challenge to help you achieve the requirements to make them a tax deduction. In my mom's case. the pride and independence of working is more important to her than helping me....despite that I clearly have been paying more than half of her expenses.

    Some of the rules include:
  • Now that all the crap has been dumped on me, rent a tiny room in her home town. Being able to stay in the town or city they are familiar with -- for senility purposes -- is even more preferable than moving somewhere else in comfort, if your elderly parent wants to keep working. BUT then she would need someone to occasionally help her.
  • Move in with another sibling. Therein lies the "still working" problem as my siblings live out of state and my mom's license 
I guess those are the choices. Choices are hard but it's good to have choices.

In one week I will know the answer.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

How to Downsize Your Parent's 50 Years of Belongings

The answer? With great difficulty.

Downsizing is easier when the stuff that is taking up a lot of space is not valuable or precious. Sure in the eyes of the family and your parents, any furniture, knick knacks, Christmas ornaments and egg beaters you've seen day in and day out are the equivalent of priceless heirlooms.

In a 6 week process in which we moved a ton (sometimes known as a shitload) of my parents' belongings to my house, we have learned a few things I'd like to share for other kids faced with relocating their parents ... especially if you are funding the move and your elderly parents don't have money.

You have a few options for downsizing:

Option 1) In a hurry? Don't downsize. Move it all then decide later.

The pros: You won't inadvertently give away anything that really is precious to the family.

You spend less time culling through everything now. There are downsizing consultants who charge a lot, maybe $65 per hour or more (sometimes called movers !). If your parent is a hoarder he or she will invariably take an hour per item. Seriously. That money can add up
The definition of money down the drain? Spending $65 per hour to get RID of stuff. See the irony?
Spending money to move it and waiting for that "inevitable" day is probably more cost effective if you have storage space.

Weigh the costs of:

  • Moving
  • Storing
  • Paying someone to help sort

Option 2) Take an aggressive approach to throwing stuff out and giving things away.

The con: Your mom or dad might go downright crazy with grief and anger. Do you want your parent's mind to fail or get worse over a few things?

I realize dealing with rooms and rooms of crap can be completey overwhelming. We've just gone through the process of unveiling boxes and boxes and piles and piles of clothes, papers, etc. Given the cost of elder care and assisted living, the cost of maintaining our mother's sanity and dignity seemed far less than the cost of storing the things she loves. Sure it's painful and embarrassing but a low cost to pay.

More thoughts to come later. The drama continues...
What are you going through?