ChatterBank5 mins ago
Whats The Point In Buying And Owning A Property?
Just recently lost My dad. He worked hard all his life and passed away at 91.
But worked hard to buy the family home. Poor Mum is faced with having to leave the family home as she needs someone with her 24/7 something we are too stretched to provide, as we all got jobs etc ourselves.
So this will mean the family home will have to be sold to pay the care home for my Mum to move into.
The issue from my point of view, is what was the point of owning a home, for it all to be gone towards a care home?
I'm pretty sure when Dad was younger he would have wanted to pass it onto me or sister to keep it in the family, but sadly now that won't happen.
The way the system is set up is all wrong because if we knew then what we know now I would have had a mortgage and bought my home, and I'm pretty sure Dad wouldn't have either.
If you rent a property theres less stress because if something needs fixing you contact the landlord. But I realise there are risks from renting too, for example the landlord might sell, and we could be terfed out.
But what really is the point of owning a property, something that took a lifetime to purchase, only for it to be taken off you in a situation like we are faced with now?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by renegadefm. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Having live in carers would cost an arm and a leg Barry. The best that a Council would supply is a 4x a day carer, and there would be no cover overnight. Not ideal if she has poor mobility and needs to use the loo during the night. In addition carers may not be able to provide the time slots that suits the persons normal routines, plus carers, who are in great short supply, may not be able to provide much continuity of personel. We had a hell of a time with my MIL, who had dementia, in getting a satisfactory care package and not for the want of trying.
in addition not everyone gets on well enough with their parents or parents in law for them to want the relative to move in with them
The OP makes a valid point that you work hard buy a house provide for yourself then the state takes it for care costs. Do burger all and ponce of the state your entire life and get it all buck shee at the end. Valid point 100% agree with that assesment. However to conflate that with not bothering to own a house is to take one aspect in isolation and put that out as the most important thing, it is not. I would hate to be at the whim of a landlord paying high rent for all my life and own nothing at the end of it. I told my kids, if they want the house they'll have to look after me in it, end of!
Boto,
I wouldn't expect everyone to pay towards Mums care home fees.
If the care homes didn't cost so much it wouldn't be so bad, but how do they justify 2 or 3 thousand pounds a month? A five star hotel wouldn't be that expensive.
I dont understand how a care home is so expensive to run because the staff there don't get particularly good wages.
Can you imagine if all the elderly patients paid 2 thousand a month, and there is 30 odd patients, thats 60 thousand a month the establishment is wracking in. That to me is astonishing.
My forty eight year old daughter has rented her house for twenty five years. She's just been informed the landlady is selling up. Out on her ear by March. She's paid for the house theee times over, and has nothing to show for it. Renting can be hazardous and insecure. She's up shut creek, and never once missed a rental payment.
david small,
So sorry to hear this, and yes that is one of the horrors of renting.
But on the flip side, theres another horror of losing the family home of over 55 years to the state, just because we can't always be there for my vunerable 90 year old Mum.
Like I said in an earlier post, I'm not interested in the inheritance, I just wanted the house to stay with family somehow.
How can you measure the hard work gone into buying the house, for it to be dissolved into Mums future at a care home. Plus theres no guarantees her quality of life will be a good one there.
She could be as someone else mentioned be sat next to someone with it all paid for by the state, something the tax payer like me is paying for.
But there is just something really awful about losing the family home.
When you think of all the memories in that house, its really painful having to let it go.
Imagine over 50 Christmas's spent there apart from everything else.
barry1010,
But Mum has never been alone until 4 weeks ago when Dad died.
Shes got slight dementia, but only slight, she just takes longer to compute everything, but shes no fool.
But she hates being left alone, so we have had to take her everywhere we go, school runs, shopping etc.
But we all have full time jobs aswell, so its a miracle we have coped as we have the past 4 weeks, but this can't continue, it simply can't.
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