My mom prepaid for her to be in the Mausoleum w/my sister when she passed in 1975. My mom is currently terminal & when I bring up the issue about what the cost will be be when it’s her time to go in w/my sister she says “don’t worry it’s all taken care of”. But IT’S Not. I called the cemetery and asked if there are going to be any fees to bury my mom’s ashes (she wants to be cremated I know that) in w/my sister. The man said he would look it up & found that it will cost between $3700-$4000 to do it. Money which I do NOT HAVE. My mother has no savings, no life insurance. All she has is about $200 in her checking account after her bills are paid. She does have a reverse mortgage where she could ask for money there, but she gets mad at me when I bring the subject up. I don’t want to upset her, but I’m angry at her because she would die & leave me w/the extreme stress of not having any money to do anything w/her body. How can I approach her about this & what should I say?
All your Mom did was buy a joining spot in the Mausoleum, nothing else. Just be blunt, tell her she cannot be placed with your sister because there isn't enough money to pay for what is needed. That should get her attention.
Ask Mom if she has a pre-paid plan with the funeral home. If no, then use a theraputic fib saying you would need to sell the house in order to place her in her final spot.
Once you got Mom's attention again, tell her there is a cost for cremation by a funeral home. And there is a cost for the cemetery to open up the Mausoleum drawer and to close it. The cost of $3,700-$4,000 sounds extremely steep, I bet the cost included the cremation.
What type of Reverse Mortgage does your Mom have? It is a line-of-credit where she can get a certain amount needed, or is the loan a monthly amount each month? If Mom can get the money, have her do a pre-paid funeral plan. And double check with the cemetery as to the cost to open/close the Mausoleum drawer.
Coy's cremains are in a box in a green velvet bag, sitting on the back of a book shelf. I'm simply not sentimental about them. Coy's essence left his body shortly after he stopped breathing. None of our children have asked for them.
Mother's ashes were mixed with Dad's by the funeral home director. Each of the 7 kids chose a miniature urn. He put a tablespoon of ashes in each. My oldest brother scattered the remaining ashes on the farm where my mother grew up, and that my father loved. Everyone was satisfied. (And Mother would have loved the celebration of her life we held in a lovely park.)
Obviously this is a very, very personal decision. I'm not trying to talk you into what we did! Not at all. But I am pointing out that if it is absolutely necessary there are less costly ways of handling this. But none of them are free.
Do you suppose that Mother may have made prepaid plans at a funeral home? Which one will you be using? Can you double check with them? Or did she perhaps join a cremation society? When my mother experienced dementia all these kinds of details left her completely. The only way we knew what was going on was that we were part of making the plans, and paying for it was her spend-down expense.
I am really sorry you are dealing with this frustration right now.
I’m sure it’s a stressful time for the both of you.
Is your mom now on hospice? Do you have her DPOA? Is mom competent to make her own decisions?
I suggest you ask for a quote in writing from the funeral home (to discuss with mom or not) so you know exactly what the fees are and what is covered. Ask him or her to go over Sisters paperwork so you can compare costs and services. If your source says they don’t have that authority ask to see someone who does. There shouldn’t be a problem. You’ll be happy to come back if they need time to get the records etc. Perhaps your mom has a copy.
There are probably less expensive places to have the cremation so ask for a quote for only opening and closing and no cremation. Ask for that so that they don’t later say it was a “package” price for having them do all the services. There is a high turnover of personnel in many funeral homes and counselors are in all stages of training so getting your quote in writing would probably require a managers oversight.
The book “ Being Mortal: Medication and What Really Matters” by Atul Gawande might help you better understand your moms mindset.
The book contains good questions to help her focus on what’s important to her and help you support her in those decisions.
Come back and let us know how things are going.
I did not have my husband embalmed and the casket was open for a private viewing for family. As I recall we had about 1 hour prior to the start of the Visitation.
If your Mom is on Hospice talk to the Social Worker and see if they can bring up these concerns. Sometimes it takes another view to make a point. She may be just as concerned about the financial aspect of this and is fearful that her wishes can't be carried out. A Social Worker just might be able to get this out of her.
Depending on the contract, it may be possible to have a certain amount ‘set aside’ for these incidentals. Prepaying may not be an option for some but at least consider preplanning. It was truly a last gift to have all this known in advance.
If Mom prepaid - look for the paperwork. Prepaying is very common where we live - but if they can get you to pay again, they will try.
When Mom passed in November of 2016, I went to the funeral home/cemetery to sign papers and make arrangements. That cost $2,000+. When I was done with them, I went across the parking lot to the cemetery office. I came out of there minus $5,000+, taken on payments of $350 a month. That was for several charges, including opening the grave, burial, closing the grave, and a small,
unassuming gravemarker. To this day, I don’t know what the heck they paid for all those years. Neither had funerals or memorial services. They did have plots, though, for which I am grateful. That would have been another $5,000. There was no inheritance and the cost all fell on us. We’re still dealing with the repercussions.
Make sure you know exactly what to expect when she passes. Get a copy of any pre-planning paperwork and memorize it, especially the fine print. Don’t let her blow you off! My mom would be incensed if she knew how her careful preplanning all turned out and how much it cost us.
Does she have records of having prepaid?
Does she have some kind of savings account she hasn't told you about?
Or funeral cover, again that she hasn't told you about?
Really, this is up to her. She either tells you what she means by "taken care of" so that you can act on her plan when the time comes; or she doesn't, and you won't have the money or the information to get it taken care of, so - I'm sorry to say - she will end up where she ends up, and it'll be far too late to complain.
I understand your frustration, but actual worry? Really? Why? Who's going to get hurt?
Here in my State, if one purchases a cemetery ground plot, the person receives paperwork which is similar to a land deed.... saying said person owns this plot of land in named cemetery, lot # such and such, in row such and such. Plots can run in cost of $3k and higher, depending on the cemetery. Non-profit cemeteries are less expensive.
If someone passes away, it is the funeral director that contacts the cemetery regarding the grave site, to verify such plot exist and if the date is good for a funeral. Then it is the funeral director that contacts the grave diggers, and the cemetery marks off the space. And it is up to the family to contact the companies that makes the headstones.
Like I said, each State is different.
I would revisit the cemetery and get a breakdown of the costs.
I agree, just tell your mother that it looks to you that she won't be buried with sister unless you have a better idea of what she means by it is all taken care of.
Why is she opposed to borrowing on the reverse mortgage?
My mother had really strong views about expensive funerals, and she was revolted at the idea of embalming and open casket viewing. I checked around for quotes for cremation and a funeral service. One firm advertised ‘from $x’, a very low figure. When I asked, they said that was only for ‘pauper’ funerals for the state government. I said that if it was advertised but not available, I would take it up with our state Consumer Affairs department, and suddenly it was available. We had a basic coffin, covered with my mum’s bedspread, and the service was fine. We sprinkled her ashes from the shore at the beach we went to with her as children.
We did it the way she had talked about for years, and were glad we did. It’s not the easiest thing to negotiate immediately after a death, but you are doing it anyway. The funeral business has been exposed as a rip-off many times, so stick to your guns!
If it were me, I wouldn't upset your mom at this point. You said she has no money anyway, so how could she pay more right now? Why have her die thinking that she won't be able to be where she wants to be? ("Therapeutic fib" for kindness.)
What type of reverse mortgage does she have?
Do you plan on paying the loan back and keeping her house?
Would you be able to get the money out of the reverse mortgage or would she need to be present?
If you paid for her costs on a credit card then pay off her reverse home mortgage over a few months (providing that's doable), could you then sell her house and pay off your credit card?
Worse case scenario, you have her cremated for the cheapest price and keep her ashes until you can put her in the mausoleum.
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I've checked 2 places here in Tijuana for my mom, so far. One very large and famous mortuary charges $3,200. U.S. dollars. They practically refused to give me what I wanted-just a simple cremation.
(In Mexico many people are buried. They have very long viewing and visiting hours-from morning to midnight then closed during the night, then open for the morning again next day.). Also, their half open caskets are covered with glass (or a plastic) so you can't touch the deceased.) I didn't want a casket, a viewing, a procession, a burial or crypt-nothing. They treated me like I was committing a sin. They wouldn't budge on the price even though I'd only get a simple cremation.
The other one we checked charged $600. U.S. dollars for just a cremation and a cardboard box. You can buy other nicer wooden or metal boxes/urns for a charge.
I'm with cetude, why spend thousands on a lifeless body? To me, the essence of the person (soul) has transcended and no longer needs the body. I know a lavish church service, funeral procession, casket, gravesite service, gravesite location and headstone, etc. has meaning to many and that's great if someone can afford it but, for me, keep it simple. Spend the money on me while I can enjoy it! And I'm going to spend most of what I have before I go! ;)