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Ask Amy: Newcomer needs to find a ‘third place’

Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

If I had the space, I could just keep it in boxes until she passes, but I don’t.

What’s the “right” way to handle this? The five of us “kids” have a hard enough time navigating her decline as a team, without this added tension around Nana’s china.

– Tired Boomer

Dear Tired: Many people who might have used family things to furnish their own homes (if they had inherited in their 20’s or 30’s), are trying to cope with heirlooms when they are currently trying to downsize.

You are faced with an ethical dilemma because you’d like to start the process against your mother’s stated wishes (an understandable choice on your part). I think you’d ultimately feel best if you adhered to her wishes, despite her dementia.

This is where a storage unit comes in.

 

It would be a good idea for you to get “the team” together to go through and transfer things to a nearby storage unit. Devote a weekend to this task.

The process of doing this as a group before your mother’s death would be very different than after her passing – when you will be stressed and grieving.

Doing this now will revive a lot of memories (which you can share with your mother – and each other).

During the transfer you can as a group organize and label things, and perhaps start the dispersal process (with siblings taking some things home) and store the rest until after your mother’s passing.

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