Judy’s Story: Why Planning Ahead Matters More Than You Think
Over the years, I have met many remarkable people, but Judy’s story has stayed with me for reasons that go far beyond the usual issues involving elder care, housing decisions, or estate planning. Her story is ultimately about resilience, independence, trust, and the importance of having the right people in your corner when life takes unexpected turns.
I first became involved in Judy’s life when a rehabilitation facility contacted me. They explained that she needed to transition either to long-term care, assisted living, or return home. At that point, I knew very little about her other than the fact that she was using a wheelchair. There was also a relative claiming to be willing to help, but something about the situation felt off, so I decided to meet Judy personally before any decisions were made.
When I arrived, I found a woman who appeared physically fragile but mentally sharp. Judy was anxious and immediately pleaded with me not to allow a family member access to her apartment, finances, or personal affairs. As I listened, I realized there was much more to the story. She described years of distrust involving this individual, and her concerns were later confirmed by her social worker. What became clear was that Judy understood exactly what was happening and wanted her wishes respected.
As I became more involved, I visited her apartment and quickly discovered that her fears were justified. The relative was actively searching for financial documents and evidence of ownership rather than focusing on Judy’s immediate needs. It was an important reminder that not everyone who appears willing to help has good intentions. Unfortunately, situations involving financial exploitation of older adults are more common than many people realize.
We eventually helped Judy move into an assisted living community where she could receive the support she needed while maintaining as much independence as possible. Despite her physical limitations, Judy remained capable of making her own decisions, managing her finances, and directing her future. Once she settled in, she flourished. She participated in activities, formed friendships, and enjoyed having her own apartment within the community.
As I got to know Judy better, I learned about the extraordinary life she had lived. She survived the Holocaust in Hungary, endured years of communist rule, immigrated to the United States in middle age, learned computer skills, and built a successful career working for the Department of Motor Vehicles. She never married or had children, but she built meaningful relationships and accumulated savings through decades of hard work and determination.
The more time we spent together, the more I appreciated her strength. Judy loved to sing Hungarian songs, share stories about her life, and reconnect with people and places that mattered to her. We frequently traveled back to visit her former neighborhood and friends. These outings brought her tremendous joy, but they also highlighted another reality many older adults face, specifically balancing quality of life with financial sustainability.
Eventually, Judy faced a difficult decision. She was maintaining both her assisted living residence and her apartment, which was becoming financially burdensome. Together, we explored her options. She could attempt to return home with significant support services, or she could sell her apartment and use the proceeds to help fund her future care. After much thought, Judy chose to remain in assisted living because she recognized that it provided services, social opportunities, and security she could no longer easily access on her own.
We assembled a team to prepare the apartment for sale. Plans were underway, and then the world changed. Covid had arrived.
Like so many families during those early months, we found ourselves navigating uncertainty and confusion. Judy became ill very suddenly, and within days, she was hospitalized, and shortly afterward she passed away. Her death was shocking and devastating for everyone who knew her.
What followed was an incredibly complicated estate battle. Judy had a will, but it had not been updated to reflect changes in her circumstances. Individuals who had shown little interest in her while she was alive suddenly became intensely interested in her estate. Attorneys became involved, and questions arose regarding her assets, her apartment, and her final wishes. The legal process became prolonged and difficult, made even more challenging by pandemic-related court closures and restrictions.
At the same time, we were trying to honor Judy’s deeply personal wishes regarding her burial and estate. Covid made nearly every aspect of that process harder than anyone could have imagined. Yet despite the obstacles, we remained committed to carrying out her wishes as faithfully as possible because that was the promise we had made to her.
Looking back, Judy’s story is about much more than elder care. It is about preparation, and choosing trusted advisors, and it is about having difficult conversations before a crisis occurs. Most importantly, it is about ensuring that the people entrusted with your future genuinely understand your values and will advocate for your wishes when you no longer can.
Takeaways from Judy’s story
1. Choose your decision-makers carefully.
Do not assume that a relative is automatically the best person to handle your affairs. Select people you trust completely and who have demonstrated integrity throughout your life.
2. Keep your legal documents updated.
A will that was created years ago may no longer reflect your current wishes or circumstances. Review important documents regularly.
3. Work with attorneys who specialize in elder law and estate planning.
Expert guidance can prevent confusion, conflict, and costly legal battles later.
4. Have conversations before a crisis happens.
Discuss your wishes regarding finances, healthcare, housing, and end-of-life decisions while you are healthy and able to make your preferences known.
5. Independence comes in many forms.
Accepting help does not mean giving up control. Judy maintained her independence because she continued making informed decisions about her own life.
6. Quality of life matters.
The right living environment can provide safety, community, purpose, and joy. Sometimes moving forward means letting go of a home in order to gain a better life.
Judy survived war, loss, displacement, and tremendous hardship. She built a life filled with determination, resilience, and courage. Her story reminds us that while we cannot control every circumstance life throws our way, we can prepare, plan, and surround ourselves with people who will honor our wishes when it matters most.
Kurt’s Story: Finding the Right Place, Not Just Any Place
When I met Kurt, he was in a rehabilitation facility recovering from a fall. His life had been anything but ordinary.
In 1939, his family fled Berlin, pretending to be on vacation. They traveled through Italy and Africa before settling in Argentina, where Kurt grew up among other Jewish refugees. He later studied food chemistry in Cuba, immigrated to New York, built a career, and eventually became a teacher.
Kurt’s consuming passion was collecting books written in Germany before Hitler’s rise. He believed those books contained warnings about how societies unravel, and he took that seriously.
By the time we met, he’d been moved from his home into senior housing, then into rehab after a fall. Staff found him difficult. Some called him “crazy” because he worried his phone was being monitored. He told me early on that he wanted out, and that he had money to make it happen. His bank account showed $15.
After obtaining limited power of attorney, we discovered someone had been draining his funds. The evidence pointed to his home health aide, who had been using his debit card for online purchases, timing withdrawals to follow his monthly deposits. We filed a police report, and federal banking protections allowed the bank to recover twelve months of stolen funds.
With his finances restored, Kurt moved into assisted living. But problems followed. He’d walk the halls talking about history and patterns he saw repeating in the world. Staff moved him to the memory unit.
Kurt didn’t have a memory problem; he had a purpose problem.
Through our conversations, I learned he’d been deeply involved with a synagogue and a rabbi he’d known since South America, someone running a project reconnecting descendants of Jewish refugees with their heritage. I reached out and the rabbi came the next day. Kurt immediately lit up. That’s when it became clear that Kurt needed a place where his identity and interests actually meant something.
I found an orthodox senior residence. The food was kosher, and the activities director knew his books. Other residents wanted to listen, and Kurt was invited to give regular talks on pre-Hitler Germany. The man labeled “difficult” became a valued voice in his community. He just needed the right room.
What This Story Shows
- Behavior is often misread when the environment is wrong. Confusion and agitation can simply mean someone’s identity isn’t being recognized.
- Financial exploitation is more common than families expect. Even trusted caregivers can misuse access and acting quickly matters.
- Purpose doesn’t expire. Older adults want to share what they know, and when that’s possible, everything changes.
- Fit matters more than proximity. Culture, language, history aren’t extras, they’re the whole thing.
- Advocacy changes lives. Sometimes you need someone who can step back, ask questions, and see the full picture. That’s the work I do.
PS. The accompanying photo is from a wonderful networking meeting where we got to enjoy ourselves on the beach. Aging Icons all!
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