Planning Ahead
This is the chapter people skip and later wish they hadn't. Every month of early planning buys years of easier decisions, because the person can still tell you what they want, and the law still lets them say it.
Why "early" is the whole game
Legal documents require capacity: the ability to understand what you're signing. Capacity fades with the disease, and once it's gone, the simple afternoon at a lawyer's office becomes a slow, expensive court guardianship process. The window is open now. Also open now: the chance to hear their wishes in their own voice, the exact thing that makes Chapter 7's decisions bearable later.
The paper, in priority order
- Durable power of attorney (finances): names who handles money and property when they can't. "Durable" is the key word. It survives incapacity. Without it: frozen accounts and courtrooms.
- Healthcare proxy / medical power of attorney: names who speaks to doctors for them.
- Advance directive / living will: their wishes for the medical lines in Chapter 7 (hospitalization, resuscitation, feeding) written while the words are theirs. Ask the concrete question kindly: "If your heart stopped when your memory was mostly gone, what would you want?" Write down the answer verbatim; quotes carry authority that summaries don't.
- Will / estate basics, and beneficiary designations checked (those override wills and are famously stale).
- HIPAA releases so doctors can talk to the family members who'll be calling.
An elder-law attorney (a real specialty) does all of this in one or two visits. Worth it; this is not the place for internet templates if you can help it.
The money conversation
Dementia care is long and, in late stages, expensive: home aides, day programs, memory care. Three early moves change the trajectory:
- Inventory quietly: accounts, insurance (any long-term-care policy? check it now. Benefits often require early filing), pensions, veterans' benefits (wartime veterans and spouses may qualify for real monthly help), the house.
- Learn your country/state's safety-net rules early. In the U.S., Medicaid pays for most long-term dementia care in the end, but it has a five-year look-back on asset transfers, which is exactly why elder-law advice five years early is worth ten times the fee later.
- Simplify and protect: autopay the bills, freeze credit, guard against the scams that specifically hunt cognitive decline. Add the bank's fraud alerts now, not after the first "grandchild in jail" call succeeds.
One folder
Everything above goes in one physical folder (plus one digital copy someone else can reach): the documents, the medication list, diagnoses, doctors and numbers, insurance cards, and the passwords that unlock the practical world. Label it. Tell two people where it lives. In every future emergency, someone will open that folder instead of tearing the house apart. Future-you will bless present-you every time.
Plan for the caregiver too
Two questions nobody asks until the bad week: Who takes over if something happens to you? (name them, brief them, write it down), and what's the respite plan when you need surgery, a funeral, a rest? A one-page "how to care for them" sheet (routines, foods, calming tricks, the saved cards printed) turns any willing helper into a capable one.
“Commit your works to the LORD and your plans will be achieved.”
Proverbs 16:3Book the elder-law consult. Start the folder with what's in the desk drawer tonight. Ask the advance-directive question at the next calm breakfast. Three moves, maybe four hours total: the highest-leverage four hours in this whole guide.