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She passes the tests that her Dr. gives her. She doesn't really want to leave the house. She sends abusive text messages to my sister and my aunt. I live in another state and don't know what to do.

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Sometimes you need to step back.

Tell the sister and Aunt to block her texts. Tell people to stop taking her calls.

I had to back way off when Dad was found passed out in the parking lot of the country club in front of the corn fields. 911 was called. He was sent to the ER. He called one of Mom's caregivers to pick him up. Caregiver said he started drinking again as soon as he got back to the house.
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Who calls the police on a person for swearing???? Your mother is grieving. She's hurting. She's all alone now and in need of help. How about you pay a visit to mom to see her in person and find out what she needs, and what help you can give her? Your sister and aunt can do the same thing, bringing her dinner and companionship instead of ignoring her plea for help. That's my recommendation. Grief is a process, and sometimes it's not such a pretty one.
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Bulldog54321 May 31, 2025
I agree! She has the right to get drunk in her house and swear at people.

I doubt APS will do anything about this.
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Take the advice of Funkygrandma and call APS. Encourage your sister and aunt to do the same. They should not engage with her for any reason when she's sending the abusive text messages. They should save them though and show them to APS and the police.

Your sister and aunt should go to the local police station and ask them to do regular wellness checks on her. They will. The police need to know that the next time the neighbors call them because of her lashing out, they should call an ambulance and have her taken to the ER. Or arrest her. They will arrest her because they're only going to respond to calls about her so many times. Actually, that will be the best thing that can happen because it will get APS to act fast and get her placed in facility where she can be cared for.
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I think OP implies she drinks and lashes out which would indicate she is not enjoying glass or two of wine on occasion.
She needs help only if she is willing to accept some sort of intervention I.e. stop drinking as with drinking too much as many do just to numb the pain,
but real grief needs to be addressed with professional therapy.
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Is this brand new behavior? As in, since her husband died? Or has mom always been volatile?

You say she "drinks wine". I drink wine. Lots of people drink wine. Drinking wine in and of itself isn't cause for alarm. You don't get into any other details about her drinking. It kind of makes me cringe that people jump right to "she's an alcoholic", when you don't specify how much she drinks, how often she drinks and if it is while she is under the influence of the wine that she behaves this way.

Who called the police for "swearing"? I was a PO for over 20 years, I can tell you that swearing is not illegal in any state in this Union, so there is absolutely nothing any police officer can do about her simply using foul language. Insofar as contacting the police for a wellness check - well, they will go knock on her door, hope she answers, if she does answer ask if she's ok and if she needs any help, and if she says no, that will be the end of it. She won't get removed by the police for being drunk and cursing, especially in her own home.

You ask what you can do about this behavior - the first thing I think you need to do is to go to her and get a better idea, in person, about what is going on with her mental health. If she is just being mean because she is angry about her husband dying, then there's not really much you can do to change her behavior, you can only decide - you and your family members and her neighbors- how much you are willing to put up with during her grieving process.

If this is brand new behavior, completely out of character for her, then a call to her doctor might be warranted, and you and/or your sister should accompany her to whatever appointments that might have to be made, in order to tell the doctor(s) what is going on with her.

What do your sister and your aunt want to do about this? Since they seem to be bearing the brunt of this behavior?
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BurntCaregiver May 31, 2025
@notgoodenough

I've had a lot of alcoholic behaviors in my life. With me if someone adds 'drinks wine' that's an indicator that the OP's mother is a drunk who gets belligerent to her family and neighbors with the swearing and lashing out. She lashes out at the neighbors. Oh, hell no. I'd call the cops on her in a New York minute if we had neighbors like this. No one has to tolerate such behavior. I'm sure she's very broken up about her husband's death, but she has no right to lash out at her neighbors.
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All you can do is call APS because she is an alcoholic and you can’t make an alcoholic get help if they don’t want help.

Tell everyone to stop answering her calls.
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Did the drinking start after her husband died? Anyone who has been through grief knows that it is extremely overwhelming and it just feels like a giant tidal wave is about to overtake you.

My cousin and I lost our husbands the same year. It was rough for about three years. Then I got laid off my job almost three years later. I couldn't work for awhile and sat home all day. This was during the time of the pandemic when I lost my job. The neighbors started getting worried about me even a ninety plus year old neighbor. My car stayed in the same spot for days. I went to grief counseling. It didn't sink in until close to the sixth year after my husband's death. No grief counseling was effective for me. All I felt was pain.

I don't think a neighbor being drunk and belligerent is a reason to call the police unless they are endangering themselves or others and becoming a public nuisance. There should be a mental health unit dispatched when 911 is called to calm the situation down. Some police are trained to handle mental health cases.
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Sounds like she is in the anger stage of grief.

Can you or anyone encourage her to seek some grief counseling?
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My father drank a lot of wine the first year or two after my mother passed. I assumed to get over the rough times. Once he developed his new normal he stopped drinking.
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Call APS and report a vulnerable adult who is an alcoholic and living by themselves and let them come out and do an assessment and if need be take over her care.
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