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Hi there,
I have been helping a senior who doesn’t have very supportive family. I’ve basically been helping them navigate through life, like scheduling appts, searching online, looking for a new senior community, etc. Lately I feel like they are pressing me and also others (that we both know) to “take them in”. They say things like “I’ll be at your place soon”, and “I don’t need much, you can have my social security”. It’s really starting to be uncomfortable (and note, they have a place to live now that is with other seniors). They even went as far as wanting my children to refer to them with a “grandparent-like” title. I thought it was so strange and a little overreaching because they don’t really know my kids. And to be honest I didn’t want my mom to get wind of it either and maybe get upset. They also got frustrated with me one time because they said I should have a doctor’s number saved that I didn’t have saved. I told them that it wasn’t my responsibility. Sorry if I’m rambling. I want the best for them of course, but am I in over my head in this relationship? Should I start pulling away? This is all volunteer work, I was just trying to help someone in need but wowza. I don’t want to burn myself out in the process. I’ve tried talking to them about why they couldn’t live with me but the topic comes up repeatedly.
Thank you

I'm part of a Visitation Team for my church, which centers mostly around shut-in or "limited" elder church attenders. Our goal is spiritual support but we are also often the "front line" eyes and ears when those seniors' situations start to overwhelm them. Our policy is to contact their PoA and then step away. If the senior doesn't have a PoA we try to contact local family member and loop them in, explaining that the senior now needs a more consistent and sustainable solution for their sudden or ongoing needs. If we can't find either of those support people then we connect them with social services. We don't drop them suddenly but try to ease out of the picture.

The US is full of Elder Orphans, seniors who have no spouse, partner or adult children (and this is a growing demographic). The impact of this comes home to roost in their age-related years of decline -- especially if they've made no real plans to deal with it.

The "best" you can do for that senior is connect them with social services and give them the number to their local Area Agency on Aging. The more you orbit around them, the more you give the impression that they are "independent" when they actually are not. This delays real solutions. The senior of course will not like it but there is no other option.

Many a well-meaning neighbor has gotten sucked into the care vortex. Bless you for helping this person to this point but now it's time to ease out.
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VeryBlessed Jan 16, 2026
Thank you for the details on this demographic. I really appreciate it! I find the whole Elder Orphan concept so sad but I’m only one person. I can’t save everyone. The delusion of independence is so spot on also. Sometimes they’ll describe things they can do for themselves but honestly it’s things that a 9 year old could do too. That doesn’t mean the 9 year old is independent. The more adult admin things and technology is where they always ask for help. They get numbers confused sometimes too which really makes me feel bad because I worry about scammers but I have to stop with the guilt trip. I guess I could ease out by denying requests like making appointments and also spacing out the phone calls.
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Yes, time to start pulling back. I have friends who have had a very long close relationship with some younger neighbors, who are lovely. Unfortunately in recent years they have become very dependent, and now to the point of being unfairly demanding.

This is your life. Don't give in to the pressure. Look up some local resources, like your Office on Aging, and give them a list of phone numbers. Then gracefully but firmly step back.
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VeryBlessed Jan 16, 2026
Thank you. Another commenter mentioned the dependence portion that I didn’t consider. It’s a kind of facade. No one can see their true state if I keep propping them up. It’s always, “can you please…my phone is acting crazy” or just a hopelessness that makes me cave in.
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From your post they "do" have family. Just not supportive, according to them. They're not homeless or alone in the world. They have a home already. They have family.

Time to step away.
There are lots of great places to volunteer at, if you love being a volunteer.
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VeryBlessed Jan 16, 2026
Thank you. I needed this! It really is that simple, but seemed so complicated to me.
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There are senior citizens who have no one to help them, so they perfect a way to inveigle what they need. Case in point: Elderly woman "Grace" met "John" when he was the young real estate salesman who sold her house. Even after the closing when she was in her new condo, she kept calling John asking how he was, she wanted to meet his wife and their baby, etc. He was frustrated about it and didn't answer her calls but she started texting. She wanted him to see her new place and invited the young couple to dinner. John felt sorry for Grace, so finally they agreed and went. John hoped that Grace would recommend him to her new friends and maybe he'd get some business that way.

Grace had prepared a nice dinner and they ate it, exchanged pleasantries throughout, and when John and Dana were looking forward to leaving afterward, she produced a will that she'd typed. She wanted them to witness her signature. They said they'd rather not, and she became blustery as in "I cooked you this nice dinner and you won't even do this little thing for me."

They were so uncomfortable that they finally agreed, both read the will and didn't find it anything out of the ordinary. They witnessed her signature and left. Afterward Grace kept calling John but he blocked her number.

It's sad, but these needy folks get like vampires. Since then I've seen other desperate elders pulling the same kind of stunts. Beware.
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VeryBlessed Jan 16, 2026
Thank you so much for the detailed response. You just don’t want to think negatively about people, but sometimes we need a reality check.
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Pull back, please. My aunt had a neighbor like you, though it's unclear if you two are neighbors.
She was an angel. She would look in on my aunt, cook for her, do her laundry, take her to appointments. My aunt has nieces and nephews that live close to her. However, from what I understood from her, they only came around when they needed to borrow money.
My aunt started getting really attached to her neighbor because she was good hearted and Godly. I didn't want her to become attached. The neighbor was moving away and I told aunt that she was going to be moving soon and she had to start thinking about long term without her, but aunt was in serious, serious denial. She didn't believe she was moving and would leave her. She told me they became like sisters. The neighbor did eventually end up moving and leaving aunt.
My advice to you is to pull back. This senior probably does have family some where. You cannot be made responsible, and the more you do, the more you will find yourself being drawn in. Detach, immediately. She has to find some other means of support.
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VeryBlessed Jan 16, 2026
Thank you, it is so easy to get sucked in. But you’re right it has to stop. I thought I was just getting some good deeds in but I started becoming an admin and a counselor, it’s crazy. And probably if they had more money they could maybe afford a better community. A lot of the complaints are about the place they live. I feel guilty but I’m exhausted. The conversations are usually depressing, when I say “how are you” it’s always, “okay but…”. Maybe I’ll just block them.
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If this were happening to me, I would pull away and end this relationship.

Listen to the uncomfortable feelings you're getting.

This is not someone who is grateful for your help, but is trying to manipulate you into giving more and more.

They probably wore out their welcome with their own family, and that's why they are no longer supportive.
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VeryBlessed Jan 16, 2026
Yes, good point, thank you. They complain about them constantly. I have to set aside a minimum of an hour if I answer their call. I tried to say something positive about one of their relatives and was shut down saying I didn’t know them. Lots of bitterness and anger. I know they need someone to talk to, but man you would think there would be other relationships to lean on in your 80’s being in the same town and all.
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It seems like it’s time for you to make some serious changes in this relationship to stop it going very bad indeed. Tell us more about him/her (to me ‘they’ means plural) and the “place to live now that is with other seniors”. That ought to be the source of advice being looked to. Unless you stop “helping them navigate through life” you are going to end up either caught as a major carer or alternatively walking away with a lot of bitterness on both sides.

How do you plan to “start pulling away”?
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VeryBlessed Jan 16, 2026
Thank you! I will start with limiting phone calls and providing social service resources. I kind of did this before (providing a social worker contact) but they ended up calling me again. Not sure how to make it stick this time. I guess just saying no to requests more and more.

They live in an assisted living home but are fairly active and ended up there under odd circumstances. I say “they” just trying to give some privacy but I think I gave away the gender in a comment anyway 😬.
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As I was reading all that you are doing for this person I was thinking you should have pulled away a while ago.
This person is being "propped up" by you and others that are "helping"
When you say this is "volunteer work" are you with an organization that provides volunteers or is this someone that you met and realized they needed help? the answer to this is important.
If this is just someone you met then maybe a call to your local Senior Service Center and explain that this person needs more help than you are prepared to give.
If you are working as a volunteer for an organization you need to talk to your volunteer supervisor and explain what is going on and that maybe this person needs a Social Worker to step in. I would also say that you should ask to be reassigned to another person.
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VeryBlessed Jan 16, 2026
Thank you. Our families know each other if that makes sense. I offered to help them find an apartment one day and here I am. I tried connecting them with a social worker through a program once but the services were kind of limited so they started calling me again for help. I’m so glad I posted here though. I was just in my head with these thoughts that it was too much but I felt guilty because their family doesn’t follow through with help at all. They also sort of bragged to their family that they “didn’t need them” and I was helping them now which made me cringe.
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Sadly with many seniors it becomes and all or nothing situation. You start off willing to help with a few things and they always want more. It is never ending. I was going to suggest to decide what you are willing to do and do only that but it sounds like she would badger you until you did more. The crazy thing is they don't realize they are driving people away with their behavior. My grandmother would state people don't like her because she is old. The truth was people didn't like her because she was mean, demanding and manipulative.
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Unfortunately you are being taken advantage of at this point and there may be a good reason other people have pulled away. I knew someone like this who was morbidly obese, estranged from her family, and as she gained even more weight over the years she depended even more on friends to get what she needed done, even standing up from a seated position eventually. She basically used up her friends, asking so so much until they could only ghost her to get away. I knew her professionally, heard she was in decline, and visited. I offered to help with a few things and she told me she loved me with big sincere eyes. At that point she was bed bound and running out of money to pay caregivers. One last friend was helping her at the end, doing everything for her. She promised the friend she would be the beneficiary on her retirement account, her last asset. Then she died, and wouldn’t you know that years before she had named a long gone hired caregiver as the beneficiary and never changed it? She would say ANYTHING to keep people helping her. Don’t get pulled into the poor me trap.
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VeryBlessed Jan 17, 2026
Aww that is so sad. The desperation really makes me feel awful, but knowing that this is common has opened my eyes. I thought I was street smart, but I did not see this coming for sure lol. Thank you.
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