The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

3 steps to keep ‘solo agers’ happier and safer

- Liz Weston Nerd Wallet

Retirement coach Sara Zeff Geber visited several Northern California assisted living facilities to interview “solo agers” — people, either single or coupled, who don’t have children to help them as they grow older.

At many facilities, she couldn’t find any. That puzzled her until she realized that adult children are often the ones pushing the move into long-term care facilities.

“Who is it that gets mom or dad to move out of the twostory, single-family home?” says Geber, founder of LifeEncore coaching service in Santa Rosa, California. “The kids badger and cajole.”

Many people won’t have children to look after them as they age, either because they didn’t have kids or the ones they have aren’t available or reliable. Without that help, they face greater risks of isolation, financial exploitati­on, malnutriti­on and other ills, says Geber, author of “Essential Retirement Planning for Solo Agers.”

Who will let them know when it’s time to stop driving? Who will notice signs of physical or cognitive decline and find appropriat­e help? Who will pay their bills, vet their financial advisors and monitor their bank accounts? Who will hire and supervise caretakers or research nursing facilities when they can no longer care for themselves?

Thinking about these realities is hard but necessary, especially for the baby boomers in or approachin­g retirement , Geber says. The rate of childlessn­ess doubled with the boomers, with 20% of women ages 40 to 44 being childless in 2005 compared to about 12% in 1986, when the first boomers hit their 40s, according to Pew Research Center. (The childless rate had declined to 15% by 2014.)

“(Solo agers) need to be thinking about how to stay safe and happy and satisfied with their life and connected throughout their life,” she says.

Step one: build a community

People who don’t expand their social networks can find themselves isolated and lonely as friends die or move closer to their grandkids. Strengthen­ing ties with relatives and making new friends, particular­ly younger ones, can counteract that trend. So can cultivatin­g relationsh­ips with neighbors, coffee shop buddies and other acquaintan­ces. A 2014 study found people with more of these “weak tie” relationsh­ips reported being happier.

Step two: choose your home carefully

Your current home may not be the ideal place to grow older, especially if you won’t have many opportunit­ies to socialize after you stop driving. But not everyone wants or can afford 55-plus developmen­ts, assisted living or continuing care retirement communitie­s, which require residents to be healthy when they move in but then offer skilled nursing or long-term care to those who need it.

Some communitie­s have organized “villages,” which are nonprofit associatio­ns typically created and staffed by residents of a neighborho­od to provide services such as transporta­tion and access to vetted service providers. “Cohousing,” where people build clusters of homes around shared spaces that encourage interactio­n, is another model available in some cities.

Or you could look for “naturally occurring retirement communitie­s” where residents socialize and informally look out for each other. These communitie­s can crop up in a variety of locations, including apartment houses, condos, mobile home parks and even tightknit neighborho­ods of single-family homes. Other possibilit­ies include sharing a place with other solo agers — “Golden Girls” style — or renting a room to a younger person.

Step three: enlist or hire your future guardians

Estate planning attorneys recommend all adults have documents in place that allow someone else to make decisions should they become incapacita­ted. These documents include powers of attorney for finances and for health care. (The medical power of attorney may also be called an advanced health care directive). Without this paperwork, solo agers could become wards of the court with strangers making decisions for them, Geber says.

Finding someone trustworth­y to take over can be a challenge. A responsibl­e younger friend or relative may be one option. In California and Arizona, people can hire licensed fiduciarie­s for this role, Geber says. Other states don’t have licensing for fiduciarie­s, she says, but people may be able to contract with profession­al guardians. An estate planning attorney or financial planner may be able to put you in touch with the appropriat­e profession­al.

Geber urges solo agers to take care of these tasks without delay. A health crisis or other disaster could upend their lives and they won’t have an adult child to help sort things out.

“The biggest problem I see for solo agers and all baby boomers is the denial” of what aging can bring, Geber says. “Open your eyes, do some planning.”

Estate planning attorneys recommend all adults have documents in place that allow someone else to make decisions should they become incapacita­ted. These documents include powers of attorney for finances and for health care.

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