From Overwhelmed to Relieved The Senior Caregiving Podcast
POA: What It Actually Means (And What It Doesn't) "Power of Attorney is not a title. It is a role. And like any role, it comes with responsibilities, boundaries, and a need for support." — Shannon Calles, Episode 19 Episode Overview Most families treat Power of Attorney like a checkbox — sign it, file it, breathe easier. But the gap between what POA actually means and what most people think it means can cause serious harm when a care crisis hits. Using a composite client story, Shannon breaks down the five most common POA misconceptions — and gives you a clear framework for understanding your role and your limits before the next crisis arrives. What You'll Learn in This Episode • Why POA doesn't give you unlimited authority while your parent is still legally competent • The difference between Financial POA and Healthcare POA — and why one without the other leaves a dangerous gap • When your POA authority expires (yes, it can expire) • How to protect yourself legally and emotionally when family conflict arises • The documentation habits that protect both you and your parent • What the role of POA actually requires — and what it doesn't The 5 Most Common POA Misconceptions 1. POA means you're in charge. (Not necessarily — not while your parent is still legally competent.) 2. One document covers everything. (Financial POA and Healthcare POA are separate documents.) 3. POA is permanent. (It expires at death and may not be honored if it's outdated.) 4. POA protects you from family conflict. (It gives you legal authority — not family harmony.) 5. You can handle this alone. (You cannot — and you shouldn't have to.) This Week's Challenge: The POA Document Audit • Find and locate the POA document • Read it — note the type, date signed, and when your authority activates • Identify the gap — do you have both financial and healthcare POA? Is it current and on file? • Take one single next action to close the gap • Share your takeaway on Instagram and tag @clark_county_senior_resources This Week's Mantra "I don't have to have all the answers. I just have to know my role, ask for help, and keep showing up for her." Resources Mentioned • National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys: naela.org • AARP Power of Attorney Guide: aarp.org • Area Agency on Aging (Clark County): 360-735-5720 • Strong Daughters Club (Free Facebook Community): The Strong Daughters Club [https://facebook.com/share/g/1DnDv72Hfx] • Book a Call with Shannon: calendly.com/shannon-clarkcountysr/30min [https://calendly.com/shannon-clarkcountysr/30min] Join the Strong Daughters Club If today's episode brought up questions — about POA, about what comes next, about how to even start these conversations — you don't have to sit with them alone. The Strong Daughters Club is our free Facebook community built specifically for adult daughters navigating senior care. Join here: The Strong Daughters Club [https://facebook.com/share/g/1DnDv72Hfx] Connect with Shannon Calles Website: clarkcountyseniorresources.com [https://clarkcountyseniorresources.com] Email: shannon@clarkcountysr.comshannon@clarkcountysr.com [shannon@clarkcountysr.com] Phone/Text: 564-227-8847 Instagram: @clark_county_senior_resources [https://www.instagram.com/clark_county_senior_resources/] Book a Call: calendly.com/shannon-clarkcountysr/30min [https://calendly.com/shannon-clarkcountysr/30min?month=2026-01]
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