Elaine Ellbogen |
Elaine Ellbogen refused to be confined, even while under a
court-appointed guardianship.
At 85, she often signed herself out of her Libertyville
nursing home, walked to the Metra station and took the train to Chicago. She'd
board a bus, then window-shop along Michigan Avenue or stop in art stores and
greet the proprietors, who became friends.
She showed up at the Tribune Tower one frigid February
afternoon, after talking to me only once before by telephone.
She wanted her independence, she said. She wanted to punish
the people who had forced her out of her Highland Park home, citing her
inability to care for herself. "I do not believe I should be under
guardianship," she said.
That day earlier this year marked the beginning of a short
friendship that ended with tragedy, and proved to me, once again, that people
can be amazingly complex.
Elaine dressed fashionably, wearing a scarf and a splash of
red lipstick that offset a crown of white hair. Articulate, witty, and
dramatic, she quoted literature and discussed current events each time we met.
She spoke about working as an account executive in the 1950s
for Daniel Edelman's public relations firm in Chicago. Much like the era was depicted
in the "Mad Men" series, it was unusual to find a woman in that role
at the time. For Elaine, it clearly remained a source of great pride.
She left her job within a few years to marry and raise two
sons in Highland Park, filling the home with artwork and staying active with
her children's activities. At one point, she tried to get back into the public
relations world, but too much time had slipped by.
By the 1980s, when her sons left for college, Elaine's
collections of artwork, newspapers, mail and clothing from frequent shopping
sprees became unwieldy.
That was when the hoarding began and her marriage unraveled,
said her son Andrew Ellbogen. Elaine stopped allowing family members in the
house, which was in dire need of repairs. One side of the roof was caving in
and mold was spreading throughout the home.
"Early on, the art covered walls at home," Andrew
said. "In later years, the artwork was on the floor when she ran out of
wall space."
After a small fire in the home, her family members begged
her to move, offering options and financial help. They asked the city of
Highland Park to intervene, but Elaine refused to move or clean up the house as
needed for its sale. When I asked Elaine later if she considered herself a
hoarder, she replied, "That is a matter of interpretation."
Eventually, a phone repairman who was allowed entrance to
the house was so disturbed by what he saw that he took photographs and sent
them to city officials, who contacted the guardian's office, Andrew said.
And so in 2011, the private guardian removed Elaine from her
home by having her declared disabled in court. The guardian took control of her
finances and major decisions regarding her life. This was a drastic step, and
Elaine did not handle it well, feeling betrayed and lied to by the guardian.
She started to write letters, compelling and coherent in
tidy cursive handwriting. She addressed them to a Lake County judge, a former
presidential candidate and to news reporters, including myself.
"Awakened at 7:40 a.m. by pounding on my front door, I
was informed by (guardian) that she would personally return me to my home in
one hour if I would accompany her to the Highland Park hospital to answer a few
doctor's questions," she wrote in one four-page letter.
"I never saw my home again," she wrote. "Thus
began my surreal Kafka-like agonizing true story. I am a real-life example of
the horrifying fate that can befall a low-income, elderly woman."
I was interested in learning more about guardianships, which
are often necessary to obtain help for people who are incapacitated, but can
also be abused.
But Elaine's case, as I soon learned, was no simple matter.
She did not suffer dementia, as some court records stated, though she had
received psychiatric care and was not taking her medication as prescribed.
Elaine was moved into a skilled nursing home in Libertyville
in 2013, after a year of failed attempts to move her into a less-restrictive
setting, such as assisted living, court records state. "She was resistant
to the limits placed on her for spending and outings," the guardian wrote,
describing her as verbally abusive.
The last time I saw Elaine, at a coffee shop near her
nursing home, she spoke about the Oscar Wilde play, "A Woman of No
Importance" and her fear, after guardianship "that I was nothing now.
That I was absolutely unwanted, destroyed."
Yet she seemed happier than on past occasions. After her
funds ran out, the state took over Elaine's guardianship, and authorities were
working on moving her to an apartment. She was allowed more freedom, and
continued to leave the nursing home for short excursions.
She had begun piling papers and items in the private room
she had at the nursing home, and clothes still carrying their tags hung along
the wall. She had made some friends and enjoyed a good relationship with her
ex-husband, her son Andrew said.
"The goal was always to let her have as much
independence as possible," he said.
So, it was shocking to learn that, on June 2, Elaine left
for a shopping trip and never returned home.
She had been struck by a train in Deerfield, and was not
identified until a day later. Her death was ruled an accident by the Lake
County coroner's office.
"She just miscalculated crossing the tracks," said
Orlando Portillo, chief deputy coroner.
Her family members remain horrified that she met such a
violent end, despite their attempts to keep her safe. She had been looking
forward to her granddaughter's upcoming dance recital, Andrew said.
I couldn't stop thinking about her after learning the news.
She had astonished me with her eloquence and mobility, and I enjoyed our
visits. While I initially questioned why she was under a guardian's care, I
began to understand why her family had become frustrated and sought the city's
help.
Despite her eccentricities — or maybe because of them — I
was touched by her and considered her a "woman of importance."
I wish she had lived long enough for me to tell her that.
Full Article & Source:
A late-in-life friendship and a lost opportunity to say 'you matter'
What a spunky, spunky woman. I would like to have known her.
ReplyDeleteWell written article which really draws attention to the crux of guardianship abuse: the horrible end and abuse of an elderly person just because he or she is vulnerable.
ReplyDeleteI believe Elaine was aware of her importance, of her impact on her new friend and advocate, reporter Lisa Black. Sadly, Elaine's death was sudden and tragic. No one could have predicted her future and possibly her loss of what she wanted most, her independence. Elaine died doing what she enjoyed.
ReplyDeleteElaine's account of how she was deceived, removed from her residence is very disturbing, although her account is not unusual as documented in the numerous complaints in Letters to National Association To Stop Guardian Abuse (NASGA).
Elaine did not handle it well, feeling betrayed and lied to by the guardian.
"Awakened at 7:40 a.m. by pounding on my front door, I was informed by (guardian) that she would personally return me to my home in one hour if I would accompany her to the Highland Park hospital to answer a few doctor's questions," she wrote in one four-page letter.
"I never saw my home again," she wrote. "Thus began my surreal Kafka-like agonizing true story. I am a real-life example of the horrifying fate that can befall a low-income, elderly woman."