oh, bless you. my family's situation is not, of course, exactly like yours, but i see so many points of commonality. i totally get your desire to have your mom find some joy and freedom and laughter and sunshine after her recent ordeal, and on a larger scale, after a lifetime of indentured servitude.
but our norms are our norms, and your mom spent a very very long time with her norm being told what to do and playing second fiddle. i'm sure she's also genuinely mourning, and at her age, she's doubtless overwhelmed with having such a new and bright paradigm trying to become her new norm.
i'd try to get her to do *one*- just one- new thing. get that part of her new routine. the bright freshness of her new surroundings, plus your thoughtful and necessary freeing of her from cleaning and managing her practical issues, have the natural but disorienting side effect of leaving her with nothing to do except all these new and overwhelming things.
this isn't a negative. you guys have done brilliantly. but she's just not able to swallow such a giant helping of good stuff.
baby steps. baby bites. if she's shy about meeting new people, maybe she'd be willing to walk down to the clubhouse and then home again, once a day. just do the walk. being outside in the fresh air would help her, and i guarantee some of the other residents would notice her and take the first step in including her in their friendships.
or maybe she'd be more motivated if someone were relying on her again. maybe the director of the community can come up with a shut-in who would enjoy it if your mom would go once a day to check on them, maybe to read to them or have a cup of tea and a snack.
i get how hard it is to watch your loved one sit in the middle of the opportunities you've worked so hard to make available for her, and sit alone and depressed in the middle of them and not take advantage of any of them. i really do.
try the Just One Thing philosophy, and try different things if those don't work.
some counseling or medication might be called for too, of course. don't leave them out.
khairete
S.