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Coping With Parents |
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A boomer exercise for growing old
Make a list of the 10 most important activities in your life
Imagine you are 65 and eliminate 3
Imagine you are 75; eliminate 3 more
Imagine you are 85; eliminate 3 more
Imagine your reaction
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Talking to Your Parents About Their
Changing Needs
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There are some things in life we don't really want to think
about; consequently we don't plan for them. One of those "things" is aging
parents and their changing needs. |
Tips On... Successful "Parentcaring"
Now I can hear each and every one of you say "What the heck is
Parentcaring?" Let me explain: When our parents gave birth to us and
raised us they exercized "Good Parenting" in the best ways they knew based
on their upbringing and their situations as adults. When we grew up and
married, we too (or at least many of us) had children and also became
concerned with "Good Parenting."
The parental role they played changed over time. When we got older, we no
longer had to call our parents to tell them we would be getting home late.
We did not have to ask permission to change jobs, to become parents, or
for any of the other minor or major decisions in our lives. Yet they
remained our parents and we still made efforts to honor their wishes. We
rewarded them with the role of "Grandparenting.”
For many of us, our parents have aged and are now in need of our
assistance. Many have made the comment that "We now become our parent’s
parent." Yet this statement is not really accurate. We are still the
children and they are still the parents – our roles have not changed but
the function within our roles has changed. As “Baby Boomers” and the
“Sandwich Generation” we are increasingly assuming new “parentcaring”
functions. Here are some insights to help adult children of aging parents
to successfully make manage some common functional transitions: |
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Whether we want to face it or not, eldercare is already a reality for the
first wave of baby boomers; too many of us, however, are utterly
unprepared to assume the role of caregiver for aging parents.
Could the sadness, loneliness or anger you
feel today be a warning sign of depression?
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Dealing With
Dementia
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Caregiving and Depression |
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1) Let go of your childhood fantasies of your parents: We all have said we
have done that and at some level we have. However it is hard for us to
think of our parents in human roles and functions. Some of us are even
shocked if we discover our parents are still actively intimate. Somehow
our childlike view of our parents being greater than human seems to live
within us as we age and mature. You may even have to remind yourself over
and over that "My parents are human and do all the human things everyone
else does, have all the human feelings, and they are not invincible".
2) Remember that your parents will have a hard time not trying to fulfill
that super human image: Our parents too will have difficulty letting us
see them in a very human light. Even we as parents have difficulty with
that with our own children. They have tried to set a good example for us
all during our growing years, just as we do for our children. As parents
it can be difficult to let our children help us especially in something as
personal as in-home caregiving.
3) You are still always your parents’ child: Nothing will change that
fact, not age or illness. No one or no thing can take that away from the
parent or the child. We can never be a parent to our parent. Yet it can
feel like that is what we are doing. Our functions towards our parents
have changed, just like they have throughout our lives in so many other
areas. These functions are often functions we thought we would never have
to do with our parents, such as those that are very personal in nature
(bathing and toileting) or ones that parents have always handled (finances
or gardening).
4) You may have to step in if your parent becomes debilitated or
dependent: This can be the hardest thing for an adult child to do. As a
responsible adult, you may have to intercede with your parent and say
“No!” if their driving becomes unsafe, if finances are being ruined, if
the home is unsafe, or if they are affected with dementia. As an adult
child, you may have to utilize a durable power of attorney, seek
guardianship, remove cars or dangerous items, or even move a parent into a
more appropriate living arrangement when they no longer can safely live
alone. These are hard things that adult children often do: You need to
realize that it is a part of your function as an adult child.
5) Getting involved when one parent is caring for the other: This presents
many challenges and complicated emotions for the child who finds herself
“in the middle.” You may be doubly confused about when and how to act. The
caring parent (also referred to as the “wellspouse”) can often
unintentionally make you feel unneeded or your attempts to help as
unwanted. It is important to know your assistance and visits are important
though implementing your actions can be difficult.
Often the wellspouse does not want to burden their offspring with their
problems: This goes all the way back to when we were young children and
the parents managed all family matters. It is difficult for most parents
to see even their adult children as being able to help shoulder some of
the family problems and that their parents are still very much part of
their family. You need to communicate to the wellspouse that it is
important to you as their child to contribute in some meaningful way.
Often the wellspouse is on an emotional roller coaster: The wellspouse
can often feel as if they are failing when they are not able to manage it
on their own. It is not the spouse that has failed but the disease that
has caused a situation that they can not win alone. As adult children we
need to support the wellspouse. We need to make sure the wellspouse is
assured that they are not the ones that have failed if they need to ask
for help.
The wellspouse needs respite: One of the most important ways you can
help your parent is to make sure they get regular respite. Respite is one
of the most vital ingredients to a caregiver mastering and succeeding. As
a close family member, you can assist with respite by watching the
effected parent or by helping provide a relief caregiver. Taking the
wellspouse out for dinner or shopping is more than just a kind gesture.
Paying for a weekend at a nice hotel with service and good food makes a
wonderful and meaningful gift to your parents.
Open the lines of communication: We all need to work actively to keep
lines of communication open with the wellspouse. Make sure that the
communication is a two way street. That helps us to be more certain that
the wellspouse will feel free to tell us when they need extra help and
attention.
Visiting: You can’t underestimate the importance of paying regular
visits to your parents. Ironically, it is visiting that most of us
children feel most uncomfortable with. Many times we worry that our
visiting, especially when we live at a distance and stay for more than a
few hours, puts a heavier burden on the wellspouse. That doesn’t mean that
you have to visit at every opportunity. Trying to understand our parents,
the disease effecting them and the "normal" emotional roller coaster the
wellspouse is going through can help us feel better about visiting. If you
live at a distance and the visit is for an extended period of time it can
be helpful to stay at a motel or other family member’s house so that you
can spend time with the parents yet be able to leave when the visit gets
to be too much. Regular telephone contacts are just as valuable. Remember
to discuss things unrelated to your parent’s illness: share positive
stories and conversation.
When the caring gets to be too much for the wellspouse: Many times the
wellspouse will not see her health deteriorating and the toll that caring
for her spouse has taken. Often the adult children see it first. You may
find yourself in the position of having to tell the wellspouse that they
have done all they can do and now it is time to allow a facility or others
to take over some of the caring roles. Nothing is sadder to the children
than to see this disease take on both parents. It is not uncommon for the
health of the wellspouse to suffer or even for it to suffer to the point
of the wellspouse passes first. You need to preserve the health and life
of the parent that does not have the disease.
by Edyth Ann Knox
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