This is something that has weighed heavily on my mind lately because it seems there are so many seniors out there (personal experience with my family included) that seem to be oblivious to the fact they are aging, have never given much thought to planning financially and are hateful and belitting to many of the caregivers who take them in. Add to the fact the stastic I read on this forum that as many as 30% of caregivers pass away before those they are caring for and it is a sobering situation to say the least.
I am not addressing patients with dementia or alzheimers but people who are normally aging. I see many who I swear would trade a dozen of their family members for just six more months. People who once they showed any signs of aging increased their hatefulness because they had somehow felt they were "above" getting old.
When my dad found out he had cancer the first time, he was 49. He said he was feeling sorry for himself and turned on the television one night and saw a commercial for St. Jude's Children's Hospital. He said he was almost ashamed at his pity party when these little children were much sicker and fighting for their lives -- some with no hope. That story always stuck with me.
My daughter has been working with kid's charities for a few years and recently had an opportunity to work with one of the major charities that helps essentially dying or very ill children. The children are so grateful for anything. Not bitter, not lashing out, not calling their parents names or threatening them. Many are dying and doing so with dignity.
What is spiritually/morally wrong with our senior population that many cannot and will not be thankful for the 80 or 90 years many have been given? Many who have had a chance for higher education, marriage, children, careers, grandchildren but they are hateful wanting to do more for themselves or demand it be done for them. I know not all seniors are this way, but for many - there is no joy in spending any of their last years or months with them. Why is it never enough for them but a dying child or teenager who will never go to college, never have a family can often have such wisdom you sit in awe?
My FIL has gambled away his pension, has womanized, you name it. He recently said if he could live his life over -- he would do MORE of the same. Some of these seniors have done little for a church or charity. Yet I recently read a story of a courageous little girl who was battling cancer and received a gift box while in the hospital. That inspired her to do the same for other kids -- and she did until she died. Her parents continued her work. I read the same for other children's foundations where the parents continue the work that many times a child has started.
So does anyone have thoughts as to what is wrong with the current generation being cared for? Why must many put their families through a living Hell when there are dying children starting foundations and leaving a legacy when they die?
yes, it's sad for a child to be sick but they don't face the same challenges, they don't have to worry about where they are going to live or die, they don't have to worry about being left alone, they don't have their belongings taken and sold off or thrown out. How many charities give 'dream vacations' or 'make a wish' to kids.....have you EVER heard of an old person being surprised with a 'dream vacation' regardless of what disease they have?
Children aren't blamed for their own conditions...but we do that to old people: "She should have watched her weight!" "He shouldn't have smoked"..
yeah, it's a bit easier to be charitable and happy when you are a child instead of an old person.
Not all senior citizens are grumpy. The ones who are, I think, are angry for a variety of reasons (often not recognized by them or vocalized) because they know their time is limited and can't do anything about it. They are angry because perhaps they want to do more, but health and/or finances limit them. They quite possibly are lonely, because many of their lifelong friends have passed, are in a facility, or are physically or mentally incapable of continuing the friendship. Family members are busy, and don't visit often. And...it can be as simple as 'things have changed' from how it was..."the good old days"...that will not return. They can feel left out, ignored, lacking purpose, and nothing to look forward to.
In general I think grumpy senior citizens are not happy with how things are in their life, but don't feel they can improve it or change it. They are tired and perhaps feel trapped.
You could possibly put them in better spirits by letting them know...they still matter. Ask for their advice on an issue or topic. Ask them questions about them, their history, their accomplishments. Simply spend time with them and LISTEN.
While the innocence of childhood certainly has its blessing and limitations, adulthood brings the power to make good choices, and to not be a victim.
My elderly parents (90+) are exactly as described in the original post, and were the same way when they were a lot younger. No one wanted to be around them then, and no one wants to be around them now. Fortunately for them, they made enough money to PAY for someone to put up with them now.
Lesson learned: if you don't want to be alone, you need to be the kind of person that people WANT to be around - your choice.
I, too, wish to die with dignity, grace, love and honor, and that starts with facing reality and doing a little simplifying and planning accordingly, while I AM able to make those choices for myself. No, it is not pleasant to think about, but I don't want to be the crazy old lady forcibly removed from her home by Adult Protective Services, and warehoused in a government "home".
You are SO right, hadenough, about medical science. Great strides have been made to prolong the life of the physical body, but the mental health (Alzheimer's, dementia) has far to go. Don't think they realized until later how prevalent mental issues would be when extending the physical health.
I do think the WW2 generation was very strong and independent, and has a hard time being dependent on others for care when they are no longer able. But, that is simply the reality of aging. Again, facing reality will allow for a dignified transition.
(Sorry for the long vent......I don't usually do this.)
I don't deny your experience. I just think that most people of every age do try to do good, and behave well much of the time. We really notice the exceptions, because they are so unbearable. Call me Pollyanna.
It is also a miconception that children are not uprooted from what they know. We have children from all over the world come to the city I live in for a children's hospital here as well as a Ronald McDonald House. They often stay for months at a time trying to receive treatment to save their lives. They are uprooted from their schools, home, city, state and sometimes their country. Many times there are language barriers. Parents are living out of suitcases and often leave other children behind with the other parent. No, these parents may not be looking at a person with alzheimers or dementia but they are missing their other children and watching one dying or struggling to live.
Our family is involved in many children's charities and hear many struggles with children having meltdowns, needing to have psychariists called in, etc. But it gets handled. I see people who are giving up their jobs, pensions, retirement and taking bankruptcy after years of caregiving for parents who many times only reason for not wanting to go into assisted living or a nursing home is simply the mandate, "I don't want to go." We all often have to do things in life we don't want to do.
30 years ago, I used to candy stripe in a nursing home. I have had experience with 120 plus patients at a time and while there were 5-6 cranky ones, it was nothing to the level that I see with seniors now or that I read on here and I worked in all wings from assisted living to dementia/alzheimers. Somethings is different with this generation of elderly people. I know they are not all like this but it is a triat I am seeing more and more. Not just with my FIL but with others around his age in various degrees of health.
It has came to the point that if I do meet a senior like I knew 30 years ago, I am in awe. I am reading more stories in the news about seniors killing one another in murder-suicides, seniors killing inlaws (one recent story in our own city) and seniors killing grandchildren. Yet amongst these stories, I am reading more about children fighting terminal cancer who are starting charities or finding ways to give back to others. Many of these children if they do survive will be left infertile from the treatments. And older children and teens are more perceptive than people give them credit for.
Maybe we need to ask ourselves why seniors are given a free pass to be so bitter. Why have the jobs, homes, children and grandchildren not be enough for them to be grateful? And many are living 15-20 years older than their parents. I see so many kids grateful with a stuffed animal and have seen personally and read personally many adults who snarl and curse at the adult child who does everything for their parent while they are demanding more. Read the stories on this forum alone to see the hatred displayed to many of the caregivers. Yes, not all are that way but whew, the stories on here alone -- well, many of them make my FIL look like a choir boy.
If people have a chance, look at some charities working with kids and read the journals that parents put up online with their struggles. It will let people see both sides of the coin and really makes you sit an think about how the elderly handle things.
Facts are facts...it's hard to be bitter about something you never knew or had. Children don't have the mental and emotional capacity to know what they are going to miss, they can't process it like adults can. Seniors on the other hand are fully aware that they USED to be able to do things they cant' do anymore, they know they have nothing to look forward to, children have some hope...they COULD find a cure, they MIGHT have a treatment, they COULD get a transplant and if they do, they MAY have decades and decades to live...no one is going to find a cure for old age, death is coming and time has run out on them, there will never be a chance to live their dreams, never be a chance to do what they wanted to do...there are no more 'coulds' or 'mays' for them. And people view them with contempt...'they've lived too long' or 'old people USED to be nice'...well, old people USED to stay home with their families...old people used to be honored...
We're all going to be old, God willing, it behooves us to extend the grace we want to recieve..
So, why not be MISERABLE and make everyone around them miserable? Then they have used their remaining time consistently with the rest of their life.
Children are INNOCENT. They are closer to the Angels. They know they didn't do anything WRONG. They are always looking for a TREAT because they are GOOD. They deserve it.
To retain the qualities of childlike GRACE and hope takes perspective beyond the end of one's nose.
Christina W you got my point exactly.
And let's remember, until a set of parents recently went to court, those transplants that children can now receive would go to an older person before the ten year old. So thank God some parents finally got tired of the age discrinimation and went through the court system.
Again, I think we dismiss children as unintelligent or lacking emotional or mental capacity to understand what is going on around them. Many children who have been sick for years grow up mentally and emotionally very fast because they are constantly surround by adults.
There is a huge different between stage four cancer of a child who has their entire life in front of them and someone wanting a "cure" for old age.
If they have not lived their dreams or had a chance to do what they wanted in 80 or 90 years then another 80 years won't help them much now would it?
The 120 plus people I mentioned that I volunteered for were not with their families. THey wer in a nursing home.
And yes, older people used to be honored before the change. The elderly poplulation used to do things worthy of being honored and give young people something to look up to. Now we are surround by people who feel entitled to blow their money, never save for that rainy day and expect their adult children to quit their jobs, take bankruptcy and kill themselves because they feel entitled. The stories on this forum are enough to break anyone's heart.
We have a spiritually and morally bankrupt generation that as Christina W said are miserable and intent on making everyone else the same. And yes, I know there are exceptions. And if you read long enough on this forum, you see many of these elderly people never were nice and that is why they are miserable now.
It would have been awesome to have writings from caregivers from generations past. You are correct that regardless of family size, there is always one child doing the caregiving. My grandparents had two and it fell on my mom. My great aunt had eight children and it fell one one.
My dad used to say when he was a kid, an elderly person was in their 60's. I remember the first time I read about the woman who gave birth at 70. Medical science is a blessing and a curse.
And the mentoin of the lady living in her car. That is just heartbreaking. Just when I think I have read one of the worst situations on this forum, another gut wrenching story comes up.
And your ramblin' mood is just fine. ;)
Yes, we all are just holiding on to our own little piece of drifwood in the ocean. Some are waiting for the storm to pass, some are afraid to sink and I think some are praying to sink so it will all be over. Sad isn't it?