Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Death by Chocolate. Sounds like a good name for a movie.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Just do the opposite of what the doctors tell you to do?
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Well, Gershun, you'll probably be the most fragrant person when you're ready to go!
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Yes, bring on the Big Mac's, greasy fries, chocolate. Hell, I'll bathe in the chocolate.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

I'm in......Beef jerky, Big Macs, Cheap vodka and Marlbourghs......I'll go down in a glorious fog of fat, alcohol and nicotine. Are there nursing homes that allow smoking? Well why not?
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

I find them both rather depressing...I was 39 when my Mom moved in , that was 14 years ago... I envy others who just go through their life only caring about themselves.. I find it hard to listen about their minor ailments.. I want to say "try waking up every day and having death be the first thought in your head.. If Mom's not awake I of course get nervous that " today is the day"...
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

Yes, GA or go to Denny's and order their Grand Slam breakfast every day. Then off to Starbucks for a double, triple foam macachino with extra whipped cream.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Gershun, first entry for your new thread could be "eat at McDonald's!"
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

Maybe we should start a group demanding that drug research companies start researching ways to not live longer. If the mouse dies we want that drug. I guess we could all just refuse treatment. Let our cholesterol run rampant. Smoke and drink till our lungs and livers just explode. I've got an idea for a new thread. Ways to not live till we are feeble and dependent on others.
Helpful Answer (36)
Report

Sorry, kind of skimmed. Today was not a good day. Woke up to a mess in Mom's bathroom all the way out to her chair. Took me from 9 to 12 to clean it up and her too. We had a small area rug we just thru out. I could have cried and I don't think she has an idea what happen.

No, I don't want to do this for the next 10 yrs, Moms 87. I'm 66. I just don't have the energy. I'm glad there are others that feel the same.

Really, don't think our parents felt they were going to live this long. Back in the 60s the life span was 65. We have taken steps to invest our money. I don't expect our daughters should have to quit jobs to care for us.
Helpful Answer (23)
Report

Garden, I'm working up a title. Something like: A FEW OF PEOPLES FAVORITE THINGS THAT REALLY P...S ME OFF!!
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

PS - have you started a few of my not so favorite things or a complaint thread yet? I've been watching...watching...
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Windy, well said, especially about the practice of searching for the low cost countries to produce goods.

However, think what this does for the third world and emerging market countries: how many of those with whom we've had physical, human rights or intellectual conflicts are now trading partners? I vaguely remember a tongue in cheek movie about a small country that initiated conflict with the US so that after the war was over they could be the recipient of Marshall Plan type assistance.

I'm not opposed to global commerce but the competitive advantage has become not so much a commodity issue in terms of goods and service, but rather of wages....lowest cost wages, regardless of the working conditions or the toxicity of the products. How many times have Chinese products been identified as contaminated? How many times have the Chinese hacked major computer systems?

Yet Chinese junk is still sold in stores.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Carla, it is in fact often difficult to get low or even reasonable cost services for the elderly. It's a vulnerable population, and can be exploited.

Occasionally, fortified by chocolate, I watch the local city council hearings but can never tolerate more than a short time because not only of the attitude toward citizens but because of the attitude toward seniors.

Once an elderly woman, probably in her 80's, asked for assistance in finding someone to care for her lawn, having been cited by the overaggressive code enforcement people.

This woman was trying to find a way to comply, yet she met with indifference and even what I considered an insult when she was told by a council member that residents have one day after receiving a violation notice posted on their door. If the lawn isn't mowed in that one day, a citation is issued and the resident may have to appear in court for failure to keep the lawn below 6" in height. If she still hasn't been able to have the lawn mowed, the city does it and bills her. And of course they don't hire individuals with lawn mowers, they hire services with the tractor mowers.

One of the council members, probably in her 50's, emphasized that they intend to adhere to these restrictions, then made ludicrous suggestions to find assistance - none of the suggestions were even based on common sense. It was clear that she has NEVER been in the position of having to hire someone for help.

It really angered me to see how this resident and others have been treated, but they're not a population with a large clout in small geographic areas.

Maybe what we need is an Elderly Population Union!
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

Regarding the economic questions of old age, we, and our parents are the last generations of Americans that had company funded health care and pensions. Not everyone certainly, but lots of us did. That's all over now with the globalization of the economy and the never ending "Race to the bottom" of corporations, seeking the lowest possible wages and the least amount regulation around the globe.

Think about our kids, and grandkids. College debt, working two or more jobs at low wages and zero benefits, living at home because rent and house payments are simply not possibly. These kids are hardly going to be able to support themselves much less aging parents.

All while state legislatures are gleefully cutting any health, education and social services and busting up what little is left of unions.

So as us Boomers b*tch and whine, I'm glad I'm not 24 and working at Walmart, Starbucks, and the 7-11 all at the same time with a worthless college degree that left me 100 grand in debt.

Sorry to be such a Debbie Downer, but hey, someone has to counter the Few of my favorite things thread........
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

Even if there is money to hire people to come in to help our parents, or for them move into the most plush retirement home, we find parents who dig their heels in to even part with one dime.

My parents are that way, for over 6 years I was their driver and it got to a point where I started to get panic attacks driving. Hello, we have senior citizens driving older senior citizens on crowded busy roads, what's not to understand? I know, I should have set boundaries when I first started to drive them, but I thought it would be a year or two, not going on 7 years.

Anyway, to get back to my point of elders not wanting to open up those stock portfolio's, my parents could have easily afford a full-time chauffeur. Nooooo, only I or my sig other were allowed to drive them. Heaven forbid a stranger get behind the wheel of their car.... [rolling eyes].

Dad keeps telling me the money will be my inheritance that's why he and Mom don't want to spent it.... and lately I've been telling Dad "You and Mom will probably outlive me, so go ahead and spend it". They look at me like my hair was on fire, they still don't understand as they never took care of their own parents.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

LastOne - when I made the remarks about planning and saving, I was not talking about nursing home care. You are right that almost nobody has that kind of disposable income, or could ever have it no matter how long or how hard they worked. But I think most people could save a few dollars here and there, even if it means working until 65 or 68 instead of retiring at 55 or 58, and not end up in old age barely able to pay their monthly bills. Plus many of our grandparents were savers and left our parents with an inheritance when they passed on. That money could and should have been put away for a rainy day unless needed for genuine emergencies during our parents' lives.

I think for most people, the initial and maybe longest stage of old age involves relying on others for a lot of instrumental tasks that they could previously do themselves. Things like cooking, cleaning, driving, home maintenance tasks. Most of these tasks could be done by any set of able hands, but adult children are often tasked with them because there's no money to hire anyone, even if the adult child is elderly or disabled themselves. If our parent had an extra thousand bucks a month, it could pay for maybe 50-100 hours per month of this kind of help, which would take an enormous burden off the adult children.

I don't really mind doing the kinds of things for my mother that depend on our relationship as mother and daughter. Doctors' visits, hand-holding during illnesses and medical procedures, emotional support. I mind having to do the huge amount of gruntwork that gets dumped on me every week, especially now that I have a badly arthritic foot that hurts a lot if I have to put weight on it too much.

Unfortunately, it's very hard to get free or subsidized help with these instrumental tasks, at least in my area of the country. I've tried. I think this is the problem that a lot of people are having during the bulk of their parents' old age.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Shaddy - EXACTLY . Same here. same with my parents... and I would like to walk into the woods to die and feed nature, like the ancients did. When it is time for pets to die, if they can they walk away and hide- I swear that is what my mother is trying to do... It is what I would want to do, but Noooo, these days they hole you up and keep you alive...
I hate it when people ask me "what about when it's your turn, who will take care of you?"
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

I think we all have our own unique triggers. It helps to recognize them and not shoot anyone verbally or physically when triggered. Seeking to live fully in the present does help. Just because a bird flies into our head does not mean we have to let it build a nest and have baby birds there.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

Yes we do hold each other up. I find that trying to help other people get through tough times helps me as well. I think I'm making progress and then something comes along that reminds me so much of my Mom my heart just aches. One day at a time..........
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Gershun, you are right. I need not dwell on the future....I need to learn to live for the day and rejoice in it. I will get there!

As for the site being sad, oh yeah! After I lost my parents, I posted maybe once or twice. Then I deleted my account. I wasn't coming back. (whatever).....Then slowly I began coming back, maybe trying to find answers or maybe be with people who understood. The site wouldn't let me sign back in under the same name and password....but I was hoping someone would remember me. We hold each other up!
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

site not sight :)
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Shaddy its hard I know. Sometimes I wish I'd never found this sight cause of all the sad stories that really don't have a happy ending.

Feel happy that you were able to care for your parents and as far as what the future holds. Well I've decided I can clench my fists and freak out about whats going to happen or just live in the moment. I figure I'll just try living in the moment cause the alternative is to spend each day dreading my old age which is going to come no matter what I do. And it might not. I might get killed crossing the street tomorrow. So why worry about something that may never happen. Thats how I get by anyways.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

My Dad lived to 93 and my Mom lived to 90. Good genes on both sides of the family except for the dementia on Mom's side. My Dad's sister died at 97, she was a widow and lived alone...she had a stroke and died that night....after mowing her yard all day. I have another aunt that soon will be 90....lives alone, takes NO medication, walks daily,,just get confused at times.

I was raised by 2 strong hard working parents. I watched them only eat the right foods, do exactly what the docs said and plenty of exercise. My Mom loved crossword puzzles (the hard ones) and my Dad loved his Braves playing baseball. They chewed gum and blew bubbles all thru each season of baseball. Even wore their Braves hats.

I watched the begin to go downhill.....because when dementia began working on my Mom, it also affected my Dad. As she went down, so did he. These 2 strong people were suddenly very humble and weak. They would freak out if someone called to try and get money, they would freak about something simple coming in the mail. It began a role reversal that I never planned in my future. My Mom would tell people that she used to be the Mom, but now she was the daughter and I was her Mom. That would just burn me a new one! But......later on, it became true. I had to make the decisions for both of them...pay their monthly bills, handle their appointments, handle their medical issues and medication. They both depended on me for everything.

I lived right next door to them, so I could be at their house in a matter of seconds if anything was wrong.....I did this for several years as well as working full time. When Mom got worse & my Dad was following.....I went to part time. It was during this time I was diagnosed with Macular Degeneration. Just another little stress factor to add on to an already growing factor. Then came the day I had to be there full time for both of them.........that lasted for 2 years and then my Dad passed and my Mom followed 5 months later.

Will I ever be the same? NO Have I changed? YES
I wonder how I will change. I saw my parents live right, eat right, get plenty of exercise and love each other to the end.
And I ask myself.....FOR WHAT? FOR WHAT? TO LIVE LONGER???? FOR WHAT? Now if I could be healthy and strong like my Aunts, I wouldn't mind. They lived alone...and didn't depend on anyone.
Now......I sit and wonder, as my eyesight keeps fading, what is going to happen to me? I don't want myself to be a burden to my son or to my husband or to ANYONE!

Enough to where I have told them to lead me to the garage, give me the key and make sure I know how to turn it on....then GOOOOO AWAY...so I can go away on my own terms....Well, neither my husband or my son agrees to this...but I do not want them to go thru this....I never want them to feel these feelings that I have dealt with or the emotional merry go round that you can never exit.

Be the same????? NEVER!
Helpful Answer (22)
Report

Education is the key to getting ahead. My gosh, we have free public education for the first 12 years, yet in today's world it is not unusual to hear that only 50% of the students in large cities even graduate. Education isn't taken seriously here by many families as it is in other countries.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Hi GardenArtist,

With all due respect, my point is that the average American cannot afford to pay for NH care. We are a poor nation actually. I am not concerned about the students affording their tuition, but merely making a point about what it takes to save for your kids college fund vs saving $96,000/year for one person to live in a NH. Folks don't have the money to live their lives as our parents did and add to that equation saving for their demise in a NH so they aren't a burden on their children or our society. I think our health care system (insurance companies, Big-Pharma, and the docs are all in bed together collecting the cash). If you think for one minute that there will be a cure for cancer and kill the goose that lays the golden egg for the above group???? Don't think so.

"...There is 1% of the Americans that control 43% of the wealth in this country. "The average annual income of the top 1 percent of the population is $717,000, compared to the average income of the rest of the population, which is around $51,000." see Forbes

As to eating healthy, I'm in agreement with you. However, the same folks who create Bayer aspirin and other medical products are producing pesticide to spray our food crops, polluting our ground water with atrizine, and promoting the use of GMO crops. The neonics in the pesticides are killing the bees and is in our food. Hmmmm....bees are needed for pollination which in turn is needed for our crops to produce our food. How many of that prosperous population care about that? Lots of lobbying going on to keep folks in the dark about GMO's and that they are in our food and which foods.

I believe we need to buckle down ourselves and actually open our eyes to see what is going on in this world and this nation BEFORE it is too late.

What about the drugs that are managing the drugs that so many people are on. I just spoke with a PT guy who said the average person he visits is on more than 12 drugs and up to 25. How can your body know what to do with all of that poison? It is said that after about 5 to 7 drugs, you will need additional drugs to manage the symptoms that the 5-7 drugs are causing a person.

It's all about the money.

LastOne
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

LastOne, I've felt for years that financing a college education needs to be more of the student's responsibility. Each of my family put ourselves through college, including occasionally working 2 jobs when necessary.

And student loan grants need to be focused more on STEM and valuable, marketable careers so students can pay back the loans after getting jobs in fields that are needed.

As to eating healthy, there's been an interesting report that neonicitinoids have been discovered in food prepared for congressional folks. Maybe that will wake up some people to the danger of food that's not grown organically.

(rodalesorganiclife./food/study-finds-congress-food-laced-insecticides)
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Thats so true about us being spirits having a human experience. I think if more people could realize that the world would be a different place. There is a whole spiritual realm going on around us all the time. These old bodies of ours are only temporary but the spirit goes on forever.

Having said all that it sure sucks when these old bodies start to fall apart and it would be nice if we had the choice whether to prolong this earthly human experience or not.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

I think one of the toughest challenges we face is becoming more vulnerable and reliant on others for help. I lost my dad almost a year ago and even though it was really tough at times, there isn't a day when I don't miss him and my mom. As their only child, I had to hold up the fort, fight back my own tears and fears, and had to stay strong for them in order to ensure that they got their final wishes for their end of life - to remain at home, to be cared for and to be safe.

I feel pretty lucky that we had enough funds to get a little caregiver help, plus the hospice workers who helped me as much as my mom and dad. Some family members helped while others shied away. Seeing someone else in their last months, weeks and days of life isn't for everyone - it makes you look at your own death. It's inevitable. When my now husband and I buried my dad, it was just us and just wanted my dad (and my mom) wanted. Peaceful, private, and like a time-honored ritual you see in the movies where the hero is wrapped, sent out on a flat boat, then the marksmen shoot their flaming arrows into the night sky. It wasn't that dramatic, but it felt calm and honorable to the very core. Both of my parents left this earthly plane gently, with great dignity - that's what they wanted and that's what I want.

The most unconventional thing I did during my mom's last months was to get a hypnosis/regression session and it was a phenomenal life changing event. There's a saying that we're not humans having a spiritual experience, but we're spirits having a human experience. I really get that now.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

As far as planning goes, do most American's have $96,000/year disposable income for living at a NH in their elder years? I think our health care system needs some serious overhauling in the U.S. If putting a kid through college takes a bunch of savings for the parent for four years of post secondary education, and probably less than $96,000, how can a person afford long term care?

Health care might be a bit more affordable if the people of our nation ate responsibly and took care of their health and our insurance was a reasonable cost. Personally I end up paying $4,000 plus dollars to cover my husband's health insurance a year. That's disposable income I don't have. We haven't had to use our insurance. We also take care of our health, don't spend beyond our means either. 16 years ago I made $18,000 less per year and I had disposable income. Now living expenses are so incredibly high that I don't have that disposable income anymore - even making more money and I live even with less than I did then and do live responsibly still. Our petroleum thirst and that energy cost has driven up the cost of everything. Everyone seems to be jumping on the making the middle class dissolve into the less than, so all we have left is the "haves" and the have-nots" a push that I've seen politically since 2000.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter