I've been pondering why our elderly parents and loved ones do not speak up when they require care and it comes time that they have declined in health and/or can no longer live alone. It has been said that the generation before most of us "Baby Boomers" was known as "The Silent Generation," a group born between 1925 to 1942. That may be part of why they do not speak up when they require help. Opinions?
I've seen so much of the situation where the seniors are ailing, struggling, in need of assistance and resist care, with various people that I know, that I think that I have gone overboard. I'm no where near ready, but, I'm already thinking of setting myself up so that I won't have to do it later. I HOPE that I'll be one of the few who doesn't resist or go kicking and screaming. But, will I change and become one who becomes a worry to others and a person who refuses help? I found that it's not so much helping our seniors who are in need, but CONVINCING them to accept the help. It really boggles the mind the hoops we have to jump through.
What I've noticed, even with seniors who do NOT have dementia, is that they have a distorted view of their situation. Their reality seems skewed. Things that seem reasonable, now they don't see. At times, I get frustrated. I wonder if being so positive, caring, platonic, etc., might be unhelpful. It might be more productive if we are blunt with our ailing seniors who need help. What if we told them they were driving us crazy and that their refusal to acknowledge and accept help and change was burdensome and annoying? Would they care? Are they able to fully appreciate what we are saying? Would it inspire them to be more proactive in voicing their need and accepting help?
What do you say to a senior with mobility issues who refuses to pay a professional house cleaner, because she just doesn't want to spend the money? Or who insists on walking up and down stairs to do laundry, when there are funds to pay for it to be done? When you explain how a fractured hip, if one should fall would be a terrible price to pay.......they shrug it off. So, yes. It is indeed a mystery.
Perhaps there needs to be a Public Service Campaign to address it, with actual seniors who have made some sound decisions as the spokes people.
to be strong. Going through the great depression etc. instilled a tough hide maybe?
Not to mention the fact that nursing homes have a horrible reputation. Who would want to end up in one of "those places".
These are my thoughts about this.
Wear it out,
Make it do,
OR DO WITHOUT” (emphasis mine).
The family members for whom I have cared were taught to do all they could for themselves WITHOUT COMPLAINT.
These dear folks weren’t “silent” without having a reason to be so.
Many of them went straight from being “seen but not heard” to being wage earners, because at least for the amazing Middle Class in our country during the Great Depression, there wasn’t the luxury of a whiney, protracted, decade long period to ”find yourself” before getting a job and adding to the resources of the family.
SEVEN of the eight surviving children of my grandfather and immigrant grandmother graduated from HS and went into a full time job the following Monday, and brought home the pay check to Mama as soon as it had been cashed, and DID THAT until the day they married.
Three of the seven never married, living at home until my grandmother died of Vascular Dementia at 81.
For the last several years of her life, my grandmother lived with sundowning, and her daughters took turns in her sad nightly vigils AND went to work EVERY MORNING, one commuting 35 miles one way, 70 round trip.
I am now the lovingly responsible caregiver for “the Baby”, who at 90 is the last survivor. By the time she found the voice she needed to speak for herself, the decisions she MIGHT have made had been largely lost to her, tendrils of dementia symptoms were already clouding her mind, and most of the decision making she might have chosen for herself had been lost to her.
I have the painful and difficult responsibility of attempting to manage her circumstances in the ways that most benefit HER.
I thank God that we are able to have conversations on her GOOD DAYS that help me discern what she might want for the rest of her life.
Sadly, I see many in her AL who have lost even more independence than she.
By the way “nursing homes” during the ‘30’s and on up until fairly recently were synonymous, and described as “Going up the hill to the poorhouse”. Yes, no one wanted to go there, and fewer made it to that age anyway.
Many times, I've had peers say, "Oh, my daughter says she'll take care of me." Or "I'll just move in with my son." Or other variations of "My kids will just have to take care of me."
My mind is saying, "Your daughter who spends 80 hours a week running a business with your help now?" Or "Your son whose wife you hate and who hates you?"
It's like a denial that bad things can happen. Well....bad things happen all the time, and not always to "other people."
I am truly an optimist at heart, with faith that God will support me through anything; but I believe I have a responsible part to play in my own destiny, and that includes not dumping my care on anyone who is handy.
That said, I am still thinking, "Does my lack of care that the floor hasn't been swept all summer mean it's time to move to senoir housing? But, I've never been an obsessive housekeeper...." and, on the rare occasions when I'm out after dark, "It's harder to see that turn-off than it used to be, and I was thinking about something else ...That's why I missed it." And, "I've left food out of the refrigerator overnight before, too; is it TIME....or not?"
I'd be happy to have loved ones point it out if/when they see problems in me, but 1) would they even notice or be willing to say anything? And 2) would I trust their assessment if they did?!?
We need a checklist!
And then you have some that think you should be at their beck and call.
Was a big mistake to let oldest come on property and should have known it was only to benefit him not help us.
Always telling us you should not take this med or that one, and we should do this or that, you should eat this way or that. Even got his sister to start telling us we should be able to save X dollars after hubby was awarded disability comp. from VA. Why so they could have it after we are gone?
I do not blame parents for not wanting to ask for help from their kids. Some might be great and others not.
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