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?
My Mother and her husband circled their two little wagons when she was diagnosed with ALS and wouldn't let us kids in to help and refused to talk about it (closure, happy talks, things to remember, etc), because it made mom feel bad.
Honestly, at the root of it is no one wants to be a burden. No one wants to move into a place with other people. People they may not like. Caretakers that may not take care of them. We all can only hope and pray to die peacefully in our sleep when we're still of a sound mind and body. Sadly, it never happens that way. That stuff, is by and large, only in the movies.
It seems that most people assume that they will be hardy and healthy throughout their lives and then pass away quickly and painlessly in their sleep.
Then, of course, there are the financial aspects to consider. The fact of the matter is that very few people understand that planning for retirement needs to include planning for increased costs as health naturally declines, and especially those really big costs of in-home care, assisted living, or fully skilled facility care.
You've asked a good thought-provoking question, Llamalover47.
I wonder how many of us on this caregiver road have given much serious thought to what our own response will be to needing help in our later years.?
Suddenly she was forced to be the strong one, the single working woman with seven kids who had just had a mastectomy herself. She worked till she was 68. But even after she retired she held on to her independence like it was a bag of gold nuggets.
I remember one time when I went to her place and saw that she had fallen and like that stupid commercial could not get back up. I'm pretty physically weak and I was always scared of doing more harm than good trying to help her. She would always zig when I zagged. If it weren't so serious it would have been almost comical. So I called the paramedics. They came over and I had a good long discussion with them about my Mom and how she would refuse help. One of them even sat on the edge of my Mom's bed with her, put his arm around her shoulders and said, "Why don't you accept help Jean?"
I'm afraid I'll be like my Mom when i reach that age. I am a very private person. I don't even like to reapply my lipstick in front of others if I am in a public washroom. I always sit in the cubicle and fix my makeup. My Mom was the exact same way. Lord help anyone who needs to look after me when I'm far gone. I pray I'll die before I ever get to that state.
And then you have some that think you should be at their beck and call.
They think their children will take care of them and enjoy doing it.
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.