4 YEARS, 5 DEATHS AND 4 POWERFUL CAREGIVER LESSONS

caregiver lessons4 YEARS, 5 DEATHS AND 4 POWERFUL CAREGIVER LESSONS

(These caregiver lessons are reposted from my Sixty and Me article.)

I’ve decided to just come out and say it. The last four years of our lives have sucked! ‘Our,’ as in my wife, Kathy, and I. Here is a rundown of events…

In December of 2013, Kathy’s brother passed away in a tragic accident while working on his car. He was 62. The same day he passed, my sister was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer. She passed in less than a month on January 15, 2014, at age 66.

That also made me caregiver to mom, who we had to relocate from Florida to North Carolina at age 92. Later that year in August, Kathy’s father passed. In June of 2016, my mom passed. And in January of this year, Kathy’s mom passed. Whew!

Here are some observations and lessons. Call them caregiver lessons.

Even When You Think You’re Prepared to Be a Caregiver, You’re Not

Caregiving is an immersion. I believe it’s similar to shampooing – lather, rinse, repeat. There is a daily grind of routine that eventually robs you of your own time and health.

Kathy had it worse. She had to travel to Philadelphia for stretches as long as six weeks. I had mom 15 minutes away. Yet, both moms had eerily similar schedules.

There was a certain day for the hairdresser. There was a schedule of doctors’ appointments. There was grocery shopping day and designated days just to spend time together.

It soon becomes apparent that your life has stopped. You’re not exercising, work is suffering, and your overall mental state declines. As someone who works in the field, I thought I was prepared. And my wife is such a great project manager. Still we were overwhelmed.

The pure logistics were dizzying for us. In my mother’s case, after my sister’s death, we had six weeks to find a place and move her.

Lesson One

When you are thrust into a caregiving situation, to avoid going crazy, just jump in and do, respond and act. Truly, don’t think too much about it. There will be plenty of time later.

Lesson Two

You do have to make time for yourself. Tend to your health. Plan alone time. Get your other work done as you can. Yes, it’s hard to do.

Post Caregiving Traumatic Stress Syndrome

This may not be a term in the medical lexicon, but it exists. There is PTSD for caregivers. In many ways, you are coming out of battle or multiple battles after someone passes.

It is a battle of consciousness, “Did I do the right things?” and a battle of guilt, “Wow I have all this free time now!” This is when a lot of reflection kicks in.

Lesson Three

You are (and we were) blessed to have been able to spend so much quality time with our aging parents (though unfortunately for us not our siblings who passed). Caregiving if you look at it is an opportunity to grow and learn.

Lesson Four

We are far more resilient that we realize. Ultimately, after every passing in our family, my wife and I look at each other, shake our heads, and wonder how the hell we got through it all. What you come to realize is we have far more resilience than we think, and that can serve us for future challenges in our lives.

I certainly hope readers will never have to experience so much grief in such a short period of time. Know that when your time comes to be a caregiver, you will step up, you will get through it, you will grow from it, you’ll be stronger from it, and you will have been blessed because of it.

Are you now or have you been in the past a caregiver? What challenges and lessons have you learned from your caregiver experiences? What caregiver lessons can you share? Please share them in the comments below.

Key to Multitasking Effectively and What It Means to Brain Health-Video

Effective Multitasking Can Be Learned

Although “multitasking” is a popular buzzword, research shows that only 2% of the population actually multitasks efficiently. Most of us just shift back and forth between different tasks, a process that requires our brains to refocus time and time again — and reduces overall productivity by a whopping 40%.

New Tel Aviv University research identifies a brain mechanism that enables more efficient multitasking. The key to this is “reactivating the learned memory,” a process that allows a person to more efficiently learn or engage in two tasks in close conjunction.

“The mechanism may have far-reaching implications for the improvement of learning and memory functions in daily life,” said Dr. Nitzan Censor of TAU’s School of Psychological Sciences and Sagol School of Neuroscience. ”

The research, conducted by TAU student Jasmine Herszage, was published in Current Biology.

Stiltz Home Elevators – Where Mobility Meets Style

home elevatorsHome Elevators – More Affordable and Needed Than You Think

(The following is a paid, sponsored blog.)

Ageing is inevitable, but why do it awkwardly when you can do it exceptionally!

Pennsylvania-based home lift brand Lifton is leading the charge with its groundbreaking residential elevator, specifically designed to break the status quo of old-fashioned stair lifts and rock the world with its sleek, stylish and problem-solving home lift.

The Lifton offers a fantastic travel experience. It doesn’t take up space on your stairs, it is not noisy and it is multi-tasking – carrying you, your laundry, your luggage and more, whenever you desire, at the touch of a button.

Installed in around one day, this elevator means you need never take the stairs alone again and carries two passengers up one floor in under 30 seconds.

Whisper-quiet, the Lifton Home Elevator by Stiltz has a compact footprint and is modular, so it can be installed in almost any location around your home.

The Lifton virtually ‘disappears’ from sight, when located upstairs, leaving only two slender stilts in view. And when downstairs it leaves a floor plug behind to block the ceiling opening. This floor plug is safe to stand on and you can even place your original floor material back on top so it doesn’t affect the aesthetics of upstairs.

And why should a practical mobility solution be boring and bland? The Lifton elevator is elegant and attractive with a grey exterior and neutral interior. Soft blue LED downlights activate when a user enters the cabin and there is a full height light curtain which senses when all passengers are safely inside.

The elevator uses a hold-to-run button inside so you are in complete control of each journey. Want to know how to install one of these home elevators? Click on the link.

Prepare for Aging – Sooner is Better – Smilecast 102

Prepare for Aging – Sooner is Better

When it comes to issues regarding growing older, most people don’t want to talk about it. Yet we must because when you prepare for aging sooner in life – physically, emotionally, financially – you can avoid a crisis later in life. How you take care of your health when you are young impacts how you age. I see many people in nursing homes who got there not because age caught up with them but because they did not keep up with themselves. This and more on Episode 50 of The Aging Experience’s Smilecast.

caregiver summit

null

null

Contact

4contact_anthony_button

Senior Smilecast (Podcast)

Free Caregiver Sur-Thrival Guide –

Free Caregiver Sur-Thrival Guide

Want to know how to turn caregiving from a burden to an opportunity? Sign up for our newsletter and receive this free 55-page guide as well as a white paper that can guide your community and health providers in becoming dementia friendly. It's not about surviving caregiving. It's about thriving!

30 Day Caregiver Support Program

Aging Insider

aging insider-1-300x300px

SixtyandMe.com

Caring Champtions

Top Senior Site

Top Senior Site

Purple Angel

purple angel

Sharecare With Dr. Oz

Boomer News from Alltop