Aging Parents and Role Reversals
This is the day you thought would never happen. Your roles in
life are reversing. Your trying to make decisions for yourself
and your Aging Parent. What will be best for them without
altering your life too drastically. How do you keep up the pace
and ultimately please everyone around you? You are not alone in
life, you have a family, significant other, a career to think
about. You want to balance everything to keep everyone happy and
life as normal as possible. Think again! Those once a week
visits or daily phone calls aren't enough anymore. Your parent
needs care, the real kind.
The care includes making sure they eat, that they take their
meds, that their money isn't being floundered away on TV
shopping. You have siblings that think Assisted Living or
Nursing Facilities are awful and they don't want to put Mom or
Dad in one even though they also don't want to help out. How do
you cope? How do you deal with this situation without alienating
every member of your family?
First understand, it's not about you. What I mean by that
statement is that it is not about guilt and what some think is
the "Right thing to do". It's not about hanging on to someone
that they used to be. They are an elderly person in need of
constant care and attention. If you need a dose of growing up,
this situation will make it happen whether your ready or not!
Start with their doctor. Have an appointment to discuss the
faltering health of your beloved parent. You can also check into
the hospital that their health care is associated. Every
hospital has an elder care group of some type. The medical
coverage will also have affiliations with elder sourcing.
Between the doctor and the medical coverage group, you may be
able to determine the types of help and living style your
parents current status requires. Keep asking until you have the
best situation for all concerned. It may be as simple as an Aide
visiting once or twice a day to help with showering, dressing,
meals and meds. Their health may need more than that and the
visiting nurse or doctor's office is the place to apply the
concern. The best word to learn to help an elder parent is the
same as if your infant child were being cared for and that is
SAFETY. If safety is not at the level necessary, keep pushing
until you get the help you need.
It may take you time to uncover everything available to your
parent to help with this care process but trust me, it will be
worth it in the many years elder care can stretch out to be. It
is best to discuss with them all their health and medical,
financial and personal situations before that day arrives. When
they are older the best thing you can give them is you. Spend
quality time instead of stress time. Have them over for a day
and dinner instead of needing to pawn them off on someone else.
The resentment builds if you do this alone and there are many
really good care facilities to take that burden off your
shoulders.
Safety and honesty is what makes those later years a good memory!