None of us want to become a burden to our kids like so many of the parents we read about here have. But I'll bet you that not a single one of these parents wanted to either and yet, here they are.
Surely there's something they could have done before they reached this stage that might have eased some of these burdens we're reading about.
In my case, I wish my parents had realized they would need the help of at least one of their three kids as they got older and moved closer to one of us. When mom got sick lived states away from any of us and it was hard on dad. We all had to stop our lives and take turns helping her "die" with dignity.
So when my husband retired, the first thing we did was move close to our daughter. We also have bought a lot nearby and have a 5 year plan to pay off our current home and to build a new smaller one level home on that lot. We plan on making this home as senior friendly as possible. In 5 years my husband will be in his 70s and I'll be 65...so hopefully we'll be doing this soon enough.
Hopefully some of us will take this discussion to heart and make an effort to take steps while we can to help ease our future caregiver's burdens.
So what do you wish your parents would have done in the past that might have made it easier for you to help them today?
NEVER EAT ANYTHING YOU CANT LIFT
DONT END UP AS THE STAR OF MY 600 POUND LIFE
LIKEWISE FOR THE SHOW, INTERVENTION
HAVE SEX ONLY WITH PEOPLE YOU KNOW
DONT DRINK ALONE UNLESS YOU HAVE NO OTHER CHOICE
CUT DONE ON YOUR SMOKING PRIOR TO HIP REPLACEMENT SURGERY
I try to set goals that are attainable
Wider hallways and doors, sinks with roll-under capacity for wheelchairs, landline connections in every room (including the bathroom), heated towel bars (as I believe they have in the UK and Europe), roll-in showers, outdoor access for wheelchairs w/o adding ramps....all these would help people age in place more safely.
I could foresee a wise, thoughtful and proactive builder creating a subdivision of adaptable homes such as these, but I think the majority of builders are still pandering to tv supported consumer goods and desires for hot tubs, pools, stainless steel appliances and granite counter tops, man caves, etc. as opposed to practical, adaptable homes that where families could age in place.
So sign those POA's and living wills now, get life insurance if you're young enough for it not to be a big financial burden, start saving money, size down, eat well, try your hardest to quit smoking/excessive drinking and gambling...and everything else everyone in here is wishing their parents had done. It will be good for you if you don't lose your wits, and good for both you and your children if you do...
I know...on some of these it's easier said then done, believe me. I'm 50 pounds overweight (quit smoking in 2005 and started eating instead). I'm working on trying to get it off but it's soooooo hard! I thought quitting smoking after 35 years was the hardest thing I'd ever done, but quitting eating is worse. I know, however, it will be better for my health now and well into the future so I keep on trying.
amygrace - the same with mother - she has had very good health and enough money to keep herself well but has one gripe after another and made my life and the lives of others h*ll at times - way too many times.
If only my mother had accepted she was getting older and made some effort to accept the help offered, and the walker recommended. If only my mother had tried to enjoy life and hadn't spent the last 30 years complaining, giving her daughters a hard time, and finding the glass half empty, when, in fact, she was so much healthier and more fortunate than 80% of others her age.
Dad apparently either had a policy only through work, &/or allowed his outside policy to lapse - either way, within 3 months of Alz dx & over a year since being laid-off (we now suspect he was fired), when cleaning out some papers, mom discovered that they had no LI policy on either. "luckily" due to dad's anti-social disorder, he has no friends, & no surviving family to come to a service. So his VA benefits to be interned @ Arlington Cemetery is fine; but my 64 yo post-heart attk mom had to find a policy to pay for a small service.
I have already looked into non-employer provided policy pricing, and have those companies on a list if needed if I should not have that benefit through my work.
Some of them didn't even have indoor plumbing or central heating; they suffered through the Depression and WWII. Pneumonia was a killer; it's been controlled for years. Who could have guessed that he/she would really live so long?
But we can gain from their experiences. And I think there is in fact a lot to be gained from evaluating what they could have done and do it for ourselves, NOW, so our own families aren't faced with what many of us have encountered.
I hope that doesn't seem condescending to other posters; it's not meant to be. It's rather an attempt to gain from experience, just as history could teach us so many lessons if we're willing to learn.
Dad became incapacitated two years ago and the proverbial "train wreck" has happened. I can't dwell on "would'a - should'a" it makes me sick when I do. Instead I have set my boundaries and only help as I am willing and able for my own health and sanity. Of course it's never going to be enough in my parents eyes but I have learned not to care about that.
Do I wish my parents had done things differently? Of course, but they didn't and I can't change that. I can only choose how I face today. Today I will do what I can but not at the expense of my own well being. I will do it with love and not allow guilt to push me into taking on more than is good for me. When I am able to do this I don't resent the poor choices my parents made, I don't even think about them.
Like most of us I wish my folks had paid more attention to their health. We are now paying the price for their lifetimes of horrible diet, no exercise etc. my mom has too many medical issues to list. I love my Mom but I think she took a short walk in 1968 and maybe ate a vegetable in 1972 but I could be mistaken.......
My folks didn't plan anything until both my siblings died suddenly within the last 6 years. I was then able to get the wills updated and a very broad durable POA which has saved my ass, as Dads dementia has increased. I would be so screwed now without that POA as I'm knee deep in the demented-stubborn-we don't need no help-elder care waltz.
My husband and I both have living wills and last wills and testiments.. we did them ourselves and had our bank notary sign them and put them into the banks safety deposit bank, which our daughter has a key to.
Golflady...that is so sad. I'm afraid if your mom were mine, rather then having her make our lives hell because she drank and wasted her money away, I'd have to get her on medicaid and put her into a nursing home if approved ... Life's too short as it is...why go through hell during the years that should be yours...you earned them! No doubt you're stronger then me.
The stress of my parents living there has aged me terribly and caused me numerous health issues. I am to blame, too, as I also enabled them to continue their lives there..... [sigh]
Now I am dealing with clearing out "stuff" so I can get that house on the market to sell, but all of this takes a lot of time. And my parents did very little updating in the past 30 years. Thankfully my Dad moved to Independent Living right after my Mom had passed.
Probably the worst moment of my life.
I've helped my folks for many years with too many things to name....but this was not the "help" I wanted to be responsible for.
Then I had to drive another 20 hours straight trying to keep my emotions at bay so I could get to her hospital beside & hold my father up through it.
I would never put one of my children in a position like that. My husband and I already have our Living Wills signed and on file with our attorney and our kids.
Now that house is an electrical fire hazard and the power keeps cutting off. Looking back now, I'm sure we enabled them to stay too long there because we essentially do everything, but now they're slowly accepting moving closer to us at a really nice ALF. I just hope and pray we pull it off.
A few other things I wish had or hadn't happened. I wished they hadn't gotten a reverse mortgage because when it sells the proceeds will go to the company and not their care, I wish my dad hadn't accumulated ridiculous debt to the point where he can't possibly ever pay it back and I wish they gotten long term care and saved their money. Mom was always good with money, but his pride never allowed him to turn it over for help.
Sometimes they look so dejected and depressed and I'm certain seeing their house and life crumble around them doesn't help. I hope that will change for the better once we get them out that H hole.