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has actually been suffering through, alone.
Seems the other estranged family or siblings come into the picture many many years later when the elder is near death, uses manipulation to convince the elder that the caregiver does not love them or other lies while the care giver never finds out until after the death.
Sadly, many times family or non family members who know the dynamic of the family can step in manipulating the estranged family as well as master minding the coercion knowing the lack of competence of the elder and the nature of the distance between the family members using it to manipulate the situation, in many cases disinheriting the care giving child and getting themselves named into the will. Although obvious, it happens.
The caregiver at that point normally has only what little the parent was going to leave them yet the others walk in and try to take it even so they neglected the parent and did nothing to help all the years before, having lived their lives free of this trauma and having been able to financially stabilize their own life and are not in need of the monies but taking it from greed and a sense of false entitlement. The money motivates them to blindly fall into the deceit of the conspiring NON family member and sometimes not so blindly....idea of money can make it so they don't want to see the truth. Legally this has gone under the radar for years until about 5 or so years ago
M88
I think back to when this thread started back in the summer of 2015 how much has changed in my life.... my Mom passed due to a serious fall.... and my Dad decided two weeks after my Mom passed that he was now ready for a senior living facility. Now I am up to my eyeballs trying to empty out their house of 70+ years of "stuff".
Dealing with all that "stuff" now makes me want to live simpler with less stuff of my own [sorry, George Carlin]. And I want to downsize as my house is turning out to be too much to clean and, I swear, the yard keeps doubling in size every year :P
I have definitely changed in the way I view older people. I remembered the talk of the three 80+ year old men at the table about what they wanted if they should marry again -- a Christian woman young enough to take care of them who had her own money and would let him leave everything to his own children. All quid, no quo. What woman wouldn't want that?
Before being a caregiver, I trusted elderly people.
Be sure to cash in your chips before you go.
I trust No One.
My view of life has changed - I'm a better daughter, sister, mother and grandmother. I value life more. I value seeing a smile on the faces that I love. I cherish conversations with my father...and I find that I actually listen better. There are no "do-overs" when it comes to the end of life and I want no regrets in my heart. I want my father's last years on this earth to be surrounded by love and respect and comfort and peace - and if that means hours of my day are spent comparing adult diaper absorbency, so be it.
My children have the same values as my husband and I. I am immensely proud of them for their involvement in their grandparents' lives - and for going above and beyond for their Grandfather after my Mom's passing. Even if I do end up in a nursing home somewhere, I have no doubt that my children will be my stalwart advocates until I leave this earth. Seeing them in action in and around my parents these last few years has made that a concrete fact in my heart.
Ive since learned to pick my battles and accept the fact that stuff is gonna happen no matter how much I worry or plan. We've all calmed down a great deal since I quit trying to impose my will on them.
I feel as you do.
I bought book(s) on caregiving, and had no time to read them.........duh!!!!
Pulled them closer to me and have one right here on top of the desk... some information is helpful. Some not so much........
Actually, so much is a matter of common sense.
What is VERY TOUGH is caring for parents who hated you growing up, or never cared about you 'really', or ignored you, treated you awful or even abused you. I know somebody first hand that had to care for her dad, and they had never had a father/daughter loving relationship.
This person did care for the dad, till his last breath, at home, in her arms. He had Alz. and was very abusive and violent........at the end.
It is hard to at that late date in life to feel "warm and fuzzy and be thrilled and happy caring for this ogre of person you don't even know!" But.... there was no one else in the cosmos to care for him.
I do admire all caregivers, I do! Now that I am one, I say to myself..........whoah! before mom came to live with us, we were living in "Disneyland". Now, this is the "real" life, and we got to muster up for it.
Like someone said in this thread a few posts ago, "no regrets".............that is my wish.
M88
So yes it has changed me in that respect
Being a Lone Ranger cargiver has good and bad points. I don't have any meddling relatives to fight with but then I don't have anyone to help shoulder the burden either.
It has opened my eyes as to what I want to happen to me as I age. I do not want to end up on multiple life extending meds and spend 20 years with no quality of life. My wife and I have done all the legal stuff, papers are all in order, the problem is, who on earth will administer our wishes about ageing and end of life. There's no kids, just the two of us.
The scary thing is, it's so easy to slowly slip into dementia, lose your ability to control your destiny and end up socked away in a nursing home for years. So what to do.....Hire a law firm as POA? Suicide pact? I now this sounds kinda grim but it's a serious problem for lots of folks with no family left.
I don't want to get into a political debate at all but when my own country's (UK) government CUTS money on tackling support for carers, cuts facilities to allow carers respite, forces situations where carers become increasingly isolated and dependent on their friends (like carers retain friends if they have had to move away from their own homes to care!) or on pills to manage their increasing depression using the view that it is an honour to care for your parents, then what is it saying to its nation? That carers are worthless? How can one expect communities to do other than follow their lead?
Yet the whole issue of the aged and the caregiving of the aged is or should be the hottest topic and top of the list. In 1950 in the UK the average life expectancy was about 70 (give or take) By 2010 it had risen to around 80 and it is similar for the USA and it now stands at 82 and rising. That means that a huge number of those people born in 1950 and who were expected to die within the next 4 or 5 years will still be alive for at least another 10 years on top. Bolt on the increase in population and it doesn't take a genius to see that our countries have not prepared themselves for the aging populations we are about to see explode.
Couple with that a growing decline in religious institutions (particularly in inner cities) and I can foresee a recipe for utter disaster if someone somewhere doesn't tackle it soon
When I said abuse I mean that governments use the construct of it being your duty to honour your parents by caregiving to avoid putting in place the infrastructure that will support that. When a caregiver is in isolation - THAT is the abuse not of the person they look after but of them. We have laws in this country that prevent working over 48 hours a week - UNLESS YOU ARE A CAREGIVER and then it matters not a jot how many hours you work