Caring for Elderly Parents and Loved Ones
Caring for your parents and loved ones is one of the most important jobs you will tackle. Here are some steps you can take to make the job manageable and get the best outcome:
• Talk with your parents about the importance of working together as partners in meeting their needs. Your parents are probably concerned about being a burden and losing control of their lives. Talk openly about the issues and agree on ground rules. Establish limits so your parents don’t form unrealistic expectations.
• Make a list of what needs to be done and then plan for it. Your parents and others who will take on key responsibilities should be involved from the start. This organized approach puts you in control and reduces the stress that comes from loose ends and surprises. It ensures that your parents get all the assistance they need. And, back-up plans are critical. In fact, being available for back-up is a huge role that hopefully someone will be willing to play. Be sure to write down your plans and schedules, and give all those involved a copy.
• Don’t accept excuses without suggesting other tasks a person could do. A sibling who lives far away can still help with jobs such as bills, doctors, seeking out local agencies, or initiating phone visits. People with childcare responsibilities can still cook meals or bring the children along for visits and outings with their Grandma. Children can even help with yard work and house cleaning.
• Contact your community and other nonfamily sources of help.
Approaches to consider: Ask a parent‘s friend to pick up groceries or get books from the library, a neighbor’s child to adopt your parent as a grandparent, or a local teenager to help with yard work for a manageable fee. See if a civic group can provide volunteer home repair or transportation services. Ask the paper carrier, a barber, or an apartment superintendent to call you if anything seems wrong. Ask the post office if there is a program in your parents’ area for mail carriers to look for problems and check on older residents.
• Hold family meetings.
Approaches to consider: Limit participation to siblings or others directly involved in care. Bring in distant family by phone. Choose a neutral party to moderate if necessary. Draw up a clear agenda for each meeting, and agree on rules of conduct—don’t interrupt, stick to time limits, clarify differences, avoid argument, stick to the facts, and focus the discussion on how to care for your parents.
• Involve your spouse.
Approaches to consider: Clarify your responsibilities concerning both sets of parents. For example, do you both take care of only your parents, or do you help with both sets of parents? Will you both go with each other to visit parents? Be specific about how your spouse can help, and suggest particular tasks. Thank him or her for their efforts. Recognize that your responsibilities also affect your spouse, and encourage him or her to talk it out. Your marriage is a priority—keep it that way.
• Involve your children.
Approaches to consider: Be honest with them about the situation. Take time to listen to their concerns. Encourage their questions and answer these thoroughly. Spend time doing something fun with them, and ask for their help—teenagers can drive Grandma to the store, and even a toddler can make her feel loved.
For help deciding on care for your elderly parent or loved one, call Senior Helpers (636) 695-3140.
