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My parents, who are in their 90's, still live in a regular subdivision, in a 3 story single family house. Snow comes and the neighbors shovel out my parent's driveway.... neighbors bring the newspaper to the front door.... when Dad falls, there usually is a neighbor who spots him and tries to help. Where am I? Working because I am a woman of an era where we didn't get the high paying jobs, the big pensions, etc. because those jobs were given to men because women "usually get married and leave the company".... [sigh].
My parents have only Plan A which means I am there to drive them where ever they need to go, get their groceries, run errands. They could have easily afford a retirement community and wouldn't be so bored at home.
From what I have noticed, it is mainly the daughter or grand-daughter to be the caregiver. Why not the son or grandson? Why do we ask the girls to quit their jobs and not ask the boys? It's interesting the answers one get depending on what generation you ask.
My parents are pretty healthy for their age, I have a feeling they will out live me.
But we're just not able. We're trying to balance caring for our loved ones and raising a family, maintaining a career to save for our own future and having to look after our own health. Some of our loved ones require care that only a trained professional could give.
I don't want my husband and/or children to have to make decisions about what to do with me. I don't want my children to have to give up their lives or careers, or have to sacrifice their marriages or families to have to take care of me. I would be doing them a disservice. I want them to love me enough to take care of me by advocating for me. I want them to do what is best for themselves as well as for me. Pick out a good home for me and make sure the staff is taking proper care of me. That is how they can take care of me in my old age.
My MIL doesn't want to go to a NH and I don't blame her. I don't want her to go. But there may not be any other choice. Do I wish things were different? Absolutely!
As we're the second, third, fourth generation who can expect to live past eighty and ought to be getting the hang of things, I'm sure we're all making mental notes so as not to repeat our grandparents' and parents' mistakes. And I'm equally sure that when the time comes we will make different mistakes instead.
Build up a pension. Make future care directives and give copies to your family, friends and lawyer. Research your options well in advance. Do everything you can now to make sure others aren't burdened by caring for you in the future. But you have no idea how things will look or how you will feel about it when and if you actually get there, so always remember: if you want to make God laugh, make a plan.
I have told my daughter that I will have my place picked out and she can visit me once a week and must bring chocolate. :) She takes it as a joke, but I have told her that I am extremely serious.
She is an only child, unlike myself with 3 other siblings, but in the journey of taking care of my dad, I have become an only child. I do not want her to give up her life or time with her children (if/when that time comes) as I have done with her to have to care for me.
I am only in my early 40s and have taken steps to make sure that I can be taken care of by a caregiver (not my daughter) or in a facility. Caregiving for a parent is a hard life and while there are many rewards and laughter along the way, there is also a tremendous amount of stress that I would not wish upon anyone, especially my own child.
I'm not endorsing this option. I'm simply looking at the state of the economy and the fact that far fewer children, whose parents are boomers, will be in a financial position to care for aging parents. Parent's savings will be depleted by rising inflation, and unless things change, the standard of living for millions of our children won't be equal to or better than the standard of living boomers have today. This means new approaches to elder care will have to be devised to address "the new normal."
I think we have to make sure we have our legal documents in place, that we clearly state our wishes. If our children have to get involved, for any reason, they will know what our wishes are (in writing), and what checks and balances are in place to prevent unnecessary disputes and power struggles.
If you're lucky enough to be independently wealthy, you can buy whatever care you need. If not, you'll have to inform yourself regarding all the options out there, and be realistic about what you'll be able to afford and what level of care you'd be willing to live with.
None of us know what tomorrow will bring, but making a plan for our care that doesn't include our children looking after us is sensible. If your children can assist in some way, that's a bonus.
It's fine to plan in advance and have POA and updated will etc. but I still wonder what someone like myself who is single with no children is suppose to do when I am not able to do the day to day things of daily living that we all take for granted now. I may need home help before I need to go into a care home, so I worry who will set that up if I have dementia? A lot of things to think about for single people with no children.
My mother said that the breaking point comes when the loved one becomes incontinent, because it just gets too hard. I know lots of you do push right past that barrier, but that's what I'm using for planning purposes. That's when I will start trying to get my husband into professional care, and that's when I will tell my daughter to get herself out from under with me.
When men plan, the gods laugh. But we still have to plan.
I also dread the though of my son having to take care of me in my old age (now 63). I keep saying I'm going to write a list of instructions for how I wish to be taken care of in a facility, and just have him oversee that my wishes are respected, and I am not being mistreated. But of course, I have not done it yet! Verbally I have told him the basics. I've got the will done, but have yet to do medical and financial POA's for my son. Like many others here, I am too entrenched in caregiving to take time for my own arrangements - but it's on the list!
We have sat with our kids and made our wishes known, that we love them and trust their judgement and if we need care, they are to do what is best for us and move us to residential care and that we do not want them to be primary caregivers. We hope that we will be able to accept those moves without incidence...but so many elders stay in their home unable to care for themselves or make good choices and their children don't feel empowered to move them. Parents with impaired judgement aren't capable of making the decision and feel like the family should be helping with their care and property upkeep. The world has changed and families just don't have time or skill set for long term care providing.
We've empowered our children to move us against our will when the time comes. We've also enlisted friends to help our children do this if they are reluctant or unsure.
I will never burden my children with caring for me. I want them to live their life and just be my sons.
While many believe there are more options for the aging, I do not agree with those options. I am not a fan of nursing homes or anything like that, if I can do what my friend is doing. A friend of mine that has no children, she hires her someone to assist her so she can continue to live in her home.
I do not want to go to a home, but if that is what comes down to I won't a choice. I have no idea if my stepson's will step up to the plate, but right now they are a bit too selfish to care about anyone else.
So for me it will probably be the home or me hiring someone to care for me.
I am sorry but I am against nursing homes and hope that many of them will close down. I hope and pray we get back to where family matters to where people will go back to their roots and care for their loved ones. There are many cultures that believe in caring for their elderly and I would like to see this happen in the future.
To fortress, my biggest fight in caregiving is making sure Dad has control at all times. Just because he is so feeble and fragile, his mind is sound even if he garbles the message. It is frightening how quickly people want to shut him up in a nursing home. I agree with you, if I have a heart attack or cancer I am not fighting it. I will die with it. What my 91 year old Dad endures everyday, I don't want to happen to me.
Jeannie: I hear you loud and clear. We are grateful to you for all of you many helpful and well thought out responses to all on AC. We are all going to die of something and it is good to act on our own behalf to stay healthy, but there are so many people, children too, who through no fault of their own, face debilitating, chronic or terminal illnesses. I had a friend who was the director of hospice in my old home town. She thought a big old heart attack, dead before you hit the ground, was a pretty good deal.
As for us, we have long term care insurance too, but it won't be enough to take care of us. We need to get on with the will, POA, and health care directives. It's amazing that we have not done that, but the past 7 years have been taken up with my folks and the time just slips by. Good reminder for me. Going to call our attorney friend next week. No, I don't want my son or my granddaughter to take care of us. It's really such a difficult job and seems to come at a time when your kids are just reaching their stride or getting ready to retire.
Hugs to all. Cattails
But your post comes a little too close to blaming the victim for comfort, in my opinion. I think of my husband who took excellent care of his health (according to current knowledge and recommendations) and has outlived his family life expectancy by decades, only to develop dementia. And he felt cheated that his father and brothers got to die of heart attacks in bed, and he is faced with living out his old age dependent on the care of others. At what fork in the road did he make the wrong decision? His doctors and researchers sure don't know.
To answer annet's question for myself, I've taken out long term care insurance, although the amount is already too small to be meaningful. I've done the POA and Health Care Directive. But who has time and energy and money to do more than that? And I'm afraid the experience of caregiving someone with dementia hasn't inspired me to be super careful about my own health. My cardiologist lectures me and and I think of my husband wishing he'd had a heart attack. So if I take better care of myself I will live longer and have a better chance of developing dementia. And this is a good thing because ... ? Hmm.
My father in law passed away in his sleep - in the Catholic faith, this is considered a "blessed death" - justly received by one of the kindest men (outside of my father) I have ever known. He had crippling arthritis in both knees; suffered immense pain and worked until the day he died at 83. Never, I mean never complained. My father as well had numerous ailments and suffered the torment of a narcissistic wife. Never complained as well. So, my perspective of aging has seen both sides.
Aging is a part of life - I live with chronic pain so my perspective is also from this experience. I know what it is to lose a part of your life, to often be housebound, to miss out on some of my kids school functions, etc. etc. etc. and numerous social gatherings with friends, and not to torture my children with my pain. So, after having to listen to the constant complaining from my MIL and mother about "the aging process" after they lived quite wonderful lives, I know first hand that there is a choice on how you view what happens to you and you have a choice on how to deal with it.
I know dementia can distort the thinking of even the kindest person and cause them to actually change in demeanor and personality; and in this they have no control over it. This is heartbreaking, but more palatable as it is justified, rather than those that just take out their old age frustrations on their families.
In planning for my future elder years, the main focus will be taking care of myself to the best of my ability. My three beautiful daughters are never to go through (again) what they endured with their domineering, self-centered grandmothers. I'm not like their grandmothers in any way and I don't want my children to go through what I have had to undertake. I've already told them their is to be no guilt whatsoever in any decisions they have to make regarding my elderly years. In no way do I ever want to be a burden; it is not my style and certainly don't want it to be my legacy. I had children because I longed to be a mother and take care of them. That in NO WAY is the same thing as taking care of an elderly parent; especially a demanding one. I didn't have children for them to take care of me.
I don't regret the caregiving I have given and continue to give; but it has taught me that I don't want my children to have similar experiences...I love them too much and want more for them.