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My husband and brother have been able to get him up and in the car. I don’t want to do this anymore.

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Very difficult.

I am guessing that if your father won't use a walker, he won't react politely to the idea of a wheelchair?

It would be a great pity if he couldn't continue to enjoy his weekly restaurant outing, though.

Can the three of you present a united front and tell your father that you are getting a wheelchair to use to and from the car, and it's that or bust?

In the restaurant itself, for getting to the table, to the rest room or whatever, there are ways of supporting a person which a physical or occupational therapist can teach you. But it's really your father's co-operation that the three of you need to work on. I'm afraid you'll have to gang up on him.
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So agreeing with Countrymouse. Either he has to use the walker or a wheelchair or he doesn't get to go. It's just that simple. CM had a great idea of consulting a PT or OT for ideas.
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How about you get a fold able wheelchair and add a name sign on it.

Call it (something like)
(insert his name) rocket
(insert his name) the flying scotsman
(insert his name) up, up and AWAY!!!!
Something to do with the work he did or where he is from may be.

Tell him you now all have bad backs and cannot do the lifting to the degrees you have done.
We get more stubborn as we get older. I expect he is scared of losing what little he has left. Trouble is, without help he has already lost it.

Good Luck
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Brilliant! - Go-faster stripes! Streamers! Love the idea of making it Dad's Mean Machine.

Claiming that you youngsters are too decrepit and feeble is also extremely cunning. Fabulous ideas from Buzzy :)
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Although I didn't have the same problem, we did experience a wonderful side effect from using a walker and the portable oxygen concentrator:

People went out of their way to not only hold doors but offer assistance with the concentrator, getting in and out of the car and the restaurant booths. Once I was wrestling with getting the rollator in the back seat of my smallish car. Two young men (30's or so) came over, picked up the rollator and put it in the car. Never asked if I needed help, just took over.

People thanked my father for his service (he usually wore an AF cap) as we entered the restaurant, visited the buffet, walked back to our booth, and left the restaurant.

Other veterans thanked him for his service as well as initiated conversations.

Samaritans paid for our meals. We never knew who they were, but it was heartwarming that people reached out to help someone who was challenged in his old age, but still got out and about.
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My FIL was in much the same condition about 4 months prior to his passing. I was his primary CG, and hubby was recovering for about half that time from a serious shoulder surgery....dad wanted to eat out AT LEAST twice a day--it was one of his only sources of outside interaction--but it was exhausting for me. Get him to the coffee shop by 8 am---he'd get a ride home. Get him to lunch at noon, then dinner at 5. I put my foot down after less than a week. Got a friend to pick him up for the coffee shop and I made dinner every night with enough leftovers he could microwave lunch.

I am only 5'2". He was 6'4". If he fell, I had to let him go, no way I was going down with him. He was frequently bowel incontinent--and that was just gruesome, in a restaurant. I'd clean up what I could, and then tip the poor souls who had to "really" clean.

Finally, no matter what, I simply could NOT facilitate dad's wishes. I think he gave up at that point. If he couldn't eat out, or eat with us (45 min RT from his home everyday, up to 3 times per day) he wouldn't eat.
He never walked with a walker but did have to have oxygen on 24/7. If we had suggested a wheelchair he would have pitched a high holy fit!!

I do feel kind of sad, 14 years later, that I simply could not comply with his wishes to be 100% independent and eat out all the time--but when you are receiving 24/7 at no cost...and you're wearing your caregivers to a small nub of a person--you just cannot be that choosy. I just wish my DH had said something to be supportive to me in this time--he refused to ever deny his dad anything.

In respect--I do not know how I alone could have made it different, or better. I did make sure he got to the coffee shop everyday, and made sure he was eating healthy meals, and his wounds and healthcare were the best they could be, but he died a sad, depressed man. Not my fault, just sad.
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Be frank with him. Since he won't use a walker and has fallen the past 3 times, he can't go if he refused to use the walker. Then call his bluff when he refuses the walker while he is trying to go out to eat. It might take a couple weeks to figure out that you are serious.
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See if you can get therapy in to evaluate him. They will tell him he needs a walker and will fit him for the right one. He can get one thru Medicare. He may do what a stranger tells him. Otherwise, you all need to be firm and tell him no walker no outing.
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We had a similar problem, but instead of going to full-service restaurants, I switched to fast food or take out. Drive through, or pick up the food ahead of time, and then drive to a park, beach/boat dock view, or somewhere with a view. They still get an outing, but you stay in the car. Or sometimes we sat at a park picnic table. It didn't seem fair to the restaurants to take a fall-risk there. Total disruption of business and other diners if a fall takes place, somebody is likely to call 911, then you have a team of medics and everybody staring.
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Does he use his walker at the AL? Does he fall a lot at the AL? When he does fall, is it due to loss of balance, weakness in legs, etc.? I'd try to figure this out. I don't disagree with insisting that he use the walker or else he there's no dinner outing, but, I would check to see why this is happening. Does he forget? Is he convinced that he doesn't need it? I know that with my LO, she started refusing to use her cane, then walker, despite falls. As it turns out, she was forgetting why she needed it. Frequent instruction to use it, helped, but, if not, she would either forget or convince herself she didn't need it.
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Garden artist, that was beautiful! Thank you for your Dad's service.
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Do you think if he were told that if he were to fall you would have to call 911 for medical assist to get him up and make sure there are no injuries because you are no longer capable of lifting him would work?
I know that if my wife were to fall I just might have to do just exactly that.
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I doubt that he would go for it, but I purchased a Drive Medical Nitro Euro Style Walker Rollator, in Red and had it pen striped for myself. It doesn't look like the Medical issued ones. It is easy to load, and looks a lot cooler than the other ones. It is more expensive and it cost me more to have it pen striped. But, I love it and it is different from the "normal" walker.

Like everyone else says, you will have to just draw the line in the sand. You can't lift him and if he doesn't use a walker, you can't take him.
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Fortunately, your dad hasn't broken any bones or torn any tendons YET.

But the more falls he has, the greater the probability is that he'll have a fracture.
I don't think anyone wants that. So.......
As they said to us when we were small,"It's for your own good." Then refuse to go without a walker or wheelchair.

I'm sure ya'll would be kicking yourselves, when he's in the hospital for repair of a fractured ______, and in a lot of pain, then in rehab for 2-3 months. Then limited use of the broken part for the rest of his life.

And think how many times he would have missed eating out IF ONLY he'd used a walker or w/c.

That's how I'd present it.
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We had this exact problem with my FIL. Long story short, we told him that if he didn't use the rollator that we would not take him out because it was very unpleasant to go out with him while worrying that he was going to fall on his face or onto someone else and pull them down with him! We explained that he was a real danger to himself and others and that if he fell in a restaurant he would be taken to a hospital by ambulance. Now he uses his rollator.
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It is no longer HIS decision to not use his walker. Good grief. You have to take control.
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