A Caregiver Looks Back After His Mother s Death
A Caregiver Looks Back After His Mother s Death Caregiver Life Balance
There were moments of , too. We never had a “huggy” relationship or even one in which we talked much. But as we sat silently in the car, sometimes for hours, on the way to visiting her sister or nieces or friends, she would suddenly say “Thank you for driving me” in a clear voice that brought a lump of emotion to my throat. Much later on, as we sat eating lunch together in the sunroom at her nursing home, in the days when her halting speech and fumbling fingers made it evident she was declining, I tried to show her through gently wiping her mouth and touching her shoulder that I understood her fears and sadness and would be there for her. Anniversaries are times for family caregivers to look back and take the measure of themselves. As the first anniversary of my mother’s death arrives, I’ve been reflecting on the nearly seven years of caregiving I provided for her before her death from complications of vascular dementia and kidney failure. I’ve been asking several questions: What did I learn about myself — good and bad — through this often difficult challenge? How does that matter to me in my life now? What lessons have I gleaned to share with those still in the middle of the daily grind of self-sacrifice and caregiving? Here are some thoughts.
A Caregiver Looks Back After His Mother s Death
On the first anniversary of my mother s death I take stock of what I learned
Courtesy Barry Jacobs Barry Jacobs provided care for his mother, who suffered from kidney failure and vascular dementia. There were times when we stared across the kitchen table at one another in tight-lipped anger during yet another argument. My mother bridled at my efforts to control her. I bristled at her resistance to using her walker and budgeting her money, even though her and financial woes were negatively affecting me and my family.There were moments of , too. We never had a “huggy” relationship or even one in which we talked much. But as we sat silently in the car, sometimes for hours, on the way to visiting her sister or nieces or friends, she would suddenly say “Thank you for driving me” in a clear voice that brought a lump of emotion to my throat. Much later on, as we sat eating lunch together in the sunroom at her nursing home, in the days when her halting speech and fumbling fingers made it evident she was declining, I tried to show her through gently wiping her mouth and touching her shoulder that I understood her fears and sadness and would be there for her. Anniversaries are times for family caregivers to look back and take the measure of themselves. As the first anniversary of my mother’s death arrives, I’ve been reflecting on the nearly seven years of caregiving I provided for her before her death from complications of vascular dementia and kidney failure. I’ve been asking several questions: What did I learn about myself — good and bad — through this often difficult challenge? How does that matter to me in my life now? What lessons have I gleaned to share with those still in the middle of the daily grind of self-sacrifice and caregiving? Here are some thoughts.