A bad side effect of caregiving my parents has been that I am becoming more and more afraid of getting old. Watching what they have gone through has let me know I do not want to go through the same thing. It has made me hope that I check out of life before I get old.
I don't know if we'll be able to use hospice at home. My mother already has mobility problems and is too heavy for me to lift. She is also stubborn as a mule when she sets her mind to something. I have a feeling that if she ever does need hospice, it will be in a nursing facility where they will be able to physically take care of her better than I can.
Mom has been hospitalized 16 times in the last 18 months. This has given her an infection called VRE and MRSA infections. She has had hospital acquired infections that have turned into pneumonia more than once.
Seeing how much my mom suffers with all this makes me wish I would die young so I don't have to go through any of this.
as far as driving is concerned i will happily hand over the keys although i still like some freedom. I did buy my last new car last year. if i live to 85 i think that will be quite old enough to stiop driving. a while ago hubby thought we should consider moving into town so we could walk if we could no longer drive. i told him if i could not drive i certainly would not be able to walk anywhere. We long ago moved out of the family home so there are no sacred kids rooms left. i do like the independence of a single family home and i know neither of us would be happy with community living.We don't play well with others. Don't need anyone to tell me to go to the Dr it is just that I don't always agree with what they want me to do and although I am an old woman I still expect a proper diagnosis not "Yes the test was
abnormal but I can't find anything serious" you can come back if you feel you need to. In other words "go away and don't biother me" i seem to be full of piss and vineger this morning.
1) have done that
2) have a hearing enhancement device - now to remember to wear it all the time
3) food always tastes good :)
4) I am working on it. Mother "gave" me a lot of her "junk". This was no favour to me. and I am still getting rid of it. Thankfully my daughter is ruthless about stuff. She is a good person for me to consult.
5) Want to downsize, but sig other likes what we have. He is younger than me, has more energy and likes keeping lots of "stuff" :(. Can we average our ages and get a few more years? When we move we will have a barn or large storage shed somewhere, and his "stuff" goes there.
6) Agreed abut driving. Though I am still a good driver, I am thinking of not getting another car when this one goes.
7) I am independent to a fault.
8) It's OK to have a pain, just don't be one. I find I have to make new friends much younger than me. The long standing ones are dying off.
Do I pass?????
There are many things that I have learned. 1. If your adult kids tell you that you need to see a doctor, then you need to see a doctor. 2. If no one can hear you, it isn't wax in your ears. Get a hearing aid. 3. if everyone else is enjoying the food and it doesn't taste right to you, it is YOU, not the food or the cook. 4. Throw out junk. Just because you like it, does not mean that anyone else does. 5. Down size. If you are 80 and still in the house, that you raised your kids in, it is time. 6. If your kids don't think that you should drive, they are right. Hand them the keys. 7. If you can do it yourself, do not ask someone else to do it. And 8. Do not say so and so doesn't come visit. Call them and ask. Then, do not once mention your aches and pains. Do a puzzle or get some coffee.
May I first identify myself as the 'someone' you referred to in your message.
I would still thank you for willing to answer my question, and for detailing the activities that were found to be most enjoyable.
True, aging is a process, with pros and cons associated with it. The PROCESS we all go through is however NATURAL, and is itself a sign of growing up, one of irreversible CHANGE. I also find it to be also true that as we become older, we are not as capable of doing things that we had found much easier to do at an earlier age. I yet have my own doubts, and feel little comfortable with the use of 'loss' by Dragonflower. I am afraid I little partake of such a view. I'd rather use LESS, NOT LOSS: being less capacitated, to little capacitated. Loss entails absence, inability, disappearance. The vast majority of seniors, not to say all of them, while surviving, learn to ADAPT, to ACCOMODATE to change. They do not cease functioning, but they function less. They do not lose their beauty, but may become less physically attractive, though here it depends whom to, and in whose eyes. I do know several seniors, and I suppose you do, who feel and find their spouses or close relatives still beautiful, though other observers may think otherwise.
Conversely, OLD AGE HAS its MERITS, rewards, and joyful moments. Several things become enjoyable just when we age, not before. It is associated with experience gain, more self- and other- control, ability to better stand on one's feet, knowing what to do and what not to do, ability to advise (tips offered in this forum are a case in point), having more wisdom, enjoyment of family warmth, to name a few.
As we age, we might need to be fully aware of, and sensitive to BOTH SIDES OF THE COIN, perhaps MORE the BRIGHTER SIDE of it. I have lately come across a senior suffering from depression, he calls it deep, profound depression. After lending him an attentive ear, and listening to the pain ha said he went through ( divorcing 5 years ago, having his 2 daughters run away from him, and no longer keeping in touch, feeling isolated, and having very few acquaintances,...) I sympathized with him. He kept saying that he felt down, so low, losing in esteem. He said he needed psychiatric care badly, though he reported he still took medicines last prescribed by his own psychiatrist... I invited him to have a meal at mine. He did enjoy the bio meal that my wife prepared. The three of us sat down at the table, and spoke while eating. I tried to persuade him that one way of overcoming the condition he said he was suffering from was to learn to go out for a walk, and not stay indoors nearly all the time, befriend others, be more sociable, eat better, feed on more vegetables, fruit, and fish. He reported living on cheese, marmalade, coffee that he drank daily and regularly. His body was thus malnourished, and feeble.
While eating and listening to the tips my wife and I offered him, he grew better at ease, smiled to us, said sweet words, and promised to change, change for the better. Now and then, he rings me up to say that though he notes some improvement, he cannot help feeling gloomy and having hallucinations. I know that it is not easy to overcome a deeply anchored state, and state of mind. I however believe that had he had better living conditions, had he been surrounded by more people, had he willed to re-build his marital life anew, that could have helped.
You may retort by saying that this is off-track, I know. But, this is a real senior condition, with its ups and downs. What I am driving at is this: old age is DEVELOPMENTAL, an INESCAPABLE PROCESS phenomenon that ALL humans go through. Let us all live through it as serenely as we can, despite the limitations associated with it. Let us NOT FEAR becoming old, not fear death since death is natural, much like birth.
I don't believe they will do it though and that is unfortunate.
1. Climbing up on a ladder and hanging wallpaper. (Yes, I used to enjoy this.)
2. Sewing clothes for my youthful, HOT body - back when I could wear any style and it looked good on me. (Now I have to wear a tent.)
3. Walking for miles and miles at a brisk pace and not feeling wiped out from it.
4. Dancing the "chicken dance" non-stop at wedding receptions without even breaking a sweat.
5. Singing for hours on end and not getting vocally hoarse from it.
6. Not having to watch what I ate because I had a high metabolism.
7. Being able to fly around the world without lugging a BiPAP machine and a pharmacy of meds along in my carry-on bag.
8. Being able to stand on one foot like a flamingo and pull my socks on without falling over.
9. Being able to multi-task well.
10. And the #1 thing.......being able to see everything well without glasses and taking it for granted. I did not even need readers until I was almost 50.
When I talk to many other seniors, I hear the same things. They are sad because they can no longer do the things they used to be able to do in so many areas - simply due to the aging process of the physical body and mind.
Aging is often about LOSS - loss of health status, loss of abilities, loss of physical attractiveness, loss of functioning, loss of independence.
a PC blew up a few months ago and wiped out 15 yrs of photos for me . that made me realize the memories are all akin to living in the past . i dont miss the pics , today is what its all about , of course with an eye for tomorrow so im not blindsided by anything .
i do regret living alone for the last 15 yrs but every now and then i meet someone in a bad relationship who would gladly trade me places .
for everyone who thinks the world is a turbulent and dangerous place -- i kinda disagree . young college students in teheran roll their eyes at the fanatacism of their elders . instant communication has changed the face of everything from medicine to international diplomacy .
im pretty optomistic about the future . maybe in a while even a worn out spine can be repaired ..