Search
Recommended Products

Related Links


 

 

Featured Health Plan: MedExpress Benefits plan
MedExpress Benefits plan

The MedExpress Benefit plan allows you access to discounts on health care at over :
a 610 000 physicians
a 48 000 dentists and specialists
a 51 000 pharmacies
& much more ...

Protect your entire family for only $14.95 per month Plan Details and Sample Savings

Informative Articles

Get a Prenuptial Agreement before Your Next Marriage
While signing a prenuptial agreement can be one of the all-time romantic turnoffs, for people heading into their second marriage, a prenuptial agreement can give the trade-off of a better relationship through the security of financial and life...

Long Distance Care for Your Aging Parent Living Alone
In 1987, 8.5 million elderly lived alone; by 2020, 13.3 million elderly will live alone. These elderly may suffer if they don’t have face-to-face interaction with others or if they don’t have measures in place to handle emergencies. As a child or...

MORAL ARMOR'S Irrational Parenting, Part II
Handing Down Malignancy. Children may begin bright and eager to face the world, but are often inundated with the conditioning of their fear-ridden predecessors speaking of lost dreams—taken by no one in particular. Their guardians appear...

MORAL ARMOR'S Irrational Parenting, Part IV
The Author of Moral Armor reveals the psychology of bad parenting; from why they have children to the ultimate parenting sin: raising aimless, fear-ridden, defenseless individuals. Imposing Their Future. In contradiction...

Women Are More Powerful
WOMEN ARE MORE POWERFUL Thought forms, biological ability to endure pain and a lot of other reasons make women more the cause of man’s insecurities than he would like to admit. This article will focus on the psychic nurturing side of women...

 
Google
Why Caregivers Die Young

Caregiving for an aging adult is a stress-filled, 24-hour-a-day job. No wonders caregivers frequently wear out before the one cared for. Ease that burden with these tips.
A few blocks away from my home shines a small store that regularly seeks to flatten my bank account. There I find the latest bulbs, flowers, and all manner of gardening gear. This time of year, their bulbs brighten my life.

The photos of bulbs gloriously blooming in rock-filled containers always draw me right in. So, for the past few years, I've forced several bulbs in just that way. Wrong, wrong, wrong! I've been killing these beauties regularly because I didn't know how to force blooms without draining the bulbs.

Until now.

Last week, the kind owner of the store enlightened me. The correct way to force bulbs is to plant them. Dirt (not rocks), food (not just water), sunshine -- all the care you provide for other plants, you must provide for bulbs if you want them to live to see another year.

It struck me that often we treat caregiving in the same fashion I've forced bulbs. Ignoring the fundamentals of care for the caregiver, we push, forcing ourselves to perform without attending to basic needs until we have exhausted all our energy with nothing left to carry us over to the next year.

If you're a primary caregiver, you're in danger of both physical and mental burnout. Ask for help! While you may be waiting for friends and family to volunteer, they may be waiting for you to ask.


Here are a few places to begin:

Let this be your first step. Hold a family meeting to discover what other family members can do to help you. Most will be happy to help in one way or another. But they have to understand you would welcome their assistance! You would, wouldn't you?

Ask your friends for help. Could they trade out care responsibilities for a few hours a week? Share cooking duties? Come by to visit more often? Again, they can't know what you need unless you tell them.

See what help you can find from the Visiting Nurse Association. Check the web and check your local phone book. Branches exist in almost every community.

Check out Senior Corps. Older volunteers will come to your home to be a companion for 10 or 20 hours each week. Your responsibility to your aging relative is great, but to stay the course, you must stay well. Part of your caregiving must include caring for yourself.

About the Author

copyright 2003 by Phyllis Staff, Ph.D. - Phyllis Staff is an experimental psychologist and the CEO of The Best Is Yet.Net, an internet company that helps seniors and caregivers find trustworthy residential care. She is the daughter of a victim of Alzheimer's disease. Dr. Staff is the author of How to Find Great Senior Housing: A Roadmap for Elders and Those Who Love Them: http://www.thebestisyet.net/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/pando19/start.cgi/book.htm