Month: February, 2011

welcome to girlfriends with aging parents

elder/guardian abuse

elder abuse graph

From Elder Abuse Daily, Feb. 15, 2011 (www.eadaily.com/15/elder-abuse-statistics)

My parents established a living trust in 1997 for senior care, naming their children as secondary trustees. In 2003, my dad was diagnosed with Multiple Myeloma and told my siblings about the trust documents.

Dad checked himself into a care facility to get the medication he needed. Mom had the beginning of dementia. My siblings decided that I was to take care of mom. I would do all of the work but get none of the rewards. The work included taking care of her, the house, property and her geese (YES, geese!)

My siblings refused to help. The more I said “no”, the more they abused me. One sibling told me: “We want you to micro-manage Mom and report all details to us”. Another said, “I don’t want to boss you around, but have that right when it came to mom’s health care”. Mom trusted me and told me many times that she did not want to be in a care facility.

In 2004, we made an agreement on how to take care of Mom. The first weekend it was in effect, no one showed up to help. My siblings said it wasn’t a legal document. I was supposed to adhere to it — they didn’t have to.

My siblings started spending Mom’s money on themselves. One took $1,500 for her 3 daughter’s graduation presents — even though one daughter wasn’t even graduating that year.

I needed help, so I worked with an attorney to get a guardian. My brother met with the guardian before we went to court and made an agreement that said Mom would be forced into a care facility the next time she was hospitalized.

In 2005, two siblings went onto the property and took most of Mom’s geese. She was devastated. I tried calling my brother but was told I had to drive out to his house in order to talk to him – as it was a game of control. I called APS about Mom. They sent the case to the King County Sheriff’s office for investigation. The Detective thought it was a “civil matter — not criminal”.

In 2006, we got a guardian and had care givers in the house. Mom passed out in March and the guardian — against state law — forced Mom into a care facility. She was drugged; she “walked into a wall” and had a big ugly bruise over her eye.  My siblings didn’t care. Because I was advocating for Mom, my siblings decided I had violated the trust and would be disinherited.

In early 2007 mom was diagnosed with a MRSA infection. In June, she gave up on life and died (the way she wanted to).

I can’t help mom any longer — but I can help others from falling victim to elder/guardian abuse. In late January, I was in Olympia talking to some legislators about changing the laws regarding financial exploitation of elderly citizens and about guardian abuse. Protect your elderly parents from abuse.

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senior moments

here it is…..the truth we ALL face!

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girlfriends good for your health!

They Teach It at Stanford:

“I just finished taking an evening class at Stanford. The last lecture was on the mind-body connection – the relationship between stress and disease. The speaker (head of psychiatry at Stanford) said, among other things, that one of the best things that a man could do for his health is to be married to a woman, whereas for a woman, one of the best things she could do for her health was to nurture her relationships with her girlfriends!”

At first everyone laughed, but he was serious…..

women-meetingWomen connect with each other differently and provide support systems that help each other to deal with stress and difficult life experiences. Physically this quality “girlfriend time” helps us to create more serotonin – a neurotransmitter that helps combat depression and can create a general feeling of well being. Women share feelings whereas men often form relationships around activities. They rarely sit down with a buddy and talk about how they feel about certain things or how their personal lives are going. Jobs? Yes. Sports? Yes. Cars? Yes. Fishing, hunting, golf?  Yes. But their feelings? Rarely.

Women do it all of the time. We share from our souls with our sisters/mothers, and evidently that is very good for our health. He said that spending time with a friend is just as important to our general health as jogging or working out at a gym.

There’s a tendency to think that when we are “exercising” we are doing something good for our bodies but when we are hanging out with friends, we are wasting our time and should be more productively engaged—not true. In fact, he said that failure to create and maintain quality personal relationships with other humans is as dangerous to our physical health as smoking!

So every time you hang out to schmooze with a gal pal, just pat yourself on the back and congratulate yourself for doing something good for your health! We are indeed very, very lucky. Sooooo let’s toast to our friendship with our  girlfriends. Evidently it’s very good for our health.”

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dialogue with Rabbi Dan

The Senior Rabbi of Temple De Hirsch Sinai since July 2001, Dan Weiner received a BA in Communication Studies from the University of California at Los Angeles, his Masters Degree from the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in 1989 and was ordained in 1991.

Rabbi Daniel Weiner

Rabbi Weiner often addresses muti-cultural groups on the dynamics of adult children & their aging parents.

He opens this interview with Girlfriendswithagingparents (GWAP) by agreeing that, “there are MANY MANY ‘how to’ books….from picking the best assisted living facility to dealing with Alzheimer’s to financial issues and the list goes on & on. There are no books however, that specifically deal with the emotional side of this issue whether it be dealing with death or our changing role or simply that we are the ‘next generation’ .. we have moved up the wrung. … like it or not !!! “

GWAP: How do adult children prepare to loose their parents? How is death viewed and can there be emotional preparation?

DW: There is no sure way to prepare, as the death of a parent evokes many existential concerns and realizations about one’s own mortality. Insuring that legal, logistical and medical issues are addressed early will free up more critical moments for a higher quality of dialogue and closure.

GWAP: How would you address the changing relationship that evolves when aging parents need help from their adult children?

DW: No simple answer to this. There is concerted pressure on “sandwiched” children of aging parents who are themselves responsible for their growing children. Embracing the Jewish values of the dignity and sanctity of life are good approaches towards helping parents make the transition from independence to dependence and disability.

GWAP: What spiritual information might we gather from our aging parents before they pass away?

DW: This a the time to embrace the historic Jewish practice of “ethical will”–the wisdom, values and lessons a parent wishes to pass on to family, that transcends financial and medical intent. This is a great way to employ new recording technology and an opportunity to engage younger children in multi-generational dialogue and connection.

GWAP: Does the Jewish faith acknowledge an after life? What are other traditions?

DW: In part, but Judaism is more concerned about this life and what we do in the world to make it worthy of our efforts and God’s vision. There is also a notion of the immortality of the soul–that those parts of us that are most essentially who we are, are intangible and thus not impacted by the forces that degrade our physical selves. What happens to that part? No one knows and Judaism doesn’t really care. However, knowing that what makes us most “us” transcends our death, is often comforting.

GWAP: As our parents need more help from us, what guidance would you give about this changing relationship?

DW: Be open, listen, be respectful, empathize with the changes occurring, and be conscious that your children are internalizing your model in way that will impact your future.

For more wisdom from Rabbi Weiner, link to goodgodforus.com and refer to: “The many ways in which an active pastor of a large, diverse congregation engages the many faces of sadness, loss and grief experienced in his community.”

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