fureverywhere
beloved friend who will always be with us in spiri
- Location
- Northern NJ, USA
I mean I can't complain. There are people in much worse positions. But when someone has a progressive illness it's hard. The focus becomes on their condition, do some of you hear me? Hubby has maybe mid-range/early Parkinson's. I've read enough Michael J. Fox memoirs and texts to know where he is at. G-d bless he's still working at a challenging job.
But I'm only five years younger. I'm not a Spring Chicken. I have two kids still at home, the companion animals, the hoops to jump through searching for a job, keeping the house from not being buried in fur, the litter boxes alone, the laundry, the kitchen, the whole house. There are days when my body parts hurt...not as bad as you...but really. I'm running the circus.
I don't know the point of this post. I guess it means as a caregiver you have to take care of yourself too. For me that is maybe a 5-8 mile hike with good tunes. Some people yoga or whatever. But yeah, no one is going to give you a big hug and say you're doing too much. You have to pat yourself on the back and give yourself deserved time-outs. Nobody else will, don't feel guilty...it works.
But I'm only five years younger. I'm not a Spring Chicken. I have two kids still at home, the companion animals, the hoops to jump through searching for a job, keeping the house from not being buried in fur, the litter boxes alone, the laundry, the kitchen, the whole house. There are days when my body parts hurt...not as bad as you...but really. I'm running the circus.
I don't know the point of this post. I guess it means as a caregiver you have to take care of yourself too. For me that is maybe a 5-8 mile hike with good tunes. Some people yoga or whatever. But yeah, no one is going to give you a big hug and say you're doing too much. You have to pat yourself on the back and give yourself deserved time-outs. Nobody else will, don't feel guilty...it works.