Wintermint
Member
I'm 66 this year. Sadly my father died 2.5 years ago after he and my mother moved to our town to be close to me in their old age a few year prior to that. I am an only child. I saw them most days after they moved here and did things for them that they no longer could do for themselves as my father had poor mobility, despite being mentally very alert, for the last few years of his life.
My mother is 90 and fit as a fiddle. She comes out walking with me and my dogs for an hour several times a week. She does her own shopping and most of her own housework. Her sight is very poor though and her hearing is going, both of which issues make her more reliant on me these days.
I see her every day more or less, take her out for a drive now and again and also do things she can't - for example I spent a couple of hours today filling in tax forms for her.
I struck me that with the population getting older and so many more of 'us' around there must be many many people who are beginning to feel the impact of their own advancing years, who are having to look after and do a lot to help their even older parents or relatives, many of who still see us as 'young one'. My mother often refers to 'you young ones' Lol!
I'm new to this forum and I'm sure this must have come up before, but I just wondered if people who welcome the chance to share their experiences of this - both positive and perhaps not quite so much.
My mother is 90 and fit as a fiddle. She comes out walking with me and my dogs for an hour several times a week. She does her own shopping and most of her own housework. Her sight is very poor though and her hearing is going, both of which issues make her more reliant on me these days.
I see her every day more or less, take her out for a drive now and again and also do things she can't - for example I spent a couple of hours today filling in tax forms for her.
I struck me that with the population getting older and so many more of 'us' around there must be many many people who are beginning to feel the impact of their own advancing years, who are having to look after and do a lot to help their even older parents or relatives, many of who still see us as 'young one'. My mother often refers to 'you young ones' Lol!
I'm new to this forum and I'm sure this must have come up before, but I just wondered if people who welcome the chance to share their experiences of this - both positive and perhaps not quite so much.
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