We are 77 & 79; Activities are Mon, Bingo or Bridge (we don't like either)
Tues Painting class or cards, (can't hold a brush anymore)
Wed Zumba & Dancer/Exercise, (we both use walkers)
Thurs Facebook/email workshops (we already do that at home)
In order to do this, we'd have to walk all the way there (bus is only for lunch)
How can we get her to leave us alone?
The reason bingo remains popular is that you can fill a room with all abilities up to fairly advance dementia and it only takes one staff member to call the numbers.
I think the biggest challenge in running any senior's centre would be trying to accommodate people from various walks of life and cognitive abilities. Maybe if more people who are "with it" would attend they would have to put more effort into things that could sustain their interest. On the other hand most of these programs seem to have all the clients they can handle so they have no incentive to try harder.
We have people all over our community who have signs saying they are letting their yard return to native plant species to support butterfly and bee populations.
The best care home group I ever had anything to do with regularly canvassed both residents and day centre service users and asked them what they would like to do. Then as long as there was a quorum for a given activity, it would be arranged.
Thanks for making my points more clear and balanced - perhaps I was a bit too "tongue in cheek" in my comments about bingo.
That's one of my primary concerns as well - the activities are not stimulating or engaging; they're passive. Picking up little chips and putting them on squares doesn't evoke much intellectual interest.
Several years ago I was searching for different groups with which to become involved, groups that spanned a range of ages and activities. I found a local branch of the AAUW (Assn. of American University Women). The general topic of the meeting was foreign relations, with the very dynamic and intellectual conversation trending off to specific areas, such as a particular Asian country.
One of the women was at least 10 if not more years older than I; others were my age. Everyone who contributed had an interesting perspective to share.
I also found a similar environment when I joined a literature club.
Those are the kinds of activities I'd want if I went to a senior center. Shelve the bingo chips!
I do realize that it's very difficult as well for planners because they don't know the capabilities of seniors. It's a challenging task to find appropriate activities that span all levels of senior abilities.
Perhaps you could drop in and check it out...see what else there is to do...or talk to some of the folks and find out how they get there. I have rediscovered a love of art and now teach various art classes...usually without mom. It has been great...who knew
My mom is the one with Alzheimer's but my dad is still very much "there" and lively. It would be for him too, I would think? My mother can walk with a walker well, carry on a conversation too (as long as you realize she won't remember a thing said after 5 minutes). Why not go and enjoy a concert, mingle etc. I don't think my mother could play a game with her attention span but surely there might be other things of interest. Maybe they have a choir etc.
Anyway, I'm feeling a bit sheepish now. Maybe I'm wrong for pushing them to go. In any case, they haven't. My mother says she has no interest and my father doesn't seem to have any either and since he's the one who drives, I guess they aren't going no matter what I say.
We have a lot of clover in our back yard right now. People would say we need to mow to get rid of all those weeds. But when I see the honey bees going flower to flower, I know that it is a good thing. We get so afraid in the US of having lawns that don't look like golf courses. And then we wonder where all the honey bees have gone.
Right now many of them are enjoying my back yard. Maybe if we quit mowing so much and stopped pulling down all the honeysuckle vines, we would see more honey bees about.
Can you imagine arresting someone for not cutting their lawn, when in fact cutting less often is better for the planet? Some people just don't understand that all this obsession with gasoline powered devices isn't helpful.
I think you've hit on an important issue in society - being too judgmental, whether it's the height of a lawn, how someone dresses, or someone's religion if it's not mainstream.
I've been thinking of how we as elders in this community can create a "rapid response force" for grass cutting. I was thinking of contacting some of the local communities that do have good senior support to see if they have lawn cutters they could refer.
I actually did this when I needed to find someone to cut my father's lawn. I learned that lawn mowers are in high demand in this area - apparently their business has increased exponentially from prior years.
Was there any information on how these young men got together to form a help brigade?
Back in the old days there used to be a few people who were so strict and so, so judgmental, wanting things done their own way. We used to say they had a corn cob stuck up their bum. Now the world seems to be full of people with corn cobs stuck up there. And they've convinced otherwise sane people that a corn cob suppository is a good thing.
We have senior citizens taking care of their much older parents. Amott6, I am just a few years younger than you are and I really believe my parents think I am still 25, full of energy, ready to go on a drop of a hat, and have the strength to run out and buy 30 bags of 20 lb mulch like I use to do. But that ship had sailed some time ago, yet I will still get such request. Even waving my own Medicare card and AARP membership card doesn't help it to sink in :(
I wished I would have found this website 6 years ago, I would have set boundaries back then, as now trying to set boundaries has resulted in unpleasant telephone conversations, stress, and a lot of guilt thrown my way.
To make this all work, it has to be a win-win for everyone involved.
It's quite true you can't win. If you make your own arrangements she's going to worry about whether they're good enough/safe enough/110% risk-free, and if you rely solely on her she's going to feel put upon. I have to admit that before I started looking after her full-time, I'd have been a lot happier if my mother had submitted all proposals for activities, holidays, purchases, catering and voluntary work to me for prior approval. I never knew *what* she'd get up to next..!
Anita you are quite right to be guarded about relinquishing control. Your daughter can't help worrying (I'd guess, rather than being jealous as such) but she's going to have to get used to it. And as long as you're in charge of your own decisions, the two of you, don't be too hesitant to remind her that she's not the boss of you yet - kindly, though, because "she MEANS well…" as my mother used to sigh.
It took me years to donate or toss out my text books... they were just too good to give away, plus I never knew when I might needed to reference a book... like that ever happened :P
My Dad has a ton of newspaper clippings. I bet, as we speak, he is now cutting out the one where CVS is planning on buying Target's pharmacies.
As for the car, I have to use my parents vehicle which I describe as a cruise liner on wheels, which I feel so very unsafe driving because it was made for someone over 6 foot tall, not my 5' frame... I cannot see out the side view mirrors as there is no way to reposition them on the car itself, so I am driving blind, thus I panic big time. I have to use my parent's car because Mom can't climb up into my vehicle. If my parents had moved to the retirement village, the village supplies it's own transportation.
amott, I don't want your daughter to be going through what I have been going through, thus the reason I am bringing forth these items now, while you are able to make clear choices for your future.
Oh, my Dad is trying to downsize all his 3-ring binders and papers for the past 2 years, and hasn't made any headway. Just recently he tossed out his physics homework from college :P My parents, in their 90's, will never leave their large home.
My own city is displaying hostility toward seniors, if not all residents who don't tow the line established by what I consider somewhat of a military junta.
A few days ago I watched only a limited portion of a broadcast city council meeting, during which one of the elderly resident speakers plead in vain for a more liberal lawn cutting policy. One of the city council members (who I was told was one of the ones chosen by a specific political party in a move to upset control by the then mayor and other council members) stated emphatically that the policy is a maximum height of 6" for lawns on improved property. Anything over that results in a notice to cut the lawn.
The city's policy is that the lawn MUST be cut back to 6" within one day (yes, that's just ONE day). The city makes no distinction between dry or wet weather. (Get out your cleats and umbrellas and figure out how to mow in the rain if not severe T-storms! Anyone know how to add a canopy to a push mowe??). Faiing compliance, a citation is issued.
A second failing to get the lawn mowed can result in mandatory court appearance.
I was so angry as I thought how totally draconian this attitude is. No resident, especially an elderly person, needs to be put through this torture.
Given this attitude, I never even would venture to the senior center. I'd probably be fingerprinted and GPSed so they could monitor me to see how often I mowed the lawn.
I think some areas require innate talent - I could never compose like Beethoven, for example, but art techniques can be learned, and the process of improvement is self validating.
There's also abstract act - as long as the person doing it is gaining confidence, skills or just being happy, who cares what it looks like?
There was a very, very insightful program on art therapy that was very enlightening. It was either on RLTV or one of the PBS stations; it's well worth watching.
Your other points were very helpful; I would agree with many of them, especially the winter snowbird culture in RV parks and other areas like retirement centers where seniors gather, as well as your insightful observation that there are unspoken family issues that aren't being factored into this discussion.
End of lecture.
We raise our children to become independent and live their own lives. Many parents are suffering because their children move back home because of financial reasons. Both of you have lived your lives. Your daughter is trying to live her life and feels very responsible about your quality of life.
Recently a family member and spouse moved in with me for 5 months. Neither one was physically active. They cluttered up my home. There was no alone time, other than go to one's own bedroom. They had so many irritating habits. They were kind and respectful, it's just living under the same roof, day in and day out. Anytime I suggested an outing, they would just say no. It involved walking, which they did not have the stamina for. Shopping in the mall, visiting parks, or flea markets. None of it.
It begins to feels like one big trap. Then it was time for them to go home, and although I miss them and love them, I am so glad they went back home.
You know the old saying, guests, like fish, start to smell after three days.
I agree with other comments about these senior centers. I never actively go out to play bingo, it can be so boring. Painting. Well, you have to be a born artist to want to paint. What if you don't like painting.
Many winter visitors come down and they have a ball. But they have the money to do many activities. Many of the recreation halls offer for free, music jams. This involves people who can play an instrument or sing to the whole group. They play tennis, golf, pool, bible study, happy hour, pot luck lunch and/or dinners, quilting, sewing, wood working, dancing (ball room, 2-stepping, line dancing or just sit and watch others dance). The list is endless. In addition, in these parks, each of them look out for their neighbors. That is a big plus.
Unfortunately, the senior centers are really, really boring. I've gone to several and walk out thinking, yuk, how can one just hang with them. To top it off, the senior centers in my area, because of the culture, are predominantly Hispanic. I have a difficult time sitting down with a group and they're all speaking in spanish, and here I sit, feeling very left out. When I speak up, they respond in english. So I feel like a third-wheel, being left out of everyone's conversations. That's how it is in the senior centers here in the Valley.
You need to find other people in your community to assist you in your needs, such as doctor appointments, etc. Allow your daughter as much relief as possible. Try not to depend on her for every errand you have.
This brings to mind my own parents, I was a young nineteen year-old-girl when I decided to up and leave and get married. My parents were both deaf and depended on me for interpreting for them in every social interaction they had. Once I left home, they hounded me. Finally, I told them they know how to read and write and to learn to do these things for themselves. They did. And I was allowed to move on with my own life.
No one should take your independence or freedom to do whatever you wish to do. Obviously, there's something not being said between the lines of what you wrote. If both of you were happy and content, I doubt she would be pushing you into activities that you have no interest in.
Good luck on standing your ground and keep being independent as long as possible. Try to use others in your community for needed assistance. Encourage your daughter and let her know she is not responsible for you.
Just supposing, hypothetically, that you could get him to agree to the move to a place you're both happy with. Set aside the downsizing issue and get your new home lined up. So there you are, looking at the home you're going to move into, and it then becomes not so much a question of how to get rid of his (three rooms' worth yikes!) stuff, as of what comes with you. At which point you take charge of the selection process, based on your detailed knowledge of his day-to-day habits and preferences; and the rest is removed by your friendly neighbourhood house clearance company never to be seen again. And any family members, friends or neighbours who would like specific items that would otherwise be for the chop have until the date you give them to remove them now or forever hold their peace.
It could work..???