"Creating certainty & hope for seniors, by helping them stay active, healthy and in touch with loved ones."
A blog supporting our seniors and the caregiver community
Thursday, December 25, 2014
The Caregiver Wellbeing Talk
Saturday, December 13, 2014
5,000 Years of History in a Tea Bag
What do safe drinking water, workers' rights, women's rights, pottery manufacturing, the American Revolution, clipper ships, taxes, smuggling, beer, and ancient Chinese legends have in common? Tea!
Sponsored by Resources for Seniors (organized by Susan M, Senior Care Coordinator) and the NC Museum of History, senior attendees of this event learnt how these small dried leaves affect our past in a story worth raising a cup to!
They also enjoyed a cup of spiced tea that Susan had given us a recipe for. One of our Caregivers, Kim P prepared the tea onsite and served it as part of this well attended program. Here are some pictures and the recipe...
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Holiday Expectations
When you have a loved one struggling with loss; of health or mobility or ability, how do you adapt your plans? Can you expect something good, even joyous, or do you just shrug away the holiday and call it a wash? Three Christmases in a row I had a close family member in the hospital or recovering from a serious illness, or both. The following three suggestions culled from my own personal experience and my years working in long-term care helped me survive and thrive in a less than perfect holiday.
but hold onto the most precious.
Adapt expectations and allow time to grieve.
Change is hard for everyone, but especially when that change involves loss. Give yourself and your loved one permission to weep, to be alone, to express sorrow even during the holiday. Allowing these times will make the smiling times more authentic.
Adapt expectations and create something new, maybe even better.
Sometimes having to slow down and do it differently means an opportunity to change a habit or tradition that wasn't serving us anyway. Maybe a desk-top tree and fresh greens will bring just as much if not more pleasure. What foods really mean celebration and which ones just tend to after-season guilty gut? Is there a food that could replace the sweets or fats currently off-diet. I have included clementines as our traditional holiday food which everyone can eat. Other changes have included more than average phone-calls and weekly letters which a care-giver reads. It is a small but meaningful way we celebrate.
Maybe you have already made these changes, share them if you can and I hope you can experience good, something joyous this holiday season.