I'm not a parent and I know parenting is not "easy" by any means, but I venture a guess that caring for an elderly relative full time is much more difficult.
The reason I'm asking this question is because my aunt said to me today that caring for three teenage daughters is the more difficult of the two scenarios (me being a live-in caregiver for grandma while working 2 jobs versus her bringing up 3 teenage daughters, plus having a multitude of pets, a house to maintain, and a husband to deal with).
While parenting is by no means "easy", I would say that caregiving is more difficult:
- an elderly person often cannot move on their own (i.e. wheelchair or bed bound). Moving an elderly person is far more difficult than moving a baby or small child- there's much more dead weight to deal with, and you can injure yourself or the elderly person.
- they may need help bathing
- they need help getting dressed
- Incontinence issues
- Memory problems
- the elderly are far more likely to fall or get sick. It's not like kids, where a toddler falls and bounces right back up and "awwwe so cute you went boom". No. If an elderly person falls, there is nothing "cute" about it. It's more like "oh $#*! Call 911!"
While there are some similarities between the two (feeding, dressing, diapers and trying to keep them entertained), at least kids are sort of adorable in the process. Elderly people not so much. This is definitely not my idea of a joyride by any stretch.
In all honesty, my aunt had some nerve to actually say that to me, and how I should "enjoy it while it lasts". Sometimes I wish she would take Grandma for a week and see how difficult it really is. She won't, because she already has an idea from ten years ago when grandma fell and she cared for her in her home for 3 months. Obviously, she has forgotten exactly how hard this really is. There is nothing "enjoyable" about watching someone you love waste away and slowly die right in front of you.
Nope, Crazy Aunt is just talking out of her arse. That's my guess.
God I miss walking her in the park. I also miss taking her to the mall. She was on a wheel chair when I took her to the mall (she had her morning walk so that was okay!) and though she seemed to tune out I could tell she enjoyed it since she did better afterward. I would give my soul to the devil if I could just be with her again but that is never going to happen. Her death was over a year ago and it impacted my life and it is a struggle without her. You do caregiving for YEARS and YEARS and YEARS and YEARS and see what it does to your mind. I do manage to carry on. I'm working and back to school -- but I'm also going through the motions and there is not a single day that goes by I miss my mom. I accept her death because we all die but life is very empty without her.
I never regretting caregiving her. You only have one mom for all eternity and I can take that with me everyday of my life I took care of mum and never had to put her in a nursing home. Mom felt loved and secure in her home and she knew she was loved dearly.
I’m doing my best I guess, trying to not sweat the big stuff and just keep trucking forward.
But that's a whole different ballgame than caring for the elderly. I tried to take care of my mother, I couldn't. Physically and mentally just couldn't. It along with my daughter, put me into a serious state of anxiety and depression.
Now my FIL is living with us. He has memory problems. I just can't stand him being in my house all the time. My husbands determined that we will take care of him until he gets to the point we physically can't and has to be in nursing care.
I think there is just no comparison so I wouldn't even talk about it, except to your therapist. So glad your getting help. I have been in counseling the better part of 30 years and I'm 53.
There is a far greater benefit to each of you acknowledging that the other is facing challenges and that you may or may not have any ability to relieve each other of your burdens. Empathy is important on both sides.
Also recognizing that you have both made choices, perhaps uninformed choices that have brought you to where you are now. I cannot imagine how hard it is to provide 24/7 to a parent and truth be told, I never will, because I refuse to do it. I do know the challenges of raising children.
Your Aunt did look after grandma 10 years ago, while raising her children, maintaining her home, marriage and caring for pets. She knows it was hard then.
What do you want from your Aunt, from us? You have brought your disagreement to a public forum. Are you looking for us to tell you, "you are right, she is wrong.", so you can go back and tell her she is wrong? Wrong about what?
Kids grow up (too fast!) and are on their own in about 16-18 years. I've been dealing with cranky, angry mother & MIL for 30 years, and there's no end in sight. And while my kids get better and better, my 'mothers' both are falling to pieces and are nasty and angry a lot of the time.
Give me a 16 yo girl with raging hormones over a 90 yo diva any day.
I know people with *extremely* special needs children, for whom they will care for until they (the parents) pass away. Compared to a situation like that, it was much easier for me to take care of my mom.
I think though, in general, it's not a question of "easier" - it's a question of mindset. In a case where your children age and mature in the more expected fashion - that is to say, not needing special care above and beyond what *most* children require - you know that, someday, they will be big enough to take care of themselves. While your children growing older may cause some bittersweet tears, there's a so-called "light at the end of the tunnel" - the knowledge that one day they will fly the nest, and you'll be free - or free-er than you were when they were young.
However, when you're caring for an elderly, declining LO, that "light at the end of the tunnel" is an entirely different circumstance.
While you likely wouldn't feel guilty about saying "gee, I can't wait 'til our kids are grown and out of the house so we can come and go as we please", if you said the the same about an elderly LO, it would produce a much different reaction - from both you, as the caregiver, to the rest of the world who heard you say it.
I'm very sorry to hear about your son. My heart goes out to you. Big big hugs! No parent should ever have to endure that hardship. Sending you lots of love.