Taking Charge Without Taking Over:  Five Tips For Helping Your Aging Parent

pWhether you are teaching your young daughter how to knit, or helping your aging parent balance her checkbook, how do you take charge without taking over?  How many times have you found yourself “showing” someone how to do something by doing it for them?   It’s human nature.   But while it might make sense to show by doing when you are “teaching” someone younger or less familiar with a particular topic than you are, it usually leads to aging parent when you do this when you are “assisting” someone with a task that he previously has been perfectly capable of handling himself.

It was probably hard enough for your mom to agree to let you help her pay her bills and balance her checkbook.  And even once she agreed, it wouldn’t be surprising if she told you that she didn’t know why you were insisting on helping her since she is perfectly capable of doing it herself.   The truth is that acknowledging that you need help with the business of life is really, really hard for most seniors.  If they come to the point where they need your help, they are confronted with their own limitations.  And those limitations won’t “get better” in most cases.  Deep down, your mom knows that this is the beginning of the end of her independence as she has come to know it.

So, how do you take charge without taking over?

  1. If possible, do the tasks alongside your mom rather than doing it for her.  While this approach might take longer than doing it yourself, you allow mom to retain some self esteem by letting her take the lead.
  2. Let your dad tell you what aspects of a particular activity he needs your help with, and if possible, try to limit your assistance to just those things, at least for now.  Of course, if your dad doesn’t have a realistic picture of what he can do for himself, you will need to gently find a way to help him see your perspective.
  3. Be respectful, and ask permission before you just jump in.  For example, when you take your aging parent to a doctor’s appointment, don’t just assume that they want you to come into the examining room with them.  Instead, ask them if they’d like you to be there the whole time, or if perhaps you can just be called in toward the end of the visit to make sure that YOUR questions are answered.
  4. Set up invisible safety nets.  For example, if you come every Sunday and set up your mom’s medications in a weekly medication management system, you can have some expectation that she will take the correct medications at the right time.  But it wouldn’t hurt to also have a way of checking that once or twice during the week.  This might take the form of a medication management visit by a home care company or trusted friend or relative or perhaps daily medication reminder phone calls from you.
  5. Make a distinction between safety and everything else.  When your dad’s safety is on the line, you might just have to take charge by taking over.  On the other hand, if you’d just prefer that something be done a certain way or at a certain time, there might be an opportunity to loosen the grip a bit.

Sometimes, no matter how you approach the situation, you’ll find yourself in a confrontation with your Mom or Dad over how to best care for them.  At these times, you and your parent might find it helpful to talk with an objective third party such as a family transition coach who can shed new light on the situation.  Your job as your parent’s caregiver is to keep them safe, comfortable, and happy.  As long as you keep that in perspective you should have no trouble taking charge without taking over.

 

Sheri Samotin, President
LifeBridge Solutions, LLC
999 Vanderbilt Beach Road
Naples, Florida  34108
239-325-1880

Five Tips For Helping Your Aging Parent was last modified: November 19th, 2022 by Phil Sanders