Caregivers Fear the Future: 3 Ways to Walk Alongside Them
Caregivers fear the future.
I was 6 or 7 when I encountered this fear in the house where I grew up. If either my older sister or younger brother was sick, Mom would fold a white hankie into the shape of an old-fashioned nurse’s hat and pin it on my head. She would tie a white apron around my waist, hand me a tray with tea and juice, and instruct me to deliver to the sick room.
When I returned the tray to the kitchen, she would say, “Isn’t it fun to be a nurse, Jolene? Wouldn’t you like to be your dad’s nurse when you get older?”
It wasn’t. And I didn’t.
But something in her voice–the same tone she used when she was afraid there wouldn’t be enough money to pay the bills–kept me silent. I was only a little girl, but Mom’s anxiety about who would care for Dad as his multiple sclerosis progressed was palpable.
Mom’s fear of the future didn’t convince any of her children to enter a medical profession, though she made a number of wise financial decisions to ensure Dad had the care he needed until he died in 1997. More than 50 years after Mom sent me down the hall to play nurse, I realized that caregivers fear the future as much as she did.
Maybe more.
The realization came during interviews with caregiving parents about the stress they experience. Several parents said that one of their greatest stressors is anxiety about who will care for their children who outlive them and where the money they need to live on will come from.
To read the rest of this post visit the Joni & Friends blog.
Do you like what you see at DifferentDream.com? You can receive more great content by subscribing to the monthly Different Dream newsletter and signing up for the daily RSS feed delivered to your email inbox. You can sign up for both at the bottom of this page.
By Jolene
Jolene Philo is a published author, speaker, wife, and mother of a son with special needs.
Subscribe for Updates from Jolene
Related Posts
In the Little Town Where I Once Lived
In the little town where once lived, we were far from hospitals and grocery stores. But somehow, our 92 citizens got inclusion right. Churches, take note!
Belonging: The Heartbeat of Inclusion
Shelly Christensen believes that belonging is the heartbeat of inclusion, and she examines biblical truths that prove the rightness of disability inclusion.
Dream a New Special Needs Ministry Dream
Do you have a special needs ministry dream for your church? Guest blogger Marnie Witters has ideas about how to start realizing that dream.
0 Comments