As much as your elderly family member has to adjust to receiving help, you also have to adjust a bit to being the one who is there for her and helping her to have the quality of life that you want her to have. These tips can help you to avoid feeling as if you’re adrift when you start out being your senior’s primary family caregiver.
Learn to Accept the Changes in Your Senior’s Life
The hardest part about becoming a family caregiver is often that it’s difficult to see her experience the types of changes your elderly family member is going through. It’s also difficult for her to accept them. If you can both do some work toward accepting what’s happening, it’s a lot easier for you to accommodate those changes.
Face those Challenges Head-on with as Much Information as Possible
Information is definitely your friend. Talk with your senior’s doctors and other healthcare providers about what is happening and what you need to know. There’s probably also a good bit of research you’ll need to do outside of those conversations, too. But all of that information that you gather helps you to make the best possible decisions for your senior and her needs.
Don’t Wait to Bring in Extra Help
So often family caregivers wait to bring in help, but when it becomes difficult for your senior to handle things like getting dressed, home care can make all the difference. Home care can help your elderly family member to feel more secure and comfortable as she’s going through these everyday activities that have become more complicated. Home care doesn’t keep your senior from doing these tasks when she can. Instead, they’re there to support her wherever she needs help.
Take Care of Yourself as Well as Your Senior
It’s vital that you’re taking care of yourself while you’re also trying to take care of your elderly family member. If you’re neglecting rest or eating foods that don’t really give your body what it needs, it becomes more and more difficult for you to keep up with what’s happening. Ultimately, when you take care of yourself, you’re going to be able to give more to your elderly family member.
Re-evaluate Regularly to Make Sure the Care Plan Still Works
Something else to remember is that your senior’s situation is going to continue to change over time. It helps if you understand that at the outset and remember to take time periodically to take a closer look at your senior’s care plan. Evaluate what is working and what is not so that you can take the time to make changes that will prove to be more effective. Over time this allows you to really finetune a care plan that meets all of her needs.
When you’re new to being a family caregiver it can feel as if you’re never making the right choices. But as you learn more and as you find new ways to help your senior in the ways she needs help, those choices get easier.