
Caregivers Support Group
A voluntary caregiver is a spouse, relative, friend or neighbor of a disabled person or child who assists with activities of daily living and assists those unable to fully take care of themselves. The challenges of a caregiver are unique and sometimes it's hard to find people to talk to who know what you're going through. Join the conversation and find others who...

MineraPearl
You may or may not have seen this website. It seems very good! Thought I'd share it with you:
For you:
http://www.strengthforcaring.com/manual/about-you-the-caregiver-role/four-messages-to-live-by/
FOUR MESSAGES TO LIVE BY
By National Family Caregivers Association
What does it mean to be a happy person when you are a family caregiver?
How can you gain a feeling of confidence in your abilities and have a sense of pride in your achievements?
How do you stand up for yourself, take care of yourself, and find a balance between your own needs and those of your loved ones?
These are heady questions, and ones that have been discussed often. We have looked for answers in our own experiences, in books, from professionals, and from other family caregivers. We've thought long and hard about these issues because they are at the core of our search for meaning and our need to have principles to live by as family caregivers.
At NFCA, we call our approach to caregiving, Principles of Caregiver Self-Advocacy.
They are the fundamental tenets of our philosophy. They have helped thousands of caregivers to date and we hope you will use them as guideposts in your own personal search for a sense of direction and inner peace.
The NFCA four principles are:
1. Choose to take charge of your life
2. Love, honor, and value yourself
3. Seek, accept, and at times demand help
4. Stand up and be counted
1. Choose to Take Charge of Your Life
Often we become caregivers very suddenly, without warninga husband is diagnosed with cancer, a child is in a car accident, a parent has a stroke. At other times, caregiving creeps up on uswe know mom is forgetting things and we slowly start taking on some administrative tasks and calling more often, until one day we realize she no longer has the capacity to live safely on her own.
Somewhere along the line however, it is vitally important that we do stop, take a breath, and try to gain some control over the situation, rather than letting the situation control us. It is vitally important that we choose to take charge of our lives.
What does that mean - choose to take charge of our lives? Obviously we cannot control everything that happens to us, or to our loved ones. But we can make active choices about how we are going to deal with the circumstances of our lives.
We can look at life as a glass half full, or we can try to make lemonade out of our lemons. We can choose to martyr ourselves in the interests of the loved one for whom we are caring, or we can set limits on what we as individuals can and cannot do without causing irrevocable damage to our own health or the other relationships in our lives. Caregiving is complicated. It is forever changing, and it usually involves a variety of people, not just the caregiver and the care receiver. Recognizing this is critical if we are going to give ourselves permission to actively make choices and not always be on the receiving side of consequences.
The choices that we can make, or have to make, during the course of our caregiving experience will change as circumstances change. It is hard to realistically make a decision about whether to try a risky experimental therapy when a loved one is asymptomatic. It is impossible to really know what it would be like to have your mother living with you and your family when she is frail and needs lots of help if she is only 61 years old now and the picture of health.
Knowing that circumstances change, including our own health and innate capabilities, is vital to learning to take charge of our lives. Remembering that martyrdom always has a negative consequence for the martyr is a wake up call to caregivers who put everyone else's needs first and their own last, never recognizing that if they fall apart there might not be another family member to take over.
Choosing to take charge of our lives means recognizing our strengths and our limitations and knowing that it is okay to set boundaries, and to say: "yes I can and will do this, but I'm sorry, I just can't do that." Being a caregiver, a willing and loving caregiver, doesn't mean you discard the word "no" from your vocabulary.
We need to know our own limits and the consequences of our actions. The lifting we could easily do five years ago may be having dire consequences for our back today. When we started spending more time helping grandma it didn't seem to impact the kids, but now they are feeling the loss of our attention and getting into trouble at school to prove it. Caregiving is a relationship - between many people. Choosing to take charge of your life means you recognize that you are one of those people. Making choices in your own interests isn't selfish - it is often the most important thing you can do for all concerned.
2. Love, Honor, and Value Yourself
It is easy to lose your true self while being a family caregiver. It is easy to lose your identity as an individual and that is why it is so important to cling to the core of your personality. Do the things that make you happy, that let you say: "I feel like 'me' when I am doing this or that, or I like 'me' when I am being this way."
Caregiving so often keeps us off balance. It is easy to get lost in its physical and psychological maelstromthe sadness, the frustration, the stress and strain on your body and your mind, the financial worries, the emotional painyou know them well. All the more reason to step out of the frame on a regular basis, and cultivate the other parts of yourself, to learn to give to yourself in addition to giving to others.
Rabbi Hillel, one of the great sages of Judaism, said many years ago, "If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am only for myself, what am I? And if not now, when?" He was a wise man, and he recognized the need for all of us to have balance in our lives and serve ourselves as well as others. His message is a wake-up call to all family caregivers that loving yourself is not selfish. It is in fact a way of honoring and valuing the wonder of a human life.
The inner person in each of us is different, and we all need to find our own way of keeping in touch with ourselves and developing an awareness of what fulfills us so that we can turn to those things for energy, solace, and validation. It might be the time you spend in church that allows you to separate yourself from caregiving for a time and that brings you peace; the morning jog you take that provides a surge of energy and a sense of well being. It might be the career that not only "brings home the bacon," but also provides you with personal satisfaction. It might be as simple as a 15-minute bubble bath you allow yourself every Friday evening as a way to calm yourself down and welcome the weekend.
It is not an easy thing to do especially when you're racing around and perhaps living from crisis to crisis. It is not easy because doing so often makes caregivers feel guilty because giving to one's self often means taking time away from fulfilling either real or perceived obligations.
But how do you do it? How do you create some balance between caring for others and caring for yourself? There's that pesky question again. You do it by recognizing that your own good health is the very best present you can give your loved one. Your own continuing ability to stay healthy is vital to your continuing ability to be a competent family caregiver.
Believe in your value as a human being and your right to a few minutes of personal space, at least several times a week. If you can take more than that, it is a bonus from which you will prosper, but all of us, even the busiest of caregivers can find 10 or 15 minutes several times a week to care for themselves. The trick is to start and to focus those few minutes on you, your interests, and your dreams.
The idea is to love, honor, and value the essential part of yourself that you've slowly been losing to caregiving. Whether its taking long walks, practicing yoga, painting, praying, baking, or reading, the specific act doesn't matter. What matters is staying in tune with the question: "If you are not for yourself, who will be for youand if not nowwhen."
3. Seek, Accept, and at Times Demand Help
In caregiving circles we hear a lot about the word support. Family caregivers regularly seek supportive relationships with other caregivers, knowing they can provide the emotional sustenance needed during difficult times. What support doesn't do however, is change the circumstances under which you are living. It doesn't relieve you of some of your responsibilities. That's the work of a different wordand that word is HELP.
Providing help is something that family caregivers know a great deal about. It is what we do every day. The question is how often does someone lend you a helping hand? If you are like most family caregivers, the answer is not often enough.
But how do you get the help you need, and where do you find it? Just as you have to reach out to get support and be open to receiving it, you need to reach out and ask for help, and know how to accept it when it is offered.
We have learned that the first step in getting help is the recognition that caregiving is far too big a task to undertake alone. This is true for all caregivers, but particularly for those who are assisting loved ones with multiple needs or providing round-the-clock care.
Some people have a hard time admitting they need help. They feel guilty even thinking they can't juggle everything themselves, or they believe no one else can do their job as well as they can. They forget that the totality of caregiving, like all jobs, is made up of lots of individual tasks, not all of which are of the same importance, or require the same skills.
Many people think asking for help is a sign of weakness, but that isn't so. Asking for help is a sign of strength because it is an acknowledgement of the difficulty of the situation at hand. It is a sign of strength because it requires putting pride aside and acting in the best interest of your loved one and yourself, and that isn't an easy thing to do.
4. Stand Up and Be Counted
The first step in standing up and being counted as an advocate for your loved one and yourself and as an activist for all caregiving families is to recognize that you are a family caregiver, in addition to being a wife, a mother or dad, a daughter or son, a sister, brother, friend, niece, etc. It is important to acknowledge your role as a family caregiver because that bonds you with the millions of other family caregivers in America who share many of the same worries and concerns that you have. Acknowledging that you are part of a group, a very large group, helps provide the strength and the conviction that you often need to stand up and be counted.
Originally published by the National Family Caregivers Association (NFCA). Reprinted with permission.
For you:
http://www.strengthforcaring.com/manual/about-you-the-caregiver-role/four-messages-to-live-by/
FOUR MESSAGES TO LIVE BY
By National Family Caregivers Association
What does it mean to be a happy person when you are a family caregiver?
How can you gain a feeling of confidence in your abilities and have a sense of pride in your achievements?
How do you stand up for yourself, take care of yourself, and find a balance between your own needs and those of your loved ones?
These are heady questions, and ones that have been discussed often. We have looked for answers in our own experiences, in books, from professionals, and from other family caregivers. We've thought long and hard about these issues because they are at the core of our search for meaning and our need to have principles to live by as family caregivers.
At NFCA, we call our approach to caregiving, Principles of Caregiver Self-Advocacy.
They are the fundamental tenets of our philosophy. They have helped thousands of caregivers to date and we hope you will use them as guideposts in your own personal search for a sense of direction and inner peace.
The NFCA four principles are:
1. Choose to take charge of your life
2. Love, honor, and value yourself
3. Seek, accept, and at times demand help
4. Stand up and be counted
1. Choose to Take Charge of Your Life
Often we become caregivers very suddenly, without warninga husband is diagnosed with cancer, a child is in a car accident, a parent has a stroke. At other times, caregiving creeps up on uswe know mom is forgetting things and we slowly start taking on some administrative tasks and calling more often, until one day we realize she no longer has the capacity to live safely on her own.
Somewhere along the line however, it is vitally important that we do stop, take a breath, and try to gain some control over the situation, rather than letting the situation control us. It is vitally important that we choose to take charge of our lives.
What does that mean - choose to take charge of our lives? Obviously we cannot control everything that happens to us, or to our loved ones. But we can make active choices about how we are going to deal with the circumstances of our lives.
We can look at life as a glass half full, or we can try to make lemonade out of our lemons. We can choose to martyr ourselves in the interests of the loved one for whom we are caring, or we can set limits on what we as individuals can and cannot do without causing irrevocable damage to our own health or the other relationships in our lives. Caregiving is complicated. It is forever changing, and it usually involves a variety of people, not just the caregiver and the care receiver. Recognizing this is critical if we are going to give ourselves permission to actively make choices and not always be on the receiving side of consequences.
The choices that we can make, or have to make, during the course of our caregiving experience will change as circumstances change. It is hard to realistically make a decision about whether to try a risky experimental therapy when a loved one is asymptomatic. It is impossible to really know what it would be like to have your mother living with you and your family when she is frail and needs lots of help if she is only 61 years old now and the picture of health.
Knowing that circumstances change, including our own health and innate capabilities, is vital to learning to take charge of our lives. Remembering that martyrdom always has a negative consequence for the martyr is a wake up call to caregivers who put everyone else's needs first and their own last, never recognizing that if they fall apart there might not be another family member to take over.
Choosing to take charge of our lives means recognizing our strengths and our limitations and knowing that it is okay to set boundaries, and to say: "yes I can and will do this, but I'm sorry, I just can't do that." Being a caregiver, a willing and loving caregiver, doesn't mean you discard the word "no" from your vocabulary.
We need to know our own limits and the consequences of our actions. The lifting we could easily do five years ago may be having dire consequences for our back today. When we started spending more time helping grandma it didn't seem to impact the kids, but now they are feeling the loss of our attention and getting into trouble at school to prove it. Caregiving is a relationship - between many people. Choosing to take charge of your life means you recognize that you are one of those people. Making choices in your own interests isn't selfish - it is often the most important thing you can do for all concerned.
2. Love, Honor, and Value Yourself
It is easy to lose your true self while being a family caregiver. It is easy to lose your identity as an individual and that is why it is so important to cling to the core of your personality. Do the things that make you happy, that let you say: "I feel like 'me' when I am doing this or that, or I like 'me' when I am being this way."
Caregiving so often keeps us off balance. It is easy to get lost in its physical and psychological maelstromthe sadness, the frustration, the stress and strain on your body and your mind, the financial worries, the emotional painyou know them well. All the more reason to step out of the frame on a regular basis, and cultivate the other parts of yourself, to learn to give to yourself in addition to giving to others.
Rabbi Hillel, one of the great sages of Judaism, said many years ago, "If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am only for myself, what am I? And if not now, when?" He was a wise man, and he recognized the need for all of us to have balance in our lives and serve ourselves as well as others. His message is a wake-up call to all family caregivers that loving yourself is not selfish. It is in fact a way of honoring and valuing the wonder of a human life.
The inner person in each of us is different, and we all need to find our own way of keeping in touch with ourselves and developing an awareness of what fulfills us so that we can turn to those things for energy, solace, and validation. It might be the time you spend in church that allows you to separate yourself from caregiving for a time and that brings you peace; the morning jog you take that provides a surge of energy and a sense of well being. It might be the career that not only "brings home the bacon," but also provides you with personal satisfaction. It might be as simple as a 15-minute bubble bath you allow yourself every Friday evening as a way to calm yourself down and welcome the weekend.
It is not an easy thing to do especially when you're racing around and perhaps living from crisis to crisis. It is not easy because doing so often makes caregivers feel guilty because giving to one's self often means taking time away from fulfilling either real or perceived obligations.
But how do you do it? How do you create some balance between caring for others and caring for yourself? There's that pesky question again. You do it by recognizing that your own good health is the very best present you can give your loved one. Your own continuing ability to stay healthy is vital to your continuing ability to be a competent family caregiver.
Believe in your value as a human being and your right to a few minutes of personal space, at least several times a week. If you can take more than that, it is a bonus from which you will prosper, but all of us, even the busiest of caregivers can find 10 or 15 minutes several times a week to care for themselves. The trick is to start and to focus those few minutes on you, your interests, and your dreams.
The idea is to love, honor, and value the essential part of yourself that you've slowly been losing to caregiving. Whether its taking long walks, practicing yoga, painting, praying, baking, or reading, the specific act doesn't matter. What matters is staying in tune with the question: "If you are not for yourself, who will be for youand if not nowwhen."
3. Seek, Accept, and at Times Demand Help
In caregiving circles we hear a lot about the word support. Family caregivers regularly seek supportive relationships with other caregivers, knowing they can provide the emotional sustenance needed during difficult times. What support doesn't do however, is change the circumstances under which you are living. It doesn't relieve you of some of your responsibilities. That's the work of a different wordand that word is HELP.
Providing help is something that family caregivers know a great deal about. It is what we do every day. The question is how often does someone lend you a helping hand? If you are like most family caregivers, the answer is not often enough.
But how do you get the help you need, and where do you find it? Just as you have to reach out to get support and be open to receiving it, you need to reach out and ask for help, and know how to accept it when it is offered.
We have learned that the first step in getting help is the recognition that caregiving is far too big a task to undertake alone. This is true for all caregivers, but particularly for those who are assisting loved ones with multiple needs or providing round-the-clock care.
Some people have a hard time admitting they need help. They feel guilty even thinking they can't juggle everything themselves, or they believe no one else can do their job as well as they can. They forget that the totality of caregiving, like all jobs, is made up of lots of individual tasks, not all of which are of the same importance, or require the same skills.
Many people think asking for help is a sign of weakness, but that isn't so. Asking for help is a sign of strength because it is an acknowledgement of the difficulty of the situation at hand. It is a sign of strength because it requires putting pride aside and acting in the best interest of your loved one and yourself, and that isn't an easy thing to do.
4. Stand Up and Be Counted
The first step in standing up and being counted as an advocate for your loved one and yourself and as an activist for all caregiving families is to recognize that you are a family caregiver, in addition to being a wife, a mother or dad, a daughter or son, a sister, brother, friend, niece, etc. It is important to acknowledge your role as a family caregiver because that bonds you with the millions of other family caregivers in America who share many of the same worries and concerns that you have. Acknowledging that you are part of a group, a very large group, helps provide the strength and the conviction that you often need to stand up and be counted.
Originally published by the National Family Caregivers Association (NFCA). Reprinted with permission.

deleted_user
Thanks so much for sharing this. It has some wonderful suggestions--wish I could do them all. Elaine

deleted_user
thank you SO much for this, inspiring have saved it and will re-read...amazing...Cathrynn X

deleted_user
Thank you for sharing. I too have copied and saved the information provided to use for future reference.

deleted_user
I too have printed this and plan to read it often to keep things in the forefront of my mind. Thanks for sharing it. Great information!

deleted_user
thank you for sharing this, like many others we find it almost impossible if not impossible to find time to take care of ourselves,,, right now with myself i see i have to find a way,,,hugs

deleted_user
thats a very good article girl.

deleted_user
Thank you for these thoughts. They ring true in every aspect. I need to take more time for myself so that I can be a better caregiver to my mom. The role of daughter and caregiver is a very difficult balance for everyone involved.

deleted_user
I copied this and goin to reread it when I can ..thanks so much for this!!

deleted_user
This does say a lot. Thank you for putting in words. Caregiving for a parent is very tough because the rolls are reverse Mom becomes the child.

deleted_user
thanks Sandy.. it's a great help.. It is difficult at best some of the time.. Love D

Sharon91
WOW,thank you for sharing.

MineraPearl
I am glad this article is helpful. No one on the outside knows the day-to-day happenings with us caregivers. It's our own little secret! It is making us better people in one way or the other. LOL

deleted_user
Thanks so much for posting this. I'm going to put it in my favorites, so I can pull up the link later on.

deleted_user
Thank you, I have added this to my favorites for future review.

deleted_user
Thank you Sandie...very helpful! Candy
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