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Creating Fun for Caregivers and Frail
Seniors
Your confined-to-home (or assisted
living or nursing home) parent, just wants to have fun!
You are focused on their safety, finances, medical
treatment, medications, privacy, nutrition and therapy.
You busy yourself with monitoring their progress (or
decline) and doing everything in your power to keep them
comfortable. You worry about their reduced energy level,
increasing fatigue, physical weakness and variable
mental status. But do you know how important it is for
them to just have fun? To laugh deeply, live in the
moment, to briefly not be just old and frail, to forget
pain?
OK, so what can you do? I know that you are thinking,
well, they can’t do that much, but you might be
surprised at all the options. Too often thoughtful
families accommodate so much to their senior’s weakening
state that they overlook how much they can do and enjoy!
While it’s good to try to bring the world to them with
visits, letters, phone calls and email, it’s also
important and possible to keep bringing them out in the
world. Of course, it may involve more work for you —
transporting walker or wheelchair, assisting in/out of
cars and doors, walking slowly, negotiating steps
carefully, finding bathrooms, keeping him/her dry, warm
(or cool) — so be prepared for a different pace and
smaller goals. And some cajoling might be needed to just
get going.
Mini-field trips
Seniors look forward to having a day out, but as they
age, they don’t have the stamina or mobility for trips
to fascinating museums, over-stimulating casinos,
monster malls, giant sports stadiums, wooded parks, loud
modern restaurants, etc. But they may be able to go out
for an hour or two. My mom adored a simple trip to the
supermarket — colorful flowers, fanciful balloons, acres
of fresh, bright produce, bakery smells, energetic
families with huge carts. She pushed her walker along,
senses on overload, straying down enticing aisles. We
didn’t buy a thing. But it was an hour that she talked
about for days – a new topic of discussion with her
nursing home buddies.
Another day we drove one short mile to a local antique
shop. “I had those gold Fostoria glasses,” she pointed
out. “Your dad and I would stop at the Fostoria factory
store on trips to see my brother in Washington, DC.”
Talk about the glassware led to reminiscing about her
deceased brother, until she0interrupted herself; “Look
at the quilts – just like Grandmother’s.” And so on,
pushing her walker forward toward the next memory. After
about an hour, she had had enough and home we went.
The first trip to a small local department store just
before Christmas involved a little arm twisting. But
once there, lights, perfume, soft velvety fashions and
just ahead a decorated Christmas tree, worked their
magic. She wheeled ahead, touching, smelling,
exclaiming. Onward through silky lingerie, cute
children’s clothes and glittering jewelry. At about the
hour mark, like Cinderella, she was done. She relived it
all week.
Recently she and I went to a small jewelry store 10
minutes from her home – she had favorite rings that
needed resizing. Instead of just taking them for her, I
invited her to come along. For the first time in a long
time she became the customer, the center of attention.
Soon she asked for a chair, her shopping done. But for
her it was a big accomplishment, an errand, like in the
old days she so misses.
My father-in-law loved an afternoon drive looking at
properties we were considering purchasing. He was
curious about these houses we described, their yards,
their roofs, the neighborhoods. Since we didn’t even
bring his wheelchair or get out of the car, it was like
a guided tour. “I’ve been in that house” he’d say. “This
was always a good neighborhood” he’d remember. “Let’s
see what they are building on that hill.” Other mini
trips for him were to the cemetery where his wife was
buried, their first house in that area and a volunteer
organization they founded. He remembered being a
neighbor, a businessman, a father and a contributer to
the community.
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