Finding Ninee » Sharing our parenting and special needs stories with heart and humor.

Our Land: Getting Old part 1

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Today’s Our Land author almost needs no introduction. For regular followers of this series, you know my deep-thinking, amazing, brilliant, and, at times, tormented friend Lizzi from Considerings. For those of you who do not know her, check her out, and read her previous Our Land contributions, here, and here. Lizzi not only Believes in Our Land (with a capitol B for Believes), but she practices it. Her writing makes her sound older than her years, and her life-view will leave you in awe of both her tenderheartedness and her wisdom. Really. Go visit her. You won’t regret it, I promise.

She’s amazing. She’s also the one that drew me to attend Clark’s vidchat, on Friday nights, which I highly recommend.

Our Land: Getting Old Part 1:

Home of the Living Dead (part one of a two-part Our Land) (WHOOT!)

The first job I found myself in, having left school, was working as a minimum-wage employee in a care home for the elderly. I hated myself for taking the job, even as I knew that I was desperate, owed some housekeeping, and was willing to plumb the very depths for ready cash.

I rocked up on my first day and realised the full awfulness of what I’d signed up to. In the ensuing three weeks (shamefully, that was as long as I stuck at it) I learned more and worse about what can happen inside one of these death-houses than I ever wanted to.

It broke my heart and left a deep and profound impression on me.

I was one of very few English people who worked there in the lower rungs of the hierarchy. Most of the staff were cheery and bright (and could speak English well), but not all of them. As I recall, the residents were all white English. The disparity stuck with me because it underlined so sharply how we, as a nation, seem to be all too ready to turn over our incapable elderly into the hands of caring foreigners and hard-up teenagers. Why don’t we care for them?

Though to be honest, the ‘care’ aspect might be rather a generous attribution. Three corridors of residents, one of which housed the highly dependent, all to be seen to by six workers.

Every morning, time tight by the constraints of the kitchen and the wafting smell of cheap, cooked food pervading the building, we’d briskly walk in, get the resident up and out of bed, trying to remember to say “Good morning” and use their name and smile at them, as policy dictated. We’d wash them, our latex-gloved hands clinically and efficiently manipulating their aged bodies, holding up arms, legs, feet, breasts, genitals and washing carefully with purpose-bought disposable cloths and warm, soapy water, before drying them and putting them in their clothes ready to be wheeled down to the room where we’d line the walls with them as they waited for breakfast.

I don’t remember being asked to introduce myself by name.

I was a stranger to them – a young, unknown kid, cleansing their most intimate parts, exposing them as little as I could, but nonetheless, required by my role to do so.

Taking them to the toilet was the worst. They seemed to all wait and suddenly need to go at once, and the workers would be hard pressed to manage the flow. Sometimes accidents happened, and then they were rolled back to their rooms to be washed and re-dressed, and their wheelchairs cleaned. And the floors.

By then it would be lunch time. And then we’d roll the more compos mentis down to the recreation room for some bought in ‘fun’. Then dinner time. Then we’d undo all we’d done in the morning and put them back into their beds.

In the evening I’d stagger home after a 12 hour shift, absolutely shattered and unable to purge the dour mood from my soul. Or the smell – that all-pervading stench of piss and faeces and death…ever clinging death, just watching, waiting around every corner. Standing guard over every bed. Because we all knew – even the residents knew – that they’d been signed over to our ‘care’ to wait, in the most convenient way possible, to die.

The incident which really put the skids under my time there was a day when I was assigned to work on the lower corridor – the high dependency section.

The residents there were severely disabled. Washing them in the mornings was a case of rolling them over, with one worker holding them still as the other scrubbed them. And in most cases, scrubbed the crusted faeces off their wrinkled arses, and applied cream to their sores, before moving them to a more comfortable position.

Breakfast was spoon-fed to them, without conversation (because they couldn’t, or wouldn’t) with one eye on the television (to counter both of theirs, fixed on it as they willed me (or, more likely, themselves) to not be there).

Not all of them were bed-bound, and some were moved from their beds into wheelchairs using a hoist, with straps which went around their upper back and under their arms, and two loops to go around each leg. They were hauled into the air and lowered into their waiting wheelchair. The same happened in reverse at the end of the day, or whenever they needed changing.

This particular morning, another worker and I were half-way through the process of getting one of these residents out of bed. We’d washed her and were ready to move her, but time was tight and I don’t think the mood was any more than perfunctory. We got the straps around her and lifted her out, aiming to put her into her wheelchair when all of a sudden, she started shitting, right there in the hoist.

She was hanging there, in her gown, with great gobbets of shit smacking wetly onto the floor, narrowly missing the wheelchair, which I swiftly moved away so it didn’t get hit. I looked at her face, feeling a sudden and overwhelming rush of horror and pity that her life had come to this – half-naked, suspended in mid-air and shitting all over the ground, in front of strangers.

And as I looked, that horror turned to heartsickness, because in her eyes there was nothing. She – whatever part of her it was that made her a person, a human – was gone. Buried away inside herself behind a defensive wall of apathy and blankness, protecting her from the excruciating humiliation her sense of dignity would have been reduced to, were she ‘present’ in this situation.

That was the day I knew the utter, devastating shame of a nation which hides its elderly and infirm behind closed doors, leaving them to die without having to see or care for them. A nation which is all too happy to abandon its progenitors, casting them off as though they were the ones to be ashamed of. A nation which treats a significant proportion of its elderly with a pitifully meagre amount of respect.

A nation I belong to.

That was the day I knew I could never work with old people again.

But I did, as you’ll see…

See? Stay tuned for part 2 and how this all fits into Our Land (Next Tuesday night – or Wednesday morning, depending on your timezone. And my ability to deliver). In the meantime, visit Lizzi and let her know how much she rocks. Here’s more about her:

LizziLizzi is a Deep Thinker, Truth Teller and Seeker of Good. She works a normal job and has a secret life as the writer at Considerings. Wife to Husby and Mother to two Neverborns, now dealing with the challenge of primary infertility, she is a frequent instigator of silliness and loves to entertain with words.

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  • Mike - There are so many wonderful people speaking out for a gazillion different causes and needs in our society around the world. The care for our elderly seems to be in the Sounds of Silence from my long life experience. I spent 7 years in these places between 3 grandparents and mom & dad. I’m 1000% familiar to every minute detail as to what goes on in there. And unfortunately I’m privy to what goes on that is far, far worse. But, it’s damn real, a damn crime (literally in the U.S.) and it hits very near and dear to my heart. And it should everyone on this planet…because we will all “be there” someday likely. Here’s to me hugging your socks off right now for writing this, Lizzi. Ok, now go put them back on 🙂 Xxxxooo’s!March 4, 2014 – 11:27 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Oh Mike, I’m so sorry you have such intimate knowledge of these awful places. Seven years! Wow. I couldn’t cope for longer than three weeks. I feel like a total wimp about it, but it was *awful*.
      But yes. Absolutely. We ALL need to sit up and stop marginalising our elderly, and make things BETTER for them – because we’re headed right for where they are now, and it’s not going to get any better unless we CHANGE THINGS.

      *HUGS*March 5, 2014 – 2:18 amReplyCancel

  • Chris Carter - Ugh… I am just grimacing through this entire post. It breaks my heart to pieces. And yet, what else to do? What are WE to do?

    It’s here too. And I simply don’t even know how to accept it or fight it. Oh the horror. Is this how we will be ending our life as well?

    I wonder. Oh God, I fear not.

    Anxious to read the next post… hurry up and get it out!March 5, 2014 – 12:08 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - I wrote this in a thrall of horror, reliving what I’d seen and been party to. Over ten years on and it still affects me and leaves my heart chilly.

      I don’t know – I WISH I knew.

      If we’re lucky, by the time we’re old, the government will have decided that care homes cost too much, and will have introduced some kind of culling program for anyone who makes it five years post-retirement.

      (I say that in darkest jest, of course…though in some ways it might be preferable)

      The second half is written and waiting for next week…March 5, 2014 – 2:04 amReplyCancel

  • Sandy Ramsey - In my early twenties, I worked in a nursing home. I was in the office but still saw and heard enough to know I don’t want to be put in one. I think that job was what fueled the ever-growing fear I have of getting old. Kids go to school for eight weeks and then are paid nothing to take care of these fragile souls and they do it with no compassion. It is just a job. The nurses were bitter. The residents were like children, I was constantly chasing the more mobile ones out the front door. I rarely walked to the wing where the for all intents and purposes, as you describe, the people were already gone. My parents will never be in a home. I know its not easy to care for an elderly person at the end of their life but I will do it, with help, in my own home. And I will beg my children to do the same for me.

    You are back, love. You are sooooo back! XX

    Thanks for putting her up, Kristi!March 5, 2014 – 6:03 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - I didn’t know that about you, Sandy. Even in an office capacity I can only imagine how tough it was to see and hear (and smell) the things which go on there.

      I don’t have a fear of older, and to balance this, I’ve seen some incredibly sprightly ancient people, who are simply wonderful and still living life to the max. But this ending. This haunts and terrifies me. In a way I feel glad that I’ll probably inherit Alzheimer’s and I’ll be *gone*…

      I’m so glad you’ve said you’ll care for your parents. I don’t know what I’ll do with mine. I hope it doesn’t come to that.

      YES! I’m BACK! And Part 2 is just as good 🙂

      THANK YOU for being such a wonderful cheerleader always *HUGS*March 5, 2014 – 12:10 pmReplyCancel

  • Janine Huldie - This was one of the many reasons, I truly never had the desire to become a nurse or any kind of caregiver, because I think it would utterly tear my heart in two to see stuff like this day in and day out. I mean I saw my grandmother slowly drift away a few years ago and that was enough to make me hope and pray to god that I would never myself suffer to this degree at the end of my life. My father-in-law always said it best that he wants to die a quick, painless death, like his own father he leaned over in his own bed, kissed his wife and passed away shortly after that. He wasn’t sick beforehand and just went so quickly, but so peacefully, too. Definitely a shock to my husband and his family, but in the end he didn’t suffer thankfully and that has always left an impression on me (if that makes sense). Thanks Lizzi for sharing with us today and Kristi for giving her this opportunity.March 5, 2014 – 8:07 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Yeah, I completely and UTTERLY understand you. I think I’d struggle hugely. And I think just seeing people in pain, even though I was doing something to help them…I don’t think I could do that on a daily basis. I have SO, SO much respect for nurses and caregivers who do this kind of thing. I truly think it’s a vocation, and there are too many who do it as a job, and that’s where the problem arises.

      There’s a story on my dad’s side of the family about an elderly relative who got up one morning and knew that it was her day to die. So she cleaned her house, put her affairs in order, laid down on her bed, and died. That sounds good to me.

      I’m glad Kevin’s grandfather passed away peacefully. That’s such a blessing.March 5, 2014 – 12:34 pmReplyCancel

  • elizabeth - Lizzi, you’ve worded this so well. I’ve been witness to this horrifying senior citizen system for the past years as my grandmother was moved from nursing home to hospital and back again. It’s sad and eye-opening. There’s a sense of guilt for having these places even existent. But you’ve said it perfectly. It’s a place to stick people while they wait to die. And I guess the younger generation would rather not have to deal with that under their own roofs. It’s a sad, selfish system that we’ve conveniently created.March 5, 2014 – 8:44 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - We’ve swiftly turned, without stopping to question it, into a world where finance governs all, and our respect for our elders is measured in how much it will cost us in terms of money and time.

      You’re absolutely right about the sense of guilt, and yet they’re so necessary, these places – for who else will take them?

      And this is why our society sucks. And why we need to *somehow* start changing it for the better.

      So sorry you saw all this first-hand with your grandmother 🙁March 5, 2014 – 12:37 pmReplyCancel

  • Lisa @ Golden Spoons - I despise going into hospitals and nursing homes. There is just an aura of sadness and sickness and helplessness that seeps into my soul and makes me so uncomfortable. I think it is one of those things that, for me, it too easy to turn away from because it doesn’t affect me directly -right now, at least. That’s not the right attitude, though, and that doesn’t fix anything. Looking forward to Part II~March 5, 2014 – 8:52 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - I know exactly what you mean, both about the feeling of hopelessness and despair about those places, and about shoving it to the back of the mind because it’s not your immediate world.

      I know that worse things happen, but this is probably one of the chronic issues of our society – it goes on and on and on and gets gradually and imperceptibly worse until one day, it breaks.

      Glad you’re looking forward to part 2 – I like it as much as I like this one (writing- and meaningfulness-wise)March 5, 2014 – 12:41 pmReplyCancel

  • Kate - This breaks my heart. I actually volunteered at my local hospital’s transitional care unit back when I was in high school. I was a bingo caller 🙂 Luckily, these folks were in the hospital setting and being taken care of by the staff there instead of a typical nursing home.March 5, 2014 – 9:22 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - I bet you were a BRILLIANT bingo caller, Kate 🙂 I expect you brought some sunshine and happiness to their lives, and that’s SO what’s needed. You have such a gorgeous, caring heart. GOOD FOR YOU 😀

      You’re a better person than I am – I took the job from desperation, not desire.

      I’m glad the people you saw were all receiving proper care 🙂March 5, 2014 – 12:43 pmReplyCancel

  • Emily - I am really interested in reading your Part 2…my mother was a Director of Nursing for several different NY area nursing homes for many years. She specialized and wrote several books about caring for the elderly so this is a subject that hits close to home. I recently volunteered in a nursing home with my dog – we are a pet therapy team and would go and visit the residents once a week. I stopped going after a year because I became depressed seeing these people, but I told everyone I thought my dog needed a change. Anyway, I have mixed feelings about nursing homes. I think they are a necessity, but I also know via my mom, that there are HUGE differences in how these places are run and how well they care for their residents. Great writing as always, by the way!March 5, 2014 – 9:32 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - That’s good to hear, Emily – thank you 🙂

      It sounds as though your mother was at least trying her best to do well by the elderly in NY. Good for her! It’s such an under-loved subject; I assume because we’ve developed a culture where people are valued by youth, beauty and economic status/contribution rather than for their wisdom, their experiences or their longevity.

      Thanks for sharing your experiences as a pet-therapist. I’m impressed with you for sticking it out as long as a year. And I know what you mean – there’s a nagging guilt because as long as we, too, leave them to their fates, nothing changes…

      But yes. There are INCREDIBLY well-run care homes. I just don’t think they’re the norm.March 5, 2014 – 12:46 pmReplyCancel

  • Piper George - It is horrifying how we churn the elderly into homes. Unfortunately in many cases there isn’t a choice – people cannot afford to stay home from work to care for them or to employ a home carer. The idea of being elderly and unable to wipe myself is frankly terrifying.March 5, 2014 – 9:44 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Yeah. This. WHY can’t we afford to stay home?

      I feel so, SO strongly that somewhere in here, is a consumer-driven answer.

      There are cultures where it would be standard to sell possessions in order to take care of venerated elders. To go without in order that they might be cared for by family.

      Not ours.

      Ours is to hide them.

      And yes. That idea terrifies me, too. It all terrifies me. But given the way Cameron’s going, we’ll just be working til we drop dead, at this rate.March 5, 2014 – 12:49 pmReplyCancel

  • Anita@ Losing Austin - Leaves me chilled despite the hot coffee I sip- I felt right there with you. Can’t wait to read part 2.March 5, 2014 – 9:52 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Anita, I experienced this over TEN years ago. It remains like a cold stone in my heart…

      Part 2 is good. It ends on a better note (thank goodness).March 5, 2014 – 12:55 pmReplyCancel

  • K - Lizzi, this gave me chills and left me with a pit in my stomach…so powerfully written, and such an important topic. I don’t have the experience of working in a nursing home, but my great-grandmother was in one when I was around 13 years old and the visits were heartbreaking. I used to try to talk to some of the residents there and there was such sadness in their eyes…sometimes I’d massage their shoulders and when I had to leave, they’d beg for me to stay and they’d try to follow me out. And there was another time when I went to go visit my great-grandmother and when I walked into her room, there was a stranger lying in her bed, a middle-aged man, one of the workers — he decided to take a nap and didn’t think anyone would notice, and my great-grandmother wasn’t in a position to say anything. Heartbreaking. I still get shivers when I think about that.

    Ahh I guess I’m rambling now, but I just want to say thank you for writing this, Lizzi. This is so, so important. xoMarch 5, 2014 – 11:19 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - You sweet, sweet thing to go and care – actually, properly CARE – for those old people, and to give them that warm human contact they probably missed so much amongst all the clinical dealings.

      Oh it breaks my heart. And yet not in a way that I could go back…

      I hate the system and the mindset and the society which creates these places.

      The experience your grandmother had sounds APPALLING! What was he THINKING? That’s absolutely outrageous, and I hope he was fired! Good GRIEF!

      Ramble at me, or near me, WHENEVER you want. I love your ramblings.

      Hope you’re well, m’dear 🙂March 5, 2014 – 1:12 pmReplyCancel

  • Katia - So, so, so difficult to read and accept. I am very well familiar with what you describe. I have almost daily conversations with my mom about the unfairness of the aging process, the utter loss of dignity and identity and the unfairness of witnessing it happen to a loved one and knowing that we’re all headed there as well. I love the sober realism with which you’ve approached this piece. I think this is the treatment the subject deserves. Old age is often painful and humiliating and you did it justice here. As for your nation, I dare not criticize as an outsider, but wanted to presented a different angle. My mom who cares for my grandma, as you know, and lives deep inside the type of reality you describe here, often says that one of her biggest hopes is that she doesn’t put me through this, meaning that I won’t have to care for her the way she cares for her mom, since she views that as something humiliating and degrading for her mother. She often says that she wishes to be “put away” somewhere where it’s not the members of her immediate family who get to change her diapers and scrub shit off her but rather someone impartial. I ask myself if she is going to feel the same way at her old age, or whether she’ll feel betrayed if I follow her request. I can’t answer that question.

    Very thought and emotion provoking post. One of your most powerful ones.March 5, 2014 – 11:28 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Oh Katia. You know how much this means, your comment and your opinion, and that when I read your piece about your Babooshka, it broke my heart. I already had this written, and I knew it would speak to you, too.

      Is there a right answer? I don’t know. I can understand (in a way) wanting not to burden your own children, and wanting to protect them from the more visceral and humiliating parts of the decay of old age. But at the same time, doesn’t that just speak volumes to our worldview – that instead of seeing this kind of care as a privilege – to be able to repay some of the care received at the beginning of one’s life, and to look after with LOVE, those older people as they begin to leave this world, we would rather the whole transaction be handled by strangers.

      Oh it’s all awful 🙁

      And that’s one heck of a potential double-bluff to have to field! I hope the answers become apparent to you as time goes by!

      Thank you for your feedback and your thoughts, Katia. They mean a lot to me.March 5, 2014 – 1:26 pmReplyCancel

  • Dana - My grandmother-in-law is in a nursing home right now, and it’s not going well. The standard of care is just not up to par, and it’s tearing my mother-in-law apart. I know there are good people who work in these homes, but it is so sad to see these residents so lonely. My daughter wants to volunteer in one this summer, and I worry about how it will affect her. But it’s an important job. Looking forward to reading part 2, Lizzi.March 5, 2014 – 11:57 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Oh Dana I’m so sorry to hear that 🙁

      The good people who work in these homes seem so often to be diminished in the extent of their capabilities by policy and timing and staffing and finance.

      I hope there’s a solution for your family *sigh*

      I think if your daughter volunteered, it would be a good thing. Yes it would open her eyes to some (probably) truly awful realities, but better to do that while you’re around to field the fall-out and be able to ‘Mummy’ her a bit.

      She’s the future, Dana. She can’t change anything if she doesn’t know it’s a problem…March 5, 2014 – 1:41 pmReplyCancel

  • Mandi - And then I sit at my computer and read a story that crashes straight into my soul. And I think…in a few years, this could be my mom…and I cry because it’s a decision that we’ve walked around, but none of us wants to make it because we *think* we can care for her, but we don’t have the hoisters or the wheel chairs or the other necessary items that one day she will probably but hopefully never need as her dementia continues to chew on her brain until she is left like your patient, blank. And I want to scream, “NO NO NO!” Please, God, NO!!!March 5, 2014 – 12:14 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Sending you HUGE wrap-around hugs, Mandi. That’s such a tough reality to face, and it breaks my heart that you have to, and that you’re witnessing the slow loss of your mom. I’d offer wishes or prayers that you don’t have to see this, but my prayers too often turn out to be monkey-paw ones, so it’s safer not to. But I hate that you face this.

      And it’s true – those pieces of equipment are too much for individuals, and so the idea of a care home seems like a good one…and then…and then…

      I hope for you, that if it comes to that, you find a really, really AMAZING one. They do exist. I promise.

      Watch Quartet. It’s a movie about a care home for retired musicians and singers. It’s SO uplifting. I think you’d enjoy it.March 5, 2014 – 2:05 pmReplyCancel

  • Tamara - I’ll be tuning in, no matter how heartsick it makes me.
    My grandmother had to go to a facility this year and we never thought that would happen, or that we’d allow it. She’s 100 and my grandfather had passed and my mom’s house has too many floors and horses. My uncle has Parkinson’s so he’s not much help.
    I get very weird about visiting my grandmother. My mom will do it daily but I live far away and can’t do it as often. I have had anxiety attacks in those corridors.
    Working there? I cannot imagine. I’m not made of the right stuff.March 5, 2014 – 1:50 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Oh Tamara I’m so sorry to hear that. It’s awful when there just aren’t the resources and facilities (human/equipment/whatever) to support our loved ones without these places.

      I don’t blame you for being weird about it. I don’t visit mine. Not that she knows who I am any more (I don’t think). But my Grandad, him I should visit. It’s shameful of me that I haven’t been for ages. He’s at home and… just the loneliness that I can never fix by myself…and so I retreat, chicken out and do nothing.

      Honestly, I hope no-one thinks I’m trying to preach with this cos I have no leg to stand on. Ever.

      I hope your grandmother gets GOOD care. And I’m glad your mom visits her daily. That’s something. A big something. So many of the people I worked with (in my three weeks) had few or no visits at all.March 5, 2014 – 4:17 pmReplyCancel

  • Beth Teliho - I’m utterly…..I don’t even know the right word. Deeply impacted by your words. There, that sums it up. So tragic and downright terrifying. I don’t think I’ll ever get the image of that poor women shitting on the floor with nothing but blank behind her eyes out of my head. The nursing home situation is no better here in the states, unless you have some serious cash that it. And I mean BIG money. It’s the kind of ugly you hate to look it, hate to admit is there. But it is. And that could be us someday. Really, really scary.March 5, 2014 – 2:25 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Me neither. That one is burned into my mind. For. Ever. It’s one of those shuddery awful ones, like seeing too-many-corpses being bulldozed into mass graves in old black-and-white photographs. Like Youtube videos where unexpectedly, someone dies.

      In the blank eyes of that shitting woman were all the things which are wrong with this broken, fucked up world of ours. And I saw them there.

      Big money is terrifying. It costs here, to get anything more than state care. Spend all your money kids, because you’ll be using your inheritance on care, and at least if the care is terrible, you might die sooner on someone else’s dollar.

      It’s all so horrible. Big. HUGE. Ugly.

      And yes. It could be us. There’s always that terror.March 5, 2014 – 4:25 pmReplyCancel

  • Lisa D.B. Taylor - So hard to read, harder still to have experienced this first hand and know how horribly true it is.
    Powerful writing!March 5, 2014 – 3:41 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Ack! From the trenches then, are you? Hate that you recognise the truth in this.

      But thanks.March 5, 2014 – 4:26 pmReplyCancel

  • Tarana - I think we fear old age and death, so we hide it behind such institutions. Your description of that old lady really shook me – she had reached a point where she actually hid her human spirit.March 5, 2014 – 4:01 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - She had. I think because it was so ignored and overlooked by others. Or she just couldn’t bear, in that situation, to BE human. Because it was so terrible.

      Yes. This is what we fear – not death, but the process of dying.March 5, 2014 – 4:31 pmReplyCancel

  • Yvonne - So who’s cliffhangering now Lizz1!?

    This is so, so sad. I am so glad my dad didn’t have to go through anything like this. My 93 year old aunt still lives at home, but needs help to have a bath now. When she’s been very private all her life, I think even that must be hard. But I think she enjoys the attention (she’s like that!) It’s not like the indignity you describe though.
    I seem to write stories about old people quite often, probably because of having elderly relatives, and seeing the stuff they go through, even if they are lucky enough to still be at home. One of my grandmothers had dementia and spent her last few years in a home, but by then she had no idea who any of us were and I think my parents made the right decision. It was hard on my mum though.
    And I think sometimes there is hope – as far as I know, in Shetland (where I’m from) the care homes really are good. Some old folk love being there – my mum’s cousin went in after he’d had a fall and wanted to stay. They have birthday parties where others in the community can come along, and my aunt attends some days for craft classes and things like that. My niece works in one of the homes, and really enjoys it.
    Great post!March 5, 2014 – 4:45 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Aw now that’s gorgeous. I’m really glad that the homes in Shetland are so good 🙂 THOSE are the ones we need more of – where there’s community and celebration and FUN.

      Your aunt sounds like she’s still having fun with life, too, soaking up the attention. So GOOD!

      I don’t write about this kind of thing much. It makes me all shivery bad inside.

      And yeah, I can cliffhanger with the best of them, Yvonne…March 5, 2014 – 8:05 pmReplyCancel

  • Jennifer Steck - This is a tragedy, Lizzi. I know things have improved in some areas but not all. We will all grow older someday barring unforeseen circumstances. I know I don’t want to be treated like that and I wouldn’t want it to happen to any of my family members or friends, either. It shouldn’t happen to anyone. Thank you for bringing this horrific experience to light. I had no idea…March 5, 2014 – 8:35 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - It’s tragic, but it feels bigger than a ‘tragedy’ (well, maybe a Greek one) – it’s a canker. It’s entrenched in our society and it’s just horrific.

      I wish I knew how we could all make it stop!March 6, 2014 – 1:04 pmReplyCancel

  • Dyanne @ I Want Backsies - While some places are nicer than others, largely having to do with the ability to pay privately instead of relying on Medicare, they are all places people are sent to wait to die. They know it. You know it when you put them there. The days when the extended family cared for the elders in the home are gone, a casualty of an economy that requires most people have to work outside the home to afford to live. Our elderly deserve to be treated with so much more dignity at this time in their lives, even when they’re “gone.”March 5, 2014 – 10:25 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - I hate that. I know no-one agrees that there ever was a ‘golden era’, but I think that in terms of relationship and sheer CARE for one another, there may well have been. And this is the pig-iron age, in those terms.

      Blech. Yes. They absolutely DO deserve to be treated with more dignity.March 6, 2014 – 6:06 pmReplyCancel

  • Out One Ear - Linda Atwell - Oh Lizzi: I wish I could say that nursing facilities aren’t like that here, but I know some are. And it makes me so sad. I’ve worked with the elderly in various capacities (and enjoyed it), but not like you did. I can’t wait to read the Part II!March 5, 2014 – 11:03 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Part two is a little more forgiving, thank goodness. But there’s still that haunting feeling – these places are OUT THERE. That they exist is awful.March 6, 2014 – 6:32 pmReplyCancel

  • Rachel - Aging and death is something that we all just want to pretend we can hide behind a closed door. It’s all neat and tidy at arms length. Your piece confronts the harsh reality that we all want to look away from. Very important.March 5, 2014 – 11:54 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Thanks Rachel. It’s a situation which definitely needs more sunshine on it!March 6, 2014 – 6:39 pmReplyCancel

  • zoe - I worked for years and facilities like this one. it was the hardest job I’ve ever done and you’re the one that took the least training and education because like you said we can find our elderly teenagers and well meaning foreigners.my dad spent his last 6 months in a nursing home and I think the the only thing that even made it livable for him was the fact that family came every single day most of the day. But I know it was a heart breaks for him and for us. Despite trying to take him home services just aren’t enough for people to be able to care for their own at home. Something needs to change about that but I just I’m not sure how that’s to happen.March 6, 2014 – 6:51 amReplyCancel

    • Considerer - You have my respect for having been able to stick at it for years. It’s an atrocious situation.

      I’m glad you and your family were able to support your dad in his time in a home. And no, there aren’t the facilities outside, so what do we do? It’s impossible. But needs thinking on.
      And, by the way, I know it drives you nuts, but I do love your dictator autocorrect…March 6, 2014 – 6:42 pmReplyCancel

  • zoe - Its supposed to say….YET the one that took the least training…dictator auto correct. …argh.March 6, 2014 – 6:53 amReplyCancel

  • zoe - Ugh….consign our elderly…..March 6, 2014 – 6:55 amReplyCancel

  • jamie@southmainmuse - Wow Lizzi. So powerful and sad. The few times I’ve been in a nursing home, it is that smell. Some of the better ones not so much. But we went once with a group singing Christmas carols and I remember being knocked out by the urine smell coming from a bin of dirty sheets in the hallway. So very sad.March 6, 2014 – 2:28 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Ohhhh the SMELL! It clings and cloys and does NOT LEAVE. It coats the inside of your nostrils and the top of your tongue and you go away feeling as though every pore is reeking of it.

      Hate. It. YUK!

      And yet we let our elderly LIVE IN IT! Bigger yuk 🙁March 6, 2014 – 6:44 pmReplyCancel

  • Kenya G. Johnson - Wow I can’t wait to read part two. I hate to think that a decision has been made that family puts family in a home because they don’t want to take care of them rather that they can’t take care of them anymore. My great grandmother was in a home for a long time. She stayed with her youngest son as long as he could take care of her. Her other children had passed away. He lived in a home where the only bathroom was on the top floor. She used to come down for the day and there would be a portable potty for her to use. But then it was getting hard to get her back upstairs for the day. I wish the facilities we better where people who had the jobs wanted to do what they were doing are compensated so that that it was at least more enjoyable. I have entertained the thought of going with a group of people from my church to visit the elderly but considering how I grimaced through this post, I am not sure I’d be able to get passed the smell or coming home with the smell still on me.March 6, 2014 – 3:50 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - I know exactly what you mean. My church does things with local care homes and elderly groups, and I just shy away from all of it. I could be the freakin’ figurehead of the ‘keep the elderly at arms length’ movement, to consider my actions. BLECH!

      I think that’s an important distinction – to put a family member in one of these places because you CAN no longer care adequately for them, rather than because you DO NOT care enough.

      Thanks for that 🙂March 6, 2014 – 6:47 pmReplyCancel

  • anonymous - I truly am not saying this to be disrespectful of you Kristi or Lizzi but I am confused because I do not understand what this had to do with the our land philosophy. Can you please explain it? I’m sad I rely on this series for inspiration and am now only sickened by ole people poo and their families not taking them. Is that supposed to be what it is? the Families should take them?March 6, 2014 – 8:22 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - It’s a two-part post. It’ll make sense…March 7, 2014 – 4:21 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - And no. It’s not supposed to be about ‘families should take them’ because I realise that’s an impossible ask. You might not be keen on my writing, but I’m not daft. Many families just don’t have the equipment or the resources or the space or the…anything else, to manage to take adequate care of their elderly family members.

      I hope that you find part two to be more inspirational. And thank you for expressing your dislike of this in a respectful manner.March 7, 2014 – 4:27 pmReplyCancel

  • Joanna - I have to say I agree with anonymous, I do not see how this post is related to Our Land of empathy and wonder. It struck me as judgmental and preachy. I understand that there is a Part 2 and maybe there will be more empathy. But, this was a disappointing read for me.March 6, 2014 – 10:23 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - I’m glad you have such confidence in Kristi for organising a post for a series she created. A series based in sound principles and the desire to improve the world.

      Wait for part two. If you care to come back.

      And it is utterly beyond me to figure what on earth part of this you find “preachy”, seeing as I have expounded precisely NO methods for fixing the problem or suggesting that others should make it better.

      YET. That’s in part two. By all means come back and judge me then.March 7, 2014 – 4:24 pmReplyCancel

  • Joy Christi - Oh WHEN is Part 2 coming? I’m on the edge of my seat! There is a special comfy seat on the Karma Bus for the earthen angels who care for the sick, the elderly, the needy. This is a real-life superhero. The work is hard, the work is needed, it’s all a circle of life and this is the hardest part of the circle. Waiting for Part 2….March 8, 2014 – 5:26 pmReplyCancel

    • Considerer - Joy, my lovely, part two is TOMORROW!

      And yes. Absolutely cannot agree MORE about your take of people who do this job and do it well. You ‘get’ this. Totally.March 11, 2014 – 8:07 pmReplyCancel

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