'Dear Friends' September 2010
Week of September 6,
2010
Prayer Requests
Taking Care of a Crabby or Formerly Abusive Parent
Dear Friends:
We posted a new Topic and it's
also the Catholic Caregivers
flier
for September.
This is how it begins:
It’s hard to be patient when you’re taking care of a
parent who’s crabby, and it can be extremely
difficult to care for a parent who physically,
emotionally, or sexually abused you when you were
younger.
Let’s look at the crabby parent first. It
could be that Dad has always been grumpy. When you
reached adulthood, you had a real sense of relief
because you could move out and be on your own. But
now he needs your help. He doesn’t necessarily want
it and may, in fact, resent it, but he needs it.
Each time you approach his front door you feel as if
you’re entering the lion’s den. You hope you’ll be
lucky enough to come out unscathed.
Sometimes a parent who has been pleasant
for most of his or her life suddenly turns grumpy.
That isn’t surprising, and, most likely, it’s
temporary. Mom’s change in disposition may be
triggered by the other things happening to her. It’s
easy to snap at the people around you, even those
you love the most, when you don’t feel well.
But if that change in personality continues
to stretch on, you need to talk it over with your
parent’s doctor. It could be related to a medical, a
mental, or an emotional problem that can be
addressed. It could be the side effect of a new
medication, one that leaves your mother feeling
anxious. Or it could be that a prescription Mom has
been taking for a long time is causing this new and
different reaction because her body chemistry is
changing.
Whether your parent has been a lifelong
crab or is only being nasty temporarily, it’s
important for you to remember that this is a
situation that presents a high risk of abuse. It’s
possible for an adult child to lose control and harm
a parent. Obviously, that’s never right. Neither is
an aging parent hitting an adult child. Sometimes it
may be necessary for you to make sure you are at
least an arm’s length away from Mom or Dad. You have
to keep yourself safe. If this situation arises,
contact your parent’s doctor and get professional
help as soon as possible.
Here are some suggestions for dealing with
a difficult parent:
This is the
flier and here's the
Topic.
A new month also means there are new
Bulletin Briefs and
Prayers of Intercession at CatholicCaregivers.com.
- - -
Please join us in welcoming Siaw Hong P. of Singapore
and Marga A. of Wisconsin as the
newest member of the Friends of St. John the Caregiver.
(Siaw Hong is our first member from that country!) Please keep
them and their intentions in your prayers.
They've promised to pray for you and yours.
Again this week we cordially invite you to join
the Friends of St. John
the Caregiver! (FSJC's programs include
YourAgingParent.com and
CatholicCaregivers.com.) You can find out more about
becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that
you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include
caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both
(including quite a few former caregivers).
You can:
sign up on-line here
or call us toll-free at
1-800-392-JOHN (5646)
or
print and mail an application form.
God
bless you!
Monica and Bill
To contact us
To join
FSJC
To make a
donation
To view or make prayer
requests
Materials order form
Past "Dear Friends" notes
"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
|
Week of September 13,
2010
Prayer Requests
The 'Triumph' of the Cross . . . and of Caregiving
Dear Friends:
Caregiving, like the cross, triumphs. But our
caregiving, unlike Jesus’ sacrifice, isn’t perfect. We
make these two points during the
week
that the Church celebrates the “exaltation” -- the
triumph -- of the cross. That’s the
feast for this Tuesday, Sept. 14.
How does our caregiving, even though it’s
imperfect, triumph? It comes out on top, it “wins,”
because it is a very particular -- and, at times, a very
demanding -- form of love. And, as St. Paul wrote, among
the theological virtues of faith, hope and love, “the
greatest of these is love.”
Or, as St. John the Caregiver/Apostle/Evangelist
put it: “God is love.” (And, of course, it was at the
foot of the cross that John accepted the role of
caregiver!)
It can help to keep in mind that even Jesus, who
made that perfect sacrifice by dying for all of us (for
each of us) on the cross, didn’t want to die on the
cross. In the garden of Gethsemane before he was
arrested, he prayed: “Abba, Father, all things are
possible to you. Take this cup away from me, but not
what I will but what you will” (Mark 14:26).
By your caregiving day after day, week after
week, year after year, your actions are that same
prayer. When you're tired, when you're angry, when
you're frustrated, you wish you didn’t have to take care
of your loved one. Or, rather, you wish your loved one
didn’t need your care. But, like Christ accepting death
on the cross, you accept the many small and not-so-small
personal sacrifices that are at the core of caregiving.
You accept the vocation of caregiving. Time and
again, you say “yes” to God’s invitation to help his
beloved son or daughter.
Your cross, your many crosses, “triumph.” Your
love “triumphs.”
It may well be that you don’t see that right now.
And you certainly don’t feel it. But veteran caregivers
-- those whose duties have ended because their
care-receivers have died -- in one way or another
report: “It was a hard time but it was a rich time. A
time of so many blessing and graces. I’m so glad I did
that.”
You are in our
prayers, this week and always.
- - -
Again this week we cordially invite you to join
the Friends of St. John
the Caregiver! (FSJC's programs include
YourAgingParent.com and
CatholicCaregivers.com.) You can find out more about
becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that
you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include
caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both
(including quite a few former caregivers).
You can:
sign up on-line here
or call us toll-free at
1-800-392-JOHN (5646)
or
print and mail an application form.
God
bless you!
Monica and Bill
To contact us
To join
FSJC
To make a
donation
To view or make prayer
requests
Materials order form
Past "Dear Friends"
letters
"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
|
Week of September 20,
2010
Prayer Requests
A Blessing, A Vocation
Dear Friends:
During his recent visit to Great Britain for the
beatification of
Cardinal John Henry Newman, Pope Benedict
XVI spoke about the
elderly and about how each of us has
a particular vocation -- which, of course, at times can be caring
for a loved one.
At St. Peter's Residence, "a home for older
people," the pope noted:
As advances in medicine and other factors lead to
increased longevity, it is important to recognize
the presence of growing numbers of older people as a
blessing for society. Every generation can learn
from the experience and wisdom of the generation
that preceded it. Indeed the provision of care for
the elderly should be considered not so much an act
of generosity as the repayment of a debt of
gratitude.
And during the beatification Mass homily,
the pope said:
Newman helps us to understand what this means for
our daily lives: he tells us that our divine Master
has assigned a specific task to each one of us, a
“definite service”, committed uniquely to every
single person: “I have my mission”, he wrote, “I am
a link in a chain, a bond of connaxion between
persons. He has not created me for naught. I shall
do good, I shall do his work; I shall be an angel of
peace, a preacher of truth in my own place … if I do
but keep his commandments and serve him in my
calling” (Meditations and Devotions, 301-2).
You can read the
complete talk
here and complete homily
here.
- - -
Please
join us in welcoming our first FSJC member from South
Africa! James O'B. lives in Cape Town. Please keep him
and his intentions in your prayers. He has promised to
pray for you and yours.
Again this week we cordially invite you to join
the Friends of St. John
the Caregiver! (FSJC's programs include
YourAgingParent.com and
CatholicCaregivers.com.) You can find out more about
becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that
you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include
caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both
(including quite a few former caregivers).
You can:
sign up on-line here
or call us toll-free at
1-800-392-JOHN (5646)
or
print and mail an application form.
God
bless you!
Monica and Bill
To contact us
To join
FSJC
To make a
donation
To view or make prayer
requests
Materials order form
Past "Dear Friends"
letters
"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
|
Week of September 27,
2010
Prayer Requests
Happy Respect Life Sunday, Oct. 3,
dear caregivers!
God bless you and your care-receivers.
'Caring for Each Other, Even Unto Death'
Dear Friends:
This is the beginning of an article from the
2010-2011 Respect Life Program from the United
States
Conference
of Catholic Bishops. It was written by Maria T.
Hilliard, RN, JCL, PhD.
Recently the daughter of a man dying of cancer
called the
National Catholic Bioethics Center’s
consultation line. Her father, while still able to
swallow, was ingesting less and less as death
approached. He had received the
Anointing of the
Sick and Viaticum (i.e., the
Eucharist given to the dying). The daughter asked if
there was a moral obligation to provide assisted
nutrition and hydration as death drew near. After
determining that her father’s vital organs no longer
could assimilate food and water, causing the
decreased appetite, the moral decision was made not
to initiate assisted nutrition and hydration.
The next day the daughter called, stating
that her father had died, and expressing gratitude
for the advice. It was obvious that the underlying
pathology, not euthanasia through starvation and
dehydration, had caused his death.
Families also get advice from other
sources. Tragically, some have been wrongly advised
by the medical community that preserving their loved
one’s “dignity” and ending their suffering require
ending their life—by active intervention, or more
frequently, by omitting basic care. Many families
are unsure about moral options for the care of their
loved ones. Fortunately, the popes and bishops of
the Catholic Church have provided invaluable
guidance concerning end-of-life decisions, including
issues of pain control and consciousness, the
provision of food and water to dying or unconscious
patients, the right to refuse certain treatments,
and the duty to care, even when a cure is no longer
possible. In a pamphlet, one can only highlight
these teachings, so readers are encouraged to read
the entire statements and directives mentioned
below, which are available online.
You can find the whole article
here. These are
links to the statements and directives to which the
author refers in the article's footnotes:
1. The
National Catholic Bioethics Center provides a 24
hour ethics consultation service, free of charge:
215-877-2660.
2. United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops,
Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health
Care Services, 5th Ed. (2009) n. 61.
3. John Paul II, Encyclical
The Gospel of Life (Evangelium Vitae),
March 25, 1995, n. 65.
4. Pope John Paul II, Allocution
“On Life-Sustaining Treatment and the Vegetative
State”, March 20, 2004, n. 4.
5. Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith,
Responses to Certain Questions of the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops Concerning Artificial
Nutrition and Hydration, 2008.
- - -
Please
join us in welcoming Katie M. of Quebec as our newest FSJC member. Please keep her
and her intentions in your prayers. She has promised to
pray for you and yours.
Again this week we cordially invite you to join
the Friends of St. John
the Caregiver! (FSJC's programs include
YourAgingParent.com and
CatholicCaregivers.com.) You can find out more about
becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that
you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include
caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both
(including quite a few former caregivers).
You can:
sign up on-line here
or call us toll-free at
1-800-392-JOHN (5646)
or
print and mail an application form.
God
bless you!
Monica and Bill
To contact us
To join
FSJC
To make a
donation
To view or make prayer
requests
Materials order form
Past "Dear Friends"
letters
"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
|
|
|