Tag Archives: caregiver

Caregiver Authenticity and Role Modeling

brave doctor in flying superhero cape with fist stretched

One of the things that I have found most attractive about caregiving is how I perceive caregivers. When I was first joining the ranks, I discovered that caregivers were of all ages, came from all walks of life, and arose from any cultural background imaginable. They were distinctive in the air of confidence they demonstrated. Not the cockiness or outright arrogance that is so popular these days, but a calm assurance that made me feel comfortable in their presence.

They were quiet. A particularly kind of dark quiet. The kind you value in a friend and dread in an opponent.

They welcomed me to their ranks without having to demonstrate any worthiness. To an observer outside, we were just different folks chatting in waiting rooms of hospitals and doctor’s offices, but a torch was being passed to the next generation. They knew I was wholly unprepared for what was coming and did what they could do to soften the shock. The reality is that the genesis of a caregiver is a highly personal series of events. There is no preparation. All we can do is to be there for one another.

Sometimes just being with one another is the best training one can receive.

My Heroes

woman on black folding wheelchair
Photo by Judita Tamošiūnaitė on Pexels.com

I must confess, as if the preceding did not already demonstrate, I am enamored of caregivers. It is not entirely hero worship. We are first and foremost human beings (foibles and all). Nor are we superheroes come to save the day.

Caregivers were and are just awesome people. Like a good friend about whom you know all their weaknesses and mistakes, yet you will want them at your back in a dark alley any day.

I find caregivers to be role models in a world where we badly need positive role models.

(Where did all the good role models go?)

Remember? Those individuals who struggled to do their best with what they had at hand. The people who possessed the strength of character to admit when they make a mistake. To not make up juvenile excuses for failure.

To persevere.

To lead.

Authenticity

In many respects, I think caregivers’ model some of our finest nature as human beings. No pretense or political camouflage. Just honest.

Caregiving (substitute “being an adult”, if you like) constantly teaches. We never arrive at some expert level where there is nothing new to discover. We are forever a humble student.

Errors along the way produce beautifully teachable moments – especially when we allow our arrogance to guide us and we do something so soundly stupid that we are reminded of who and what we really are. Human.

It is this authenticity that grounds me.

Caregivers are courageous enough to blaze personal examples without concerns for conformity or embarrassment. We are the first to step towards the problem.

We could likely be good targets for today’s cancel culture, though very few want to do what we do. We likely would not care anyway.

Indifference to hurt feelings is part and parcel to caregiving.

Score-keeping

scoreboard
Image by HeungSoon from Pixabay

Authenticity of character references the audacious nature of human beings in difficult circumstances. Personal losses and triumphs are just points along a spectrum for the caregiver.

We have a job to do (caring for others) and we will have to get back to you on your narrow concerns. Later.

Ultimately, it is actions that matter. Words, whether shouted, recited, or spoken, do not carry the same weight as doing. Caregivers give to the world in what we do. We may lose on the total score of things to ingratiate oneself to a group, but that is okay. We were not really concerned with keeping score anyway.

Popularity and the Caregiver

cheerful diverse friends demonstrating thumb up gesture

The irony of caregivers’ personal popularity can get a little thick at times. At a casual glance, one could think that helping others in need would be a noble and well-respected avocation. Society values the care of the unfortunate, right?

Sometimes, however, this messenger of accountability and assistance is figuratively shot at sunrise.

Carrying the Message

If anyone thinks it could be a cool job to care for another unable to care for themselves, let us dispose of that thought right now.

As I have mentioned in these posts, the “job” of caregiver is challenging. A footnote to that observation is that besides having to make difficult decisions, delivering on those decisions makes us unpopular with loads of folks.

From guiding the loved one away from assorted hazards (“Let me cook that for you”), to advocating for the loved one with vendors, the healthcare system, etc., we learn to say “no” any number of ways to a whole lot of people.

When it comes to becoming decidedly unpopular, family is the one group that has its own level of hell. People that you grew up with will try to leverage that common past to get what they want concerning the loved one under care. (“Of course, Dad can still drive! All those accidents were obviously the fault of those other drivers.”)

Especially with family, there is no winning solution to doing what’s best vs. what others want you to do.

Get used to it.

The Truer Nature of Things

woman sticking out tongue
Image by Engin Akyurt from Pixabay

While all of these points of friction and learning experiences sound unique, the reality is that they are all a reflection of the human nature we all share. Managing stress between people, along with the more practical matters of caregiving, is not special. Personally, I think we categorize these challenges as unique to better organize our thoughts and emotions in the matter.

It is all okay.

Pop culture and social media tend to deny facts we wish to avoid. From aging to role changes with the loved one, caregiving is about the things that go bump in the night. Scared and courageous at the same time, caregivers venture into these depths of unpleasantness to answer a higher calling.

Not everyone is up to those levels of honesty.

Truth

women wearing white long sleeves
Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

Social media has derailed our awareness and interactions over the years. Expectations of popularity will likely be dashed when one accepts the responsibilities of caring for another.

Making the hard decisions does not often come with creating bunches of friends. In fact, it is usually the opposite.

It is a good kind of loneliness, though. Not morbid and all-consuming but a warm place of contentment with what you have and what you have accomplished. No regrets because you did the best you could with what you had at hand.

Not everyone can say that.

As for the popularity contest called modern life, all those fluffy things mean nothing. We do not hate status seeking, we just do not care. Give me something of substantial importance in life any day.

Like the smile of a loved one.

People Make Our World

restaurant man people woman

I think most of us will agree that the basis of caregiving is that it is about people. The ones we care for, the ones we interact with while providing help, and not the least of which, trying really hard to care for ourselves. People make our world.

A great many people have lately been producing (rather loudly) commentary that has not made us feel very comfortable. No matter where your views lie along the political spectrum, there has likely been someone telling you were wrong, and you must change.

I am forever an optimist. Not that everything is always rosy, but I try very hard to not dwell on negatives. I like to find the good, wherever and whenever it exists.

Spoiler alert!

While these are difficult times, discovering that much of our human experience has not been diminished by this current incivility has been heartening. A great many people continue to be the people we have always known. Maybe it is because the folks in the heartland of this country do not concern themselves with the abstracts of labels and other heady debates. The media just likes to portray a few exceptions with bullhorns as commonplace. I am happy to report that they are still just exceptions.

Rediscovering People

train window side
Photo by Daniel Frese on Pexels.com

Last summer I had the wonderful need to travel across the country, though I did not realize the gifts such a journey had to offer at the time.

Time was not a factor, so I decided to create an adventure and travel by rail. I have never done this before, and being of a disposition lately where exploration of new experiences sounds like a good idea most of the time, I signed on for an Amtrak ride.

The ride became a connection with the people that political pundits say no longer exist. I am overjoyed to report that the personalities that most all of us grew up with still exist in abundance across the United States.

A Pandemic Shadow

The remnants of COVID restrictions were still in the process of being lifted as I traveled. After years of closure, the dining car was open once again – a big event in Amtrak circles apparently. In listening to the language of the staff, there was still much uncertainty of being near one another without the mandated measures to separate us.

Who would have thought that sitting down to a meal could involve such uncertainty? We were learning, however.

With everyone being reintroduced to one another after so much fear and anxiety, the reluctance was understandable. In a fashion typical of recent history, the railroad began mandating behavior, or at the very least, strongly suggesting we comply.

The issue? We needed to sit with strangers if we wished to eat in the dining car.

I cannot say that this was a particularly disagreeable mandate.

Next thing I knew, I was chatting over meals with America. A middle-aged mother and her kids on their first adventure by rail, a retired aerospace engineer who has been traveling the country by rail for years, even a few rookie solo travelers like me.

The best part about it was that even with the uneasiness of pandemic still lurking in the background, it all started to feel “normal”. You remember normal, right? When the commonplace is just that.

Takeaways

cheerful diverse friends demonstrating thumb up gesture
Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

From this adventure, I found reassurance.

Know that we are still good people. Media has amplified a horrible theme that is not true of most of us. We have been through much, but we are not changed all that much. We retain the same traits and decency that we used to take for granted.

Like returning (or recovering) from caregiving, we may be changed but much of the world remains the same. There is a special assurance in the knowledge that people are still just people. Our essence as people remains strengthened and unchanged by events.

I hope this message of hope reassures you that the same motivations that brought you into care for others remain a stable foundation to build upon as we venture into the changed world in which we find ourselves.

Knowing that decent people still are still plentiful sure helps.

“Doubt makes a man decent.”
― Harry Crews

Dying of Embarrassment

woman covering her face

Is it possible that some of the angst we see in the media these days are people who went with the favored political winds a few years ago and now are facing up to the idea that they picked the wrong horse? With all the emotional gusto of a preadolescent person decrying the trauma of a social gaff, are people dying of embarrassment?

Of note in recent years has been a general decline in civilities among people, including a concerning lack of character and integrity of leaders.

Empathy Abuse

A personality trait that I have come to regard as a two-edged blade is empathy. That ability to put oneself in the shoes of another to better understand them and their actions.

embarrassed person being bullied by a man in white top
Photo by Yan Krukau on Pexels.com

Empathy is a “soft skill” that requires a certain amount of personal vulnerability to access successfully. In our caregiving mode, this ability to relate to the human needs of another is often what brought us to this situation. We relate to them on a personal level, and we seek to respect and understand them during difficult times.

With bullying behaviors that have become so much more common in recent years, the bullies seemed to have been on the hunt for more people to push their demands of conformity. Political correctness on steroids.

Empathy can easily be mistaken for weakness because the empathic individual exhibits natural helpful tendencies. Empathic people are not noted for being confrontational and tend to try to make the other person happy by relating (adopting) the other’s perspective.

The bullies abuse this helpfulness characteristic, and the empathic individuals are stuck paying the emotional bill for that abuse.

Feeling Stuck

Sensitivity to others carries can carry with it a duty to serve them as well. Empathic individuals do not wish to betray others, even when bullied. Emotional abuse, whether in the context of a personal relationship (i.e., family, spouses) or a less intimate arrangement, can often be difficult to disentangle oneself from. The abusers know of this reluctance to discontinue a destructive relationship and play on it to maintain a status quo.

Often lacking a motivating event to do otherwise, the empathic individual tends to stay where they are. Finding a way out becomes a struggle.

In much the same way as when we find ourselves up against the wall in caregiving, we do what the situation calls for, not what we prefer to do. One will not die of embarrassment if you change your response to a situation but making such a change happen is difficult.

the word resilience on pink surface
Photo by Ann H on Pexels.com

Resilience

Tough decisions make resilient people. We all have the capacity to stand up on our own, but as with most important things in life, we also calculate the cost. Once we are willing to pay what is needed, the courage to carry on just naturally happens.

Moral decisions to not abuse ourselves or others is taking hold. The feelings of guilt are legitimate for many and belong to them. We can, however, still hold the door open for them. Forgiveness and gratitude work wonders at allowing people to mend broken relationships. Trust is a more difficult challenge and will take considerably more work and time.

Still, we must start somewhere and now is always a good time to begin.

“Anyone who isn’t embarrassed of who they were last year probably isn’t learning enough.”
― Alain de Botton

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