Thursday, May 28, 2026

Mental Health and Seniors 2

 There’s a moment many seniors recognize, though they don’t always talk about it. It’s that quiet realization that something has shifted, not just in the body, but in the spirit. The days feel heavier. The spark that once made ordinary things enjoyable seems dimmer. For some, it comes suddenly. For others, it creeps in slowly, almost unnoticed.

At the coffee table at any local Seniors Centre, these stories surface in bits and pieces. “I’m just tired all the time.” “I don’t enjoy things like I used to.” “I thought it was just part of getting older.”

But here’s the truth worth holding onto it’s not “just aging.” It may be depression, and depression is treatable.

Understanding the different forms, it can take is one of the strongest first steps toward getting help.

Major Depressive Disorder, often called clinical depression, is what many people picture first. It’s not just feeling down, it’s a deep, persistent low mood lasting at least two weeks, often longer. Seniors may lose interest in hobbies, struggle to get out of bed, or feel overwhelmed by even simple tasks. Meals lose their taste. Sleep becomes irregular. Life feels stalled. This level of depression can interfere with daily living, and it deserves medical attention. A family doctor or mental health professional can help begin treatment, often with a combination of counselling and medication.

Then there is Persistent Depressive Disorder, sometimes called dysthymia. This one can be tricky because it doesn’t always feel intense, it feels constant. Imagine carrying a low, grey cloud for years. You may still go about your daily routine, but without much joy or energy. Many seniors assume this is simply their “new normal,” but it doesn’t have to be. Long-term support, including therapy, can gradually lift that cloud.

Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) is something many Canadians understand all too well. As fall turns to winter and daylight fades, mood can drop. Seniors may feel more tired, withdrawn, or unmotivated. Living in places like British Columbia, where grey skies can stretch for weeks, can intensify this. Light therapy, time outdoors, and medical advice can make a real difference here.

Postpartum or peripartum depression might seem like it belongs only to younger families, but many grandparents witness it in their children or even recall their own experiences. It involves deep sadness, anxiety, or exhaustion during or after pregnancy. Seniors can play a key role by recognizing signs in loved ones and encouraging them to seek help. This type of depression is very treatable, and early support matters.

Bipolar depression is part of a condition that includes both depressive lows and periods of elevated mood or energy. For seniors, the depressive phases can feel especially heavy, while the manic phases may sometimes be mistaken for simply “having a good day.” Proper diagnosis is critical because treatment differs from other forms of depression. Specialized care ensures the right balance of medication and support.

Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is less common in older adults but may still affect those in earlier stages of later life or those reflecting on past struggles. It causes intense emotional and physical symptoms linked to hormonal cycles. While it may ease after menopause, understanding it helps families support one another across generations.

Psychotic depression is more severe and includes symptoms like hallucinations or delusions alongside deep depression. A senior might hear or believe things that others don’t, often tied to feelings of guilt, fear, or worthlessness. This can be frightening, both for the individual and their family, but it is treatable with immediate professional care. This is not something to manage alone, medical attention is essential.

Finally, there is treatment-resistant depression. This is when depression doesn’t improve after trying at least two different treatments. It can feel discouraging, even hopeless, but it’s not the end of the road. Specialists can explore other options, different medications, therapies, or newer approaches. Persistence, with professional guidance, is key.

Across all these types, one message stands out clearly: recognizing what’s happening is the turning point. The next step, seeking help, takes strength, but it opens the door to healing.

In Canada, there are trusted places to turn. Organizations like Canadian Mental Health Association provide local programs, education, and support groups. Wellness Together Canada offers free online resources, counselling, and even text-based support, making it easier to reach out from home. And in moments when things feel overwhelming, Talk Suicide Canada is available 24/7 to listen and guide people toward help.

Still, the most important starting point is often the simplest: talk to your doctor. A familiar face, a trusted conversation, that’s where many journeys toward recovery begin.

For those who want to take small steps on their own, there are ways to support your mental health while you seek professional care. Stay connected, even when you don’t feel like it. A short walk, a phone call, or a visit to a senior centre can shift the tone of a day. Keep a routine, simple structure can provide stability. Pay attention to sleep, nutrition, and movement. And give yourself permission to talk openly with someone you trust.

But self-help is not a replacement for professional care. Think of it as support, not a solution.

Back at his Senior Centre, George now sits at a different table, one surrounded by others. He still has quiet days, but they are fewer. He talks openly about seeing his doctor, about trying new approaches, about how things are slowly improving.

“It took me a while,” he says, “to admit I needed help. But once I did, things started to change.”

That’s the heart of it. Depression is serious, but it is also treatable. And no matter which form it takes, there is help available, right here in our communities.

The first step isn’t easy. But it’s worth it.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Punny gardeners

 The coffee at the Wilson Centre seems to taste just a little better. Out behind the building, the community garden was beginning to stir, slowly at first, like the people who tended it.

Mary arrived with her sunhat and a folding chair.

“I’m not bending over all morning,” she announced. “I believe in resting crops.”

Across the path, George was already talking to his tomato plants.

“Now listen,” he said, wagging a finger gently, “I’m new at this, so you’ll have to be patient.”

Mary smiled. “Don’t worry, George, they’ll ketchup.”

A few plots over, Raj carefully placed labels in the soil, though he admitted he might forget what he planted anyway.

“That’s half the fun,” he said. “At our age, surprises keep life freshly rooted.”

Near the herb box, Evelyn was holding court.

“I’ve decided I’m only growing herbs,” she said. “At this stage of life, I’m focusing on sage advice.”

There were groans, chuckles, and one dramatic eyeroll from Bill, who had just finished planting an entire row in one determined burst.

“I did it all in one go,” he said, wiping his brow. “I’m not getting any younger thyme-wise.”

From the far end, someone called out, “What are we calling this group anyway?”

Without missing a beat, Mary raised her hand. “The Thyme of Our Lives!”

That one stuck.

By mid-morning, the garden was alive, not just with the promise of vegetables and flowers, but with stories, laughter, and the quiet pride of people trying something new. Some bent carefully, some worked from chairs, some forgot where they planted things five minutes ago—but all of them showed up.

George stood back, hands on hips, looking at his small patch.

“You know,” he said, “I thought I’d try gardening just to pass the time.”

Mary glanced over at the group, at the laughter, the conversations, the shared purpose.

“Funny thing,” she said, “looks like the garden is growing more than just plants.”

And in that little space behind the Wilson Centre, among the rows of hopeful green shoots and well-earned jokes, something else was taking root: connection, curiosity, and the simple joy of beginning again.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Tomorrow Is a Very Busy Place

 If procrastination were a place, it would be crowded.

Bills are stacked neatly in one corner, waiting for their turn. A dental appointment is sitting there, flipping through old magazines. A haircut is leaning back confidently, enjoying its extended stay. Somewhere nearby, a hospital visit is pacing, unsure when it will be acknowledged. Three simple words, “I love you”, are hovering quietly, waiting to be spoken. A doctor’s appointment is tapping its foot. And just outside, a car is making a faint squeaking sound, hoping someone will finally listen.

Welcome to “tomorrow.”

We’ve all been there. In fact, many of us visit often.

And if we’re honest, procrastination isn’t always the villain it’s made out to be. Sometimes it gives us breathing room. It lets us pause, think things through, wait for better timing, or gather the energy we need to deal with something properly. Not every delay is dangerous. Not every “I’ll do it later” leads to trouble.

But this is where the stories we’ve walked through start to connect; some things don’t do well in the waiting room.

Bills don’t get cheaper with time.
Teeth don’t fix themselves out of courtesy.
Hair… well, hair will grow, but eventually, even it starts asking for a plan.
Loved ones in the hospital don’t need perfect timing; they need presence.
“I love you” doesn’t gain strength by being held back.
Our bodies don’t send signals just for conversation.
And brakes? Brakes don’t negotiate.

The pattern isn’t complicated.

We delay because something feels uncomfortable, inconvenient, or unnecessary in the moment. So. we shift it to tomorrow, believing we’ve bought ourselves time.

But in many cases, we’ve actually done the opposite.

We’ve stretched a small task into a longer worry.
Turned a minor issue into a larger one.
Missed a moment that won’t come back in quite the same way again.

And here’s the almost funny part, if it didn’t cost us so much sometimes:

The things we avoid are usually not as bad as we imagine.

Paying the bill takes minutes.
Booking the appointment is quick.
The haircut feels better once it’s done.
The hospital visit, though hard, brings real comfort.
Saying “I love you” takes seconds, but it stays with someone for years.
Seeing the doctor early can prevent a much bigger problem.
And fixing a small squeak is a lot cheaper than replacing the whole system.

We spend more energy avoiding these things than actually doing them.

So, what’s the shift?

It’s not about becoming perfect. It’s not about rushing to handle every little thing the moment it appears. Life doesn’t need to feel like a race from one task to the next.

It’s about recognizing the difference between a pause that serves you… and a delay that costs you.

A good question to carry forward might be this:

“Is waiting helping this situation, or quietly making it worse?”

If the answer leans toward “worse,” that’s your moment.

Make the call.
Pay the bill.
Schedule the visit.
Say the words.
Listen to the signal, whether it’s coming from your body, your car, or your heart.

Not because you have to.

But because you’ve learned something valuable:

Tomorrow is always full.
And the best things, the important things, are usually better handled today.

Monday, May 25, 2026

The Squeak That Cost More Than It Should Have

It started as a small sound.

Not loud. Not dramatic. Just a faint, polite little squeak every time I touched the brakes. The kind of sound that doesn’t demand attention, it suggests it.

“Just a warning,” I told myself.
“I’ve got time.”

And that’s the thing about warnings. They rarely shout at the beginning. They whisper.

So, I carried on.

Driving to the store, running errands, going about life as usual. The squeak became part of the background noise, like a familiar song you stop really hearing. Now and then, I’d notice it again and think, “I should get that checked.”

But not today.

Because today was busy. Today had other priorities. And besides, the car was still stopping. That’s the important part, right?

To be fair, this kind of procrastination makes a certain kind of sense.

Life is full. Appointments take time. Mechanics cost money. And when something still seems to be working, more or less, it’s easy to convince yourself that it can wait a little longer. Sometimes, waiting does save you a trip. Not every noise turns into a problem.

But brakes?

Brakes are not subtle storytellers. When they speak, they’re telling you something important.

What I didn’t fully appreciate at the time is that a small issue in a braking system doesn’t stay small. Brake pads wear down. Metal starts meeting metal. Damage spreads. What could have been a simple, relatively inexpensive fix quietly grows into something bigger, heavier… and far more expensive.

Eventually, I did what I had been meaning to do all along.

I took the car in.

And that’s when the story shifted.

The mechanic took a look and didn’t ease into it. No gentle build-up. No soft landing.

“I’m sorry,” he said, “I can’t let you drive this car. It’s too dangerous.”

Just like that, my “I’ve got time” turned into “You’re not going anywhere.”

What I thought would be a quick check-up became a full brake job. The cost? A lot more than I had planned. Easily three times what it might have been if I had gone in when the squeak first started.

That’s the real cost of procrastination, it rarely shows up all at once. It builds quietly, in the background, while we tell ourselves we’re saving time or money.

Until we’re not.

Now here’s the part worth holding onto.

The car gave me a chance.

That squeak wasn’t an inconvenience; it was an early warning system doing exactly what it was designed to do. It was saying, “Deal with this now, and it’ll stay manageable.”

I didn’t listen soon enough.

And isn’t that how it goes with so many things?

The early signs are usually the easiest to deal with. A small repair. A short appointment. A quick decision. But when we delay, we don’t freeze the problem; we give it time to grow.

So yes, not every noise means disaster. Not every delay leads to a big bill.

But when something keeps showing up, keeps reminding you, keeps asking, quietly, for attention, it’s worth listening.

Because the goal isn’t just to save money.

It’s to stay safe.
To stay in control.
To keep small problems from becoming big ones.

These days, when I hear something unusual, I don’t negotiate with it.

I get it checked.

Because I’ve already learned what happens when you wait for a whisper to turn into a warning you can’t ignore.