Have you ever heard the phrase, “The 200-pound gorilla in the room”? It’s a phrase that refers to a topic that nobody talks about, but it so dominates everybody’s thoughts. Everyone knows the gorilla is there, but nobody gets anxious because, after all, you don’t want to upset the gorilla.
There is a 200-pound gorilla in the room at any
time being spent with a senior. It is a topic that is blatantly pertinent to any
senior, but it is a topic that nobody talks about either because it’s too upsetting,
or nobody knows how to talk about it. But it is a topic that weighs on the mind
of every senior, and your mom and dad virtually every day. The 200-pound
gorilla in the room is death and the end-of-life issues that are ahead for
every senior citizen at some point or another.
As the caregiver for your mom or dad, you should be aware of how heavily the topic we don’t talk about weighs on the minds of your parents. If you have lost one parent, the surviving spouse is even more aware of the issue. But there are good reasons to remove the stigma from talking about end-of-life issues with your elderly parent. That is because there are numerous ends of life issues about which you must reach some decisions before that time actually comes along including:
·
The condition of the Will.
·
Do not Resuscitate and other advance
directive document decisions to give to end of life medical personnel.
·
A review of insurance and the location
of other financial documents that you, the executor of the Will or the person
who has power of attorney will resolve.
·
Any desires the senior citizen might
have about funeral arrangements.
In order to be able to discuss the end of life and
issues related to death, you will have to be at a point emotionally where you
can deal with the topic yourself. Many of us bury our thoughts of death in a
mental trick we play that seems like we think we will not have to go through
this part of life. We do that perhaps because we prefer to think about life or
because we are uncomfortable about the discussion of the afterlife and religious
ideas.
So, to get ready to be able to be a good caregiver
and counsellor to your aging mom or dad, you should sit down and get some peace
and resolution about the topic yourself. If that means confronting your
religious anxieties, well, that is part of adulthood and those who are
depending on you including your aging parents and your children may be looking
to you for some answers in that area. It will take some courage but face those
issues so you can be ready to help your parents face them too.
If you have a religious faith and your parents share that outlook, this is the time to review the afterlife assurances that come from your religious upbringing. By spending time with your mom or dad reviewing the doctrines of heaven and the comfort those religious texts bring, you can give them renewed hope and peace about the coming of death because they will know that passing from this life is not the end.
Don’t let the 200-pound gorilla stay in the room. Confront
the issue of death with your aging parent or parents and do so with compassion
and kindness. If you do, you will help your parent reach a place of peace and
acceptance about what is going to happen that will benefit them for the whole
of their golden years remaining on this earth.
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