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Answering the Difficult Questions
About Aging
By Peter Ganther
I recently had to assist my 78 and
82 year old aunt and uncle, respectively, who were
dealing with some pretty typical issues – fear of losing
independence, an awkward reliance on family members and
their changing status in their own community. As a
professional fiduciary, I do this for a living and
thought I would be able to jump right in and give them
the benefit of my experience.
My aunt and uncle have no children, but do have
community support from friends. In my conversations with
my aunt, she shared that my uncle, not her, was getting
more forgetful. These conversations went on for about
six months.
When I actually visited them, I discovered that they
were not coping as well as they had said. For example,
my uncle is a Methodist minister and still had a small
congregation in a neighboring town. I discovered that he
would get up to preach and halfway through the sermon
forget what he was discussing and end up preaching on
three or four subjects. Because he had been a stable and
positive influence within his community for over 50
years, people overlooked his ramblings. Ironically, his
congregation continued to grow during this period.
The most revealing incident that showed me the extent
of his lapse of short-term memory occurred at a local
restaurant when he introduced me to a resident. In the
course of the conversation, he asked how her mother was
doing. The woman was a little taken back since my uncle
had conducted her funeral the previous week.
If one individual is having physical or memory problems,
usually a spouse will fulfill the role of caregiver in
order to maintain some semblance of their previous life
style. But what happens if that individual is having
problems as well?
In my infinite wisdom, I contacted the aging services
within their county to see if there were support
services available. What I found was one caseworker for
the entire county. Because my aunt and uncle had some
assets, they were not eligible for help. I went to Plan
B and contacted the Oklahoma Chapter of the National
Association of Social Workers to obtain names of
qualified individuals to provide case management. I
located an individual 50 miles away and had her begin
the process of getting my aunt and uncle on the right
track. I thought I had it all under control.
When individuals have the right to determine their own
destinies, they sometimes will not cooperate. My aunt
and uncle decided they were quite capable of taking care
of themselves. Something I had learned several years ago
is that individuals have to experience a crisis before
they accept help. The crisis came about six months
later.
My aunt contacted an uncle in Oklahoma, saying she was
having a nervous breakdown and asking him to immediately
come to help. When he arrived, she was unable to cope
any longer with my uncle or herself. Arrangements were
made for admittance to a geriatric unit at a local
hospital for a full evaluation. What we found was a
person with severe depression and anxiety. This crisis
started a process that would not have been carried
through unless a plan had been created earlier outlining
their wishes.
How can we help our elderly family members with medical
and financial decisions? Where do we begin? First, sit
down and ask who they trust to make medical and
financial decisions.
Second, visit an attorney to assist with documents that
will answer these questions. If cost is an issue, there
are a lot of free services available through Legal Aid
and senior centers. Their attorney will discuss living
wills, durable powers of attorney, and durable power of
attorney for health care.
Third, make sure that you know the answers to the
following questions in the event that you have to step
in to make decisions on their behalf:
The person’s current health?
Level of trust with doctors? Is the person comfortable
with their doctor making the final decision concerning
any treatment needed?
What makes the person laugh or cry?
What is their attitude toward death?
What are the wishes on the use of life sustaining
measures for terminal illness?
If the person could not care for himself any longer, how
would living arrangements change?
What is the level of worry concerning the amount of
money required for care?
Have funeral arrangements been made? What are the wishes
for funeral, burial, or cremation?
Who can be trusted to make medical or financial
decisions if the person were unable to?
These are tough questions to answer. I have friends who
have ended up in therapy after trying to answer them,
but they need to be asked. Luckily, I had conducted the
exercise with my aunt and uncle and executed the
necessary documents to ensure their desires and needs
would be met.
Individual self worth and dignity are important factors
as we age. We need to allow the individual the dignity
and privacy we all want through this process. If the
individual does not want to discuss the specific issues,
honor that. The old saying, “all things work out in the
end” really is true. It might not end as you envisioned,
but when an individual reaches a crisis state,
situations tend to resolve themselves.
One last piece of advice that I hear over and over for
older individuals is to live life to the fullest each
day, doing what you want now. Their biggest regret is
not what they have done, but what they haven’t.
--Gary Beagle, RG-NGF, is a professional fiduciary in
Portland, Oregon and a member of the National
Guardianship Association.
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