Monday, March 25, 2013

Caregivers

The experience of going blind and gimpy is much like getting elderly. I’m less capable by far but can remember all the things I could do and could do well if only my body still possessed the physical capabilities. I can see to neither drive nor read nor much in between. Especially when wearing pants with cuffs that do not fit over the Crow Boot, the walking disability is clearly evident to people.
Many people, perhaps the majority, have an aversion to getting close to me for this, as if the blindness or diabetes or collapsed ankle was catchy. Some people just don’t know what to say in the face of evident misfortune and steer clear of the person to avoid saying the wrong thing. I understand this and mean no criticism. I was much the same way. I would look after people in my life when they needed help, but I just was never the type to see an old woman at the curb and grab her by the arm to help her across the street. People with something other than my lump of cold coal for a heart will take that old biddy by the arm and escort her across the street. People do this with me. Often they grip my arm to guide me along, and the hold is not completely different than police escorting handcuffed prisoners. I need help less when I am on familiar ground. I can say I am all right or can get by where I am, but seldom am I released to stand or fall on my own. I get the help, need it or not, want it or not.
I know some readers will take this line of complaints as ingratitude or general surliness on my part. I do appreciate even small kindness from others. I express gratitude without hesitation, to the person who earned it, and often about the person who earned it. People who truly know me do know that I say things how they are, and I am good on stating the positives rather than just the negatives.
Some dark paths run close parallels to the bright and cheery roads that the casual caregivers travel. The first is that offers to the effect "if you ever need help, call me" are moist often empty offers. The person making the offer is often making it in front of others, to make themselves seem charitable and caring. Actually being taken up on those offers strikes them as inconvenient.
The second pitfall is someone who does want to help but finds there can be no end to it. Giving an occasional ride is no problem, but a regular ride somewhere becomes an unwanted obligation. The receiver of the recurring favor needs to keep aware of this. The "now-obligated" caregiver can quickly grow resentful of the obligation but feel unable to separate from it. The stress of the situation will grow in those caregivers and reach a boiling point.
The other type of charitable caregiver can be the most sinister situation of all. My reference to arm-grasping assistance being like police corralling prisoners was not casual. Care-giving is often an expansion of mommy (or daddy) instincts. The best caregivers are often control freaks.

No comments:

Post a Comment