Article

In Your Next Chapter, Caring For An Aging Parent

Topic: Career TransitionBy James O. ArmstrongPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 859 legacy views

As you begin to transition into the next chapter of your life, other considerations will begin to emerge on your horizon. Among those factors entering into your new equation may be the consideration of caring for an aging parent or parents.

Q: "I can't get more job training because I'm taking care of an aging parent. What would you say to me?"

A: There are alte
atives or options which you need to consider, including elder care options from agencies that visit men and women's homes on a regular basis. So, perhaps the answer is bringing someone in on those days of the week when you are working or gaining additional training.

Q: "I take my mother to many doctors appointments. Does this limit me in the kinds of jobs I can accept, because I have to take so much time off work?"

A: There are agencies dealing with aging in each county. Some of these are voluntary organizations, such as churches uniting together to take seniors to doctors' offices and dentists' offices plus tests at hospitals. There are simply men and women in the community who have already retired, and they're willing to perform these functions.

Q: "Where can I learn more about these services?"

A: You can check with your own county departments on aging or voluntary organizations in your county that deal with the subject of aging.

Q: "I never know when a family member is going to need me, and then I have to drop everything. So I can't work, and we're running out of money."

A: Most companies and schools would take that into consideration from an attendance standpoint. This is an item that can be negotiated.

Q: "I have to give the highest priority to helping my aging parent. Don't you think so?"

A: Your aging parent understands the necessity of you working, if you absolutely have to have money from a cashflow standpoint. Everything in life is a question of establishing correct priorities. If you need income every month to pay your bills, then that is your first priority. This doesn't mean that you're not involved in the resolution of your aging parent's problem.

Q: "My mother is very high maintenance."

A: There are also nursing home options and assisted living options that need to be evaluated going forward. Perhaps, one of these options involves your mother selling her current home or condominium, as she evaluates these senior living options.

Q: "I know that other cities have more job opportunities for me. But my parents wouldn't even consider moving and I take care of them."

A: All of these conce
s have to be taken into consideration. So, if working is the first necessity that you have, then you have to pursue these job opportunities where you're conce
ed and, then, deal with your aging parent issues as a separate line item. In other words, you need to de-couple those items.

Q: "My father is frail, and he simply could not move with us."

A: Then your father needs to consider senior living options that would be appropriate for him, based upon his age and physical or mental limitations.

Q: "All of my family and friends are in this town. We just can't move."

A: Because your family and friends are here doesn't mean you can't move. That's a choice on your part.

Q: "I'm too old to move. I'm set in my ways."

A: I'm reminded of the phrase from the Lord's Prayer, "Give us this day our daily bread." I don't think that it has to do with where you currently live but where you can earn your income. And I believe that flexibility is part of the answer in this process. The more flexible we're willing to be, the more easily our needs can be met in this area in terms of providing the income we need for our basic necessities.

Article author

About the Author

James O. Armstrong, President of NowWhatJobs.net, Inc., http://www.nowwhatjobs.net, is also Editor of NowWhatJobs.net. NowWhatJobs.net covers job and career transitions for workers 40 years old and over, Baby Boomers and Active Seniors. Get skills training, relocation and real estate options, and more. James is author of "Now What? Discovering Your New Life and Career After 50."

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Before you consider your next job change or even career change, it's crucial that you look at the kind of lifestyle you want today and in the future. This career-planning time is also time to think about life planning. When I meet with my clients for the first time, before I ask them what they want to do, I ask them what kind of life they want to live. Even in carefree Hawaii, there's an expression Pau Hana--meaning after work. Until the last decade, most of our lives were built around work and after work.

Related piece

Article

WHAT IF YOU COULD MANIFEST THE PERFECT PLACE TO LIVE ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD? What if you could live in sunny Hawaii in winter and cool San Francisco in hot summer! What if you could live in a mansion when you're now making do in a log cabin? What if you could move to the beach next week when you're in a skyscraper in Tokyo today. YOU CAN DO IT -- you can create the life of your vision and dreams! Where you live need not be driven by career choice, but by personal decision.

Related piece

Article

GET A LIFE, NOT JUST ANOTHER JOB YES, you can change your life-- just create a vision and change your mind! With coaching, a great Vision Board and a new path lined up -- you can create the life of your dreams for you AND your family. Joyce Schwarz has worked with more than 10,000 people to assure that they are living the law of attraction and manifesting their life's dreams and visions. HERE ARE SOME EXAMPLES.

Related piece

Article

You can shorten your learning curve by learning from the best. To help you do just that, here are 10 of 26 proven strategies gleaned from interviews with highly successful people who have overcome obstacles to accomplish such feats at climbing Mt. Everest, winning a Grammy, becoming an ...

Related piece