Death & Dying, Poetry, Real life

euthanasia

Pia Roma sitting on my VariDesk in 2017. She was an excellent catssisstant ❤

June 26, 2019: I wrote this a month or two before I had to put little Pia Roma to sleep on June 29, 2018. I was in anguish for months, hoping she would die a natural death before I had to euthanize her so she wouldn’t suffer. Pia had been Mom’s beloved companion for about eight years, and then mine for seven after Mom went to #DementiaJail.

I still miss her by my side.

euthanasia

This poem is dedicated to everyone who has had to put a beloved animal member of their family to sleep.

©2018 punkie

euthanasia

your heart beats strong
as the hours grow long
softly you do stride
through this life
with all its strife
and troubles to abide

a feline muse
clothed in silver hews
with golden eyes moon-wide
you helped me write
through days and nights
lay patient by my side

and we played with string
ran around in rings
laughed until i cried
while disease within
like original sin
consumed, then health denied

though it’s humane
to ease the pain
when everything’s been tried
that you must leave
me here to grieve
sickens me inside

friends say i’ll know
when it’s time you should go
but how shall i decide
to cause you to sleep
in the eternal deep
as if god’s hands were mine

 

©2018 Susan Macaulay. I invite you to share my poetry widely, but please do not reblog or copy and paste my poems into other social media without my permission. Thank you.

after i put them in prison, mom’s bff became mine

one little kitty’s top dementia care tip

7-part palliative care plan works (for people AND cats)

the paws that refreshes

 

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Advocacy, Love, Memories, Videos

after i put them in prison, mom’s bff became mine

December 26, 2017: In November 2012, I put Mom and her best friend Pia Roma in separate prisons.

Pia went to the friend of a friend’s where she hid under the sofa in a cigarette-smoke-filled apartment for a month. My friend rescued Pia from her friend’s, but that didn’t help. Pia hid under my friend’s bed for another month until I rescued her again.

Mom & Pia April 10, 2012, six months before being incarcerated

I didn’t want a cat. Just like I hadn’t wanted to return to Canada to care for Mom in 2011. But I couldn’t bear for helpless Pia who, in Mom’s words, was her “best friend” to live under a sofa or a bed for the rest of her life. So when I decided I needed to stay close to Mom instead of restarting my old life in a new way, I rented a house near the nursing home I would come to call “ElderJail,” and I brought Pia Roma to live with me.

I succeeded in rescuing Pia, but I failed to liberate my mom.

Since then, Pia has accompanied me through ups and downs, never saying anything but “meow” (like Zlateh the Goat said nothing but “maaaaaaa”), or purring loudly, and sharing my morning tea as she often did with Mom, which I captured on video on December 28, 2009, and aptly title “the paws that refreshes.”

Pia is getting old now, and will soon join Mom. I will be devastated when she goes. It can be painful to grieve the loss of those we love, but it’s also normal. For me, grief (and tonnes of other stuff) involves lots of tears.

But none of us should die before we’re dead, and so, in the meantime, Pia and I paws frequently to count our blessings. We hope you do too. We also invite you to remember that, even in prison, there is space between the bars.

https://myalzheimersstory.com/2016/12/28/the-paws-that-refreshes/

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Love, Memories, Videos

the paws that refreshes

December 28, 2009: Exactly when Mom acquired her little grey cat with the big yellow eyes is hard to say, but it was sometime after the spring of 2001 when Mom and I went to Rome on holiday for a week. We stayed at a little family-run hotel call the San Pio, saw amazing sights and created wonderful memories which Mom lost over time, but which I still have for the moment. Mom named Pia Roma for the little hotel and the trip.

I also don’t recall precisely how Pia found her way to Mom. She was either discovered  in the cedar hedge in front of Mom’s or given to her by a friend who lives on the East Road; I don’t remember which. It doesn’t really matter when or how they found each other. What does matter is that Pia became Mom’s best friend, her stalwart companion in the big red brick house on the hill.

Of all the cats Mom had over the years, Pia proved the oddest. In a strange and quirky way, she was the most endearing as well. She and Mom often had tea together in the morning, a ritual I captured on December 28, 2009, and entitled (tongue-in-cheek) The Paws that Refreshes, in which Pia has her share of tea from Mom’s new Christmas mug.

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Love, Resources, Tips, tools & skills, Toward better care

20 ways touch benefits people who live with dementia

holding-hands-5-logo

The image above is a close-up of Mom and her BFF Gaby holding hands on July 13, 2013, when I took them to a concert in the park. Gaby was 98 at the time, Mom was 86;  they sat side by side and had a grand time listening and clapping to the music, watching the band and the goings on around them and being “au plein air” on a fine summer evening.

Gaby and Mom loved to hold hands, wherever, whenever. They did it all the time. So did Mom and I. Appropriate loving physical touch (I deliberately include the qualifiers “appropriate” and ” loving” for obvious reasons), is fundamental to human health and well being, and yet the elderly, particularly people who live with dementia, and especially those in the later stages don’t get enough of it, which is sad in view of the many benefits. Appropriate loving physical touch is easy to do; it:

  • requires no special skill
  • uses no equipment
  • takes little time
  • costs nothing
  • feels good

Here are some of the benefits thanks to Ann Catlin, and AGEucate (watch the short slide show below for more information):

  1. eases pain
  2. improves sleep
  3. lowers heart rate
  4. decreases anxiety
  5. increases relaxation
  6. soothes and comforts
  7. lowers blood pressure
  8. gently focusses attention
  9. helps heal both body soul
  10. makes people feel secure
  11. creates trust and goodwill
  12. builds bridges and connection
  13. immediately decreases agitation
  14. lowers agitation for up to an hour
  15. fosters feelings of closeness and warmth
  16. decreases intensity of agitated behaviour
  17. decreases frequency of agitated behaviour
  18. makes people feel that others care about them
  19. conveys fondness, kindness, concern and encouragement
  20. improves relationships between PLWD and their care partners

 

 

https://myalzheimersstory.com/2015/05/29/101-activities-you-can-enjoy-with-a-person-living-with-alzheimers-dementia/

https://myalzheimersstory.com/2017/07/10/5-ways-to-help-people-who-live-with-alzheimer-not-fade-away/

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Tips, tools & skills, Toward better care

5 psyche-saving tips for dementia care partners

“What is the best way for a family to deal with the parent who has dementia?” someone asked me on Quora. Tough question. I continue to learn new things every single day on this journey; it would take hundreds of posts to share it all (I’m working on them!).

My top five best pieces of advice to that Quora questioner on that particular night were:

1 ) open your eyes

Reject the myth that you are losing the person; the person at their core remains until her/his spirit leaves the body when s/he dies. I wrote a poem about some of that here: i see you, i love you, i miss you, and there are some hands-on/practical ideas here: 7 ways to honour living and dying with dementia. Knowing that person is still there will save you needless grief, loss and pain. And the truth is they ARE still there.

2 ) be respectful

Treat the person who is living with dementia with the respect they deserve as your parent, spouse, sibling; do not condescend or infantalize them. They are still there and they have the same rights and freedoms you do. See more here: The 12 tenets of the Dementia Bill of Rights. The more respectful you are, even if it’s in the face of verbal abuse that comes from the disease, the better you will feel about yourself, and the better you feel about yourself the better you will feel about them, and…(you see where I’m going with this?)

3 ) ask good questions

If and when s/he doesn’t recognize you anymore ask yourself important questions before you decide it isn’t important to see or visit s/he any more. Here are some starters to get you thinking: 20 great questions to ask when a loved one with dementia doesn’t recognize you anymore. Do not, I repeat: DO NOT, let yourself fall into the trap of the ego that says it’s important for them to recognize you. What is important is for them to feel love. And they will if you love them regardless of whether they know your face, which they probably do BTW, or remember your name.

4 ) put yourself in their shoes

Do not ascribe behaviours to the disease that are in fact natural and normal responses to the environment and the way we mistakenly treat people who have dementia. More on that here: 29 normal behaviours you could be sedated for. Ask yourself what you would do if you had to a walk a mile in their shoes. And I highly recommend you take this survey.

5 ) ask more good questions

If your parent with dementia becomes aggressive, anxious and/or impatient, ask yourself why that might be. Here are some questions I asked myself that helped me to be a better caregiver to my care partner: 20 questions that help explain why people with dementia get agitated and physically aggressive (See more about asking good questions in my blog post 20 questions for better care on The Caregiver Network).

These may seem to be focused on the person on the receiving end of your care, and to a certain degree they are. BUT, and it’s a big BUT, I learned from experience that the easier it is on them, the easier it is on us. And as care partners, we need to make sure we aren’t drowning in frustration, anxiety, and hopelessness, because when that happens there’s often no one there to save our souls.

Do you have tips to share based on your experience? Feel free to share in the comments.

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Activities, Inspiration, Life & Living, Tips, tools & skills, Toward better care, Videos

dachshund demos 7 person-centered care tips

Dachshund demos person-centered care copy

Isn’t it amazing that many animals know intuitively what some humans seem unable to learn or unwilling to apply?

Here are a few person-centered dementia care partner tips inspired by a viral video of two friends taking a walk:

1) Do stuff they like, together

2) Focus on capacities

3) Adjust your pace

4) Be supportive

5) Be patient

6) Exercise

7) Love