A Minute for Caregivers: When Everyday Feels Like Monday
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A Minute for Caregivers - Peter W. Rosenberger
Introduction
"I’d recommend a book for you to read, but you’re the guy to write it!"
Walking into a mental health facility in Nashville, I stood silently for a moment until a woman at the front desk asked, Are you lost?
With tears filling my eyes, I nodded while muttering, I guess I am.
Sniffling a bit, I wryly asked, Do you all take walk-ins?
Both people sitting behind the counter responded with strange looks on their faces.
With exasperation, I inwardly asked, Really?! This is a mental health facility, and that’s the question that gets me a funny look? It’s not like I was dressed as a Wookie or anything!
Would you like to talk to a counselor?
Prudently holding my tongue while nodding affirmatively, I followed them to another counter. After staff members took my wallet, keys, and later my blood pressure, I found myself at a dilapidated table in a stark room. With faded paint on the walls and chairs that had seen better days, I felt like I sat in a precinct interrogation room from what can best be described as "early Law and Order." After a few minutes, a pleasant woman opened the door and introduced herself as a staff counselor.
What’s brought you here today, Peter?
Haltingly, I recounted the journey of my life as a family caregiver. Many years into the role by that time, I also shared my own recent surgery that went sideways—nearly causing me to bleed out on the table. Four units of blood, a post-op infection, and a bumpy recovery later, I discovered the inability to sleep. Simply put, I felt spent.
It all tumbled out to this patient woman. I dumped a lifetime’s supply of frustration, weariness, resentment, fear, obligation, guilt, shame, heartache, and anger onto the battered table. But behind all those feelings lay the even greater anguish of grief.
Such is the life of a family caregiver.
To date, my wife, Gracie, has endured more than eighty-five operations, including the amputation of both legs. More than 100 physicians have treated her in thirteen hospitals. In addition, Gracie has undergone 150+ minor procedures and lives with relentless pain—all from a 1983 car accident when she was only seventeen. I met her a few years after her ordeal following surgery #21. She lost her legs after our children were born, and although we experienced seasons without massive trials, those seasons remained short and infrequent.
Following my marathon purging in the examination
room, I took a deep breath and waited for the counselor’s response. The overpowering weariness and angst led me to hope I could stay and receive treatment
for exhaustion. What I really wanted was rest.
It turns out they don’t do that sort of thing (except maybe in Hollywood during the 1940s).
After telling a trained mental health professional that I felt I was crazy—while inside a mental health facility—I admit to experiencing great curiosity about what would happen next.
Thinking for a moment, she said, You know I can’t keep you here.
You’re not crazy,
she quickly added.
With a raised eyebrow, I asked if I could get that in writing.
There’s quite a list who’d like to see that,
I muttered glumly.
Chuckling, she further said, No, you’re not crazy, but you are burned out.
Retrieving a notepad from her jacket, she wrote some names and offered, I can refer you to some counselors who might be helpful.
Nodding in acceptance, I took her list. Switching gears, she added, We’ve been giving out box lunches to people today, and there’s one left. It’s tuna fish—you want it?
Not once have I turned down a tuna fish sandwich, and the record remains intact.
Escorting me out of the room, she led me across the hall and grabbed the last box lunch from the refrigerator. Handing it to me, she added something that would change my life.
"I’d recommend a book for you to read, but you’re the guy to write it."
Reclaiming my wallet and keys, I trekked to the parking lot. Without turning the car on, I sat quietly behind the wheel and opened the box to see a sandwich, soda, chips, apple, and cookie. Savoring every bite as if from the finest restaurant, I reflected on her words about me writing a book for caregivers.
What kind of book would I write for caregivers?
I scoffed to myself.
What would I say to them?
Taking another bite, I half snorted, What would I say to myself?
Those questions launched my journey into learning the language of caregivers.
Drawing upon my 35+ years (and counting) of caring for my wife, I’ve answered those questions and more. Now fluent in caregiver,
I speak directly to caregivers’ hearts and address the train wreck behind the weary eyes of those who stand between a vulnerable loved one and an even worse disaster.
Sadly, I don’t remember the name of that counselor who helped direct my feet to what would become my life’s work. Yet I remain deeply grateful she saw past my distress and offered compassion, insights, and sustenance for the journey—even if it was just a box lunch.
The inspiration for this current book unexpectedly arrived while talking with an individual at a doctor’s billing office. When I inquired how she was doing that day, she enthusiastically exclaimed, Great … it’s Friday!
Without thinking, I (embarrassingly) grumbled, Friday means nothing to me … every day is Monday.
After finishing that conversation, I considered the reality of Every day is Monday
—not just for me, but for many of my fellow caregivers. Knowing the existence of the caregiving life, I sought to give myself and other caregivers a one-minute message to strengthen us for those every day is Monday
moments.
The job of a family caregiver remains filled with many dangers, toils, and snares.
As a burned-out caregiver, I tried to have myself committed to a mental health institution, but all I received was a tuna sandwich—along with the invitation to dig deep within and help point fellow caregivers to safety, often for one minute at a time.
Resolve never to quit, never to give up, no matter what the situation. —Jack Nicklaus
1
The Opinions of Others
In 1986, my wife (then fiancé) underwent surgery on her right ankle to save her crushed leg. Although she ultimately lost both legs years later, hope remained in the driver’s seat at the time. While this surgery was her 22nd (best count) since her 1983 car accident, it was my first with her. Following the operation, the surgeon provided a favorable report, and everyone expressed relief. Stating she’d be in recovery for some time, he suggested, You can’t see her for a while, so why don’t you take a break.
Following doctor’s orders,
I went to a movie.
I later learned of the clutched pearls and tongue-clucking that occurred while I sat in the theater. One of them, a holy-roller type with a My Other Car Is a Chariot of Fire
bumper sticker on her Cadillac, piled onto Gracie’s family about my inability to care for her.
Stunned at the response, I mistakenly allowed shame and fear of disapproval to drive future actions. That unfortunate pattern continued for years before learning to trust my instincts. I also better discovered how to handle unsolicited opinions flung by the ill-informed and inexperienced.
Trusting in our instincts while detaching from others’ disapproval helps avoid resentment while allowing clarity of thought—and caregivers desperately need to think clearly. It’s okay to watch a movie, go for a drive, take a walk, and by all means, keep firm boundaries with the pearl clutchers
!
None are more unjust in their judgments of others than those who have a high opinion of themselves. —Charles Spurgeon
2
Collect the Facts and Fears
A listener shared her frustration, weariness, and burnout after years of caring for her husband following a traumatic brain injury. At sixty-eight, she expressed growing concern regarding her abilities—and his