'Dear Friends' July 2008
Monday, July 7, 2008
Alcoholism and Aging
Dear Friends,
We thought we'd start this week's letter with a short
excerpt from "Alcoholism and Aging," which is featured
in this month's edition
of
"Catholic Caregiver" and is a Topic on
YourAgingParent.com:
"Alcoholism
in a family is a touchy subject. Denial is one of
the most common symptoms of the disease. To make
matters worse, many older people think that
alcoholism is simply a moral weakness and not a
disease.
"In fact, an older body has more difficulty processing alcohol. Maybe
your loved one has only been a social drinker, but as he advances in
years, the same amount of alcohol packs more of a wallop, and its
effects last longer, because his tolerance level has dropped.
"A
second factor is medication. Many older people take a variety of
medications that shouldn’t be combined with alcohol. An older person
may also come to rely on the numbing effect of alcohol to deal with
pain. While alcohol seems to dull both physical and emotional pain,
it eventually compounds both. . . . "
You can read more on this topic
here. And to view the same material as a one-page
flier, go
here and scroll down to July 2008.
And here are links for:
Alcoholics Anonymous
Al-Anon/Alateen
AA's
"The Big
Book"
The Calix
Society ("An association of Catholic alcoholics who are maintaining their
sobriety through affiliation with and participation
in the Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous. Our first
concern is to interest Catholics with an alcoholic
problem in the virtue of total abstinence. Our
second stated purpose is to promote the spiritual
development of our membership.")
If you or your loved one has a drinking problem, our
prayers are with you. We understand how difficult this
can be and we know what a difference sobriety -- a
challenge and a blessing -- can make.
- - -
Again,
thank you so much to all who have sent in a "Non-event
2008" donation. (The
invitation
was a big hit!) If you've been meaning to do that,
please take a few minutes to write that check and drop
it in the mail. Your gift makes a big difference.
- - -
Please
join us in welcoming the newest members of the Friends
of St. John the Caregiver. "Hello"
to Dolores M. and Tillie G. in New Mexico and Mary S. in
Florida. Please keep them and their
intentions in your prayers. They have promised to pray for
caregivers and those receiving care.
And,
of course, we invite you to join, too! You can find out
more about becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. Our members
include caregivers, care-receivers, and those who
support both (including quite a few former caregivers).
God
bless you!
Monica and Bill
To contact us
To join
FSJC
To make a
donation
To view or make prayer
requests
Past "Dear Friends" notes
"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
|
Monday, July 14, 2008
The Littlest Caregivers
Dear Friends:
Just as World Youth
Day 2008 offers the reminder that the Catholic
Church includes young people, it's good to remember --
to
recognize
-- that there are also "youth caregivers." We're talking
about the grade-schooler who has extra duties because a
parent is taking care of Grandma or Grandpa. The teen
who can't take part in extracurricular activities after
school because he has to get home to help a parent or
senior family member who's ill or frail. The sibling
whose brother or sister has special needs and so that
boy or girl has special responsibilities.
If a typical family caregiver often goes
about his or her work unseen by all but a very few, the
littlest caregiver is close to invisible.
--She's getting dinner ready because Mom had
to stop at Grandma's on the way home from work.
--He's
putting a pile of laundry into the washing machine because Dad is spending so
much time at the hospital and Mom needs to be with him.
--She's making sure her brother brushes his teeth or gets
properly dressed or remembers to wear his glasses and or
his
hearing aids.
--He's coming to his sister's defense among
the neighborhood kids because . . . well, she may be
weird in some ways and he may get mad at her sometimes
but she's his sister!
Little shoulders can carry big loads.
During this week of World Youth Day, we
encourage you to particularly remember in your prayers
the youngest family caregivers. May God richly bless
them now and always.
- - -
If your children have a bother or sister with special
needs, we encourage you to learn more about the
Sibling Support
Project. Years ago two of our own children were
fortunate to be able to attend a "Sibshop." (Their
older brother was in special ed throughout his school years.)
Don Meyer is a pioneer in the field and did a great
job helping our family and countless others.
(And, as long as we're on the
subject, your child might enjoy a middle-grade novel
titled "My
Sister Annie." (Bill is the author.) It's about a
grade-schooler whose older sister had Downs syndrome.)
If you're a "sib," you know that your
caregiving responsibilities can increase after you and
your brother or sister have reached adulthood and your
parents have passed away. There's more
information for adult sibs here and
here, too.
- - -
The latest edition of the FSJC quarterly newsletter,
"Among Friends," was mailed and e-mailed last week.
You can read it here, too.
- - -
Thank
you so much to all who have sent in a "Non-event
2008" donation. (The
invitation
was a big hit!) If you've been meaning to do that,
please take a few minutes to write that check and drop
it in the mail. Your gift makes a big difference.
- - -
Please
join us in welcoming the newest member of the Friends of
St. John the Caregiver. "Hello" to Mary Ann D. in New
York. Please keep her and her intentions in your
prayers. She has promised to pray for caregivers and
those receiving care.
And,
of course, we invite you to join, too! You can find out
more about becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. Our members
include caregivers, care-receivers, and those who
support both (including quite a few former caregivers).
God
bless you!
Monica and Bill
To contact us
To join
FSJC
To make a
donation
To view or make prayer
requests
Past "Dear Friends" notes
"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
|
Monday, July 21, 2008
The Stations of the Cross for Caregivers
Dear
Friends:
Perhaps you noticed that the praying of the Stations of
the Cross was among the activities and
devotions for World Youth Day
2008. A Catholic News Service
article reported:
In a week when the presence of Pope Benedict XVI in
Sydney for World Youth Day had produced multiple
memorable moments, the re-enactment of Jesus' last
days on earth was an event the likes of which this
city had not seen before.
Combining traditional and contemporary
elements of song, dance and drama set amid many of
Sydney's iconic landmarks, this huge devotional
production attracted hundreds of thousands to key
locations in the city and harbor shores. Joining
Sydney participants was a worldwide viewing audience
estimated to be more than 500 million. . . .
Pope Benedict XVI was at St. Mary's Cathedral to
watch the re-enactment of the Last Supper on the
steps. Afterward, the pope prayed that those "who do
not know or have forgotten" Christ should seek him
in the Eucharist.
"Draw us to your real presence at Mass,"
prayed the pope. "Help us to understand that
communion with you also means union with all those
to whom you give yourself. Make us generous and
insightful as we try to walk in your footsteps."
We were surprised to see that the participants used some
different "stations" than the ones with which we're most
familiar. The events didn't identically match the
traditional 14. (You can see a
list of their stations here. Scroll down on that
page for a link to the prayers themselves.)
And we were delighted to see Station 11:
Jesus Entrusts Mary and John to Each Other. The
reflection for that station included this:
The charge of mutual care given by the dying God-man
echoes on, even goes on echoing up to our own day.
As a caregiver, a care-receiver or someone who
supports both, you know how true that is.
This week seems like a good time to remind
you that we'd be happy to mail you a free copy of the
prayer book titled
"The
Stations of the Cross for Caregivers."
Just send a self-addressed stamped envelope to us
at:
Friends of St.
John the Caregiver
P.O. Box 320,
Mountlake
Terrace, WA 98043.
(Outside the United States or to
request multiple copies, e-mail
us your information here.)
- - -
Did you notice the art for this week's "Dear Friends"
letter? It's a detail from that 11th Station by
Richard Campbell.
As Catholic News Service reported in its
article about the stations being said in Sydney:
One poignant departure from the European tradition
of the stations was the depiction of Simon of Cyrene
as an Aboriginal man. In this vignette the actor was
manacled to other Aborigines to reflect the way that
colonial powers captured and chained indigenous
people on the edges of the frontier in the 19th
century.
When, in the enactment of the stations, the
Roman guard released this man from his shackles and
directed him to take up Jesus' cross, it was a
metaphor of the backbreaking burden that Australia's
indigenous people have labored under since white
settlement 220 years ago first began to separate
them from their land.
Reading the prayer at this station was
Louise Campbell, an Aboriginal Catholic education
officer who works in the Maitland-Newcastle Diocese,
north of Sydney. In collaboration with her brother,
Richard Campbell, a World Youth Day indigenous
artist, Louise Campbell has developed many
Aboriginal interpretations of scriptural images.
Her brother's paintings of the Stations of the
Cross, which hang on the walls of the Church of
Reconciliation in suburban La Perouse, were widely
used in World Youth Day promotions.
As members of the so-called Stolen
Generations, the brother and sister were separated
as young children when welfare authorities broke up
their family of 11 siblings. The children were sent
to white foster homes and institutions, and it was
not until 20 years later that the two were reunited.
They are both proud of their Aboriginal and Catholic
heritage.
Louise Campbell's prayer reached out to all
the marginalized peoples in society -- "the sick,
starving, jailed, depressed, the refugees and
strangers."
"They may not seem to match our image of
you and this, too, has come to be true of many of
the indigenous peoples of our world," she prayed.
"But they are truly are sisters and brothers. Help
us not to ignore them, but to walk with them and
lighten their burdens."
- - -
Please
join us in welcoming the newest member of the Friends of
St. John the Caregiver. "Hello" to Rosemary D.
who lives in Maryland. Please keep her and her intentions in your
prayers. She's promised to pray for caregivers and
those receiving care.
And,
of course, we invite you to join, too! You can find out
more about becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. Our members
include caregivers, care-receivers, and those who
support both (including quite a few former caregivers).
God
bless you!
Monica and Bill
To contact us
To join
FSJC
To make a
donation
To view or make prayer
requests
Materials order form
Past "Dear Friends" notes
"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
|
Monday, July 28, 2008
Caregiving is a Family Affair
Dear Friends:
It can seem there's nothing more wonderful -- or, at
times, aggravating -- than family. Both those extremes
can be even more
intense
when it comes to caregiving. It's hard enough for one
person to help a loved one but when it's a family
helping . . . . It can seem like a committee -- and you
know how committees can be. And this committee is one
that knows the history (and hot-buttons) of every
member.
Here's an excerpt from "Caregiving is a
Family Affair," a topic on YourAgingParent.com and the
subject for the August edition of Catholic Caregivers:
As a child you probably didn't like it when others
compared you to your siblings. Now, as an adult
caring for an aging parent, those similarities and
differences can continue to influence the challenges
your family is facing. You and your siblings each have a unique relationship with
your parent. You've each played particular roles in the family. Those
roles have been shaped over your lifetime. So it’s not strange that
we fall back into our family roles when everyone gathers. You each
have unique abilities, life experiences and training. You each have
your own way of handling things. Your own strengths and weaknesses.
It's a small wonder then that when it comes to helping your mother or
father, there may at times be some differences of opinion, even some
friction.
You can read more on
YourAgingParent.com here or find a downloadable copy
of
Catholic Caregivers here.
- - -
We continue to receive requests for prayers from family
caregivers all over the world. Please keep them and
their intentions in your prayers. Here's a
list of requests and
here is how to add your
own intentions.
- - -
A new month (August? Already?) means new
Bulletin Briefs and
Prayers of Intercession for parishes at
CatholicCaregivers.com. And, as already mentioned, a
new edition of
Catholic Caregivers, too.
- - -
And,
of course, we invite you to join the Friends of St. John
the Caregiver. You can find out
more about becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. Our members
include caregivers, care-receivers, and those who
support both (including quite a few former caregivers).
God
bless you!
Monica and Bill
To contact us
To join
FSJC
To make a
donation
To view or make prayer
requests
Materials order form
Past "Dear Friends" notes
"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
|
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