'Dear Friends' September 2013
Weeks of September 23
and30, 2013
Prayer Requests
St. Vincent de Paul on Serving Those in Need
Dear Friends:
This Friday, Sept. 27, is the
feast of St. Vincent
de
Paul (c.1580-1660). One of his many quotes that I've
particularly liked, and used when talking about
caregiving, is:
"When you are called from your prayers or the
Eucharistic celebration to serve the poor, you lose
nothing, since to serve the poor is to go to God.
You must see God in the faces of the poor."
I have no doubt that includes those whose health is
poor, our dear care-receivers.
Yes, you would like to get to Mass on time (or get
there at all!) or attend an annual retreat or just have
the energy to pray more each day but . . .
But at this period in your life as you continue to live
your God-given vocation of caregiver, those may not be
possible. Find comfort in the fact that "you lose
nothing."
Here are a few more wonderful quotes from St. Vincent:
"It is from your hands that Our Lord, in the person
of the sick, seeks relief."
"Let us love God, my brothers, let us love God.
But let it be with the strength of our arms and the
sweat of our brow."
"Outpourings of affection for God, of resting in his
presence, of good feelings toward everyone and
sentiments and prayers like these ... are suspect if
they do not express themselves in practical love
which has real effects."
"The net result of my experience on the matter is the
judgment I have formed, that true religion -- true
religion, gentlemen -- true religion is to be found
among the poor."
And one prayer:
"Lord, help me to make time today to serve you in
those who are most in need of encouragement or
assistance."
St. John the
Caregiver
-- and St. Vincent de Paul!
-- pray for us.
- - -
This week we're so pleased to welcome Jan N. of
Louisiana as the newest member of the Friends of St. John the
Caregiver. Please keep her and her intentions in your
prayers. She has promised to pray for you and yours.
And we cordially invite you to join
the Friends of St. John
the Caregiver! (FSJC's programs include
YourAgingParent.com and
CatholicCaregivers.com.) You can find out more about
becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that
you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include
caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both
(including quite a few former caregivers).
You can:
sign up on-line here
or call us toll-free at
1-800-392-JOHN (5646)
or
print and mail an application form.
God
bless you!
Bill
To
contact us To
join
FSJC To make a
donation To view or make
prayer
requests Materials
order form Past
"Dear Friends"
letters "Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
Week of September 16, 2013
Prayer Requests
Imitating God by Saying 'No!"
Dear Friends:
Over the past eight months since Monica's death I've
noticed some parallels between grieving and caregiving.
One is exhaustion. Another is the value of saying "no."
Of saying "No, no, no!"
That's had me thinking about how most of us accept the
fact that sometimes God says "no" to our requests. Well,
perhaps "accept" isn't the right word. On more than a
few occasions it's more "grudgingly learn to live with."
Then, too, his "sometimes" can seem to be "way too
often."
In the big picture, we know why he says that. It's in
our own best interests. It's better for us.
The same is true as a caregiver (or a griever).
Sometimes, in our own best interests, we have to say
"no."
No, I can't supply any baked goods for the annual fund
raiser.
No, I can't host Thanksgiving dinner for the extended
family.
No, I can't . . . make it to Sunday Mass this week.
There a things you want to do, things you normally
would do, and even things you think you should be that,
right now, you simply aren't able to do because, right
now, taking care of your loved one is priority number
one.
But even consider a decision like that and, so often,
guilt comes rushing in.
I should bake cookies. It will only take an hour
or so. I'm being lazy.
I should host Thanksgiving dinner. It's a
tradition that everyone looks forward to. I'm being
selfish.
I not only should make it to Sunday Mass, I
really want to make it there. I'm being sinful.
Over the past two years I've come to realize it takes
effort, and practice, to say "no." And, good news!, I've
discovered it gets easier.
As a caregiver, your "no" is probably the exact
opposite of being lazy or selfish or sinful. It can be,
truly, imitating the One who created us in his own
image.
- - -
This week we're so pleased to welcome Mary C. of New
York as the newest member of the Friends of St. John the
Caregiver. Please keep her and her intentions in your
prayers. She has promised to pray for you and yours.
And we cordially invite you to join
the Friends of St. John
the Caregiver! (FSJC's programs include
YourAgingParent.com and
CatholicCaregivers.com.) You can find out more about
becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that
you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include
caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both
(including quite a few former caregivers).
You can:
sign up on-line here
or call us toll-free at
1-800-392-JOHN (5646)
or
print and mail an application form.
God
bless you!
Bill
To
contact us To
join
FSJC To make a
donation To view or make
prayer
requests Materials
order form Past
"Dear Friends"
letters "Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
Weeks of September 2 and
9, 2013
Prayer Requests
Grades, Grades and Caregiving
Dear Friends:
Back-to-school time has reminded me that there isn't
much about my school days that I miss. I was glad to be
done when I was done. But, it's occurred to me, there
were two parts of school that would be helpful if they
could be applied to caregiving. The first is grades and
the second is . . . grades.
Throughout the nine months of any grade -- whether one
through twelve or even in graduate school -- you pretty
much knew where you stood. Attend class and pay
attention, complete the homework assignments, pass the
tests, learn the material and that was that. Yes, it
took work but you could tell, and your teacher could
tell, that you were progressing.
Then, at the end of the school year or term, you were
moved up to the next level and, for the most part, were
ready to meet its challenges.
Grades -- your test scores and report cards; and grades
-- being promoted from one class to the next.
But, as you know, with caregiving . . . it can be tough
to tell how you're doing. And, I suspect, most
caregivers give themselves lower marks than they really
deserve. They notice their weak spots (and we all have
them) and gloss over their strengths (and we all have
those, as well).
Then, too, there's no teacher. No tutor. No mentor.
Yes, there are professionals to help and books and
websites and the advice of "veteran" caregivers but
caregiving isn't like learning multiplication tables.
Every caregiver's experience is unique because every
caregiver and his or her care-receiver is unique.
With caregiving there's no moving from grade to grade
at a steady and expected pace. Again as you know, it can
suddenly shift from only a small amount of care needed
to a great deal that's demanded. From a sense of feeling
relatively comfortable in your role to feeling
unprepared and overwhelmed. That can happen even to the
point of honestly recognizing and being forced to admit
and accept that you're no longer able to provide the
care your loved one now needs. The care you so want to
offer but simply can't.
That can be one form of a caregiver's "graduation" and
it's such a tough one for both you and your
care-receiver.
Another, and so much happier form, can be that your
loved one's health improves to the point that he or she
no longer needs care. What a glorious day that is!
Of course there's one more way your caregiving time may
end: with the death of your dear care-receiver. What a
tough day that is, followed by a period that's
challenging in so many ways.
As always, dear Friends, you remain in my prayers.
- - -
This week we're so pleased to welcome Cathy M. of Ohio
and Darlene M. of Virginia as the newest members of the Friends of St. John the
Caregiver. Please keep them and their intentions in your
prayers. They have promised to pray for you and yours.
And we cordially invite you to join
the Friends of St. John
the Caregiver! (FSJC's programs include
YourAgingParent.com and
CatholicCaregivers.com.) You can find out more about
becoming a member here.
No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that
you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include
caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both
(including quite a few former caregivers).
You can:
sign up on-line here
or call us toll-free at
1-800-392-JOHN (5646)
or
print and mail an application form.
God
bless you!
Bill
To
contact us To
join
FSJC To make a
donation To view or make
prayer
requests Materials
order form Past
"Dear Friends"
letters "Among Friends" quarterly newsletter
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