How To Have Fun With Your Aging Parent

A Step by Step Manual for Adults Who Love and Care for Older Adults

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Pub Date Dec 01 2017 | Archive Date Nov 08 2017

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Description

With an older population of 46.2 million* needing daily care and quality of life, adult children of aging family members have plenty of books that explain the financial, medical and nursing options to consider for their loved ones in their golden years, but there are few books or resources that discuss activities for the elderly and almost none that shows how to personalize an aging person’s preference for enjoying the years he or she has left.

 

Whether living in an assisted living facility or in their own home, children of aging parents (aunts, uncles, disabled persons) are looking for ways to determine and discuss the best activities and level of daily care for loved ones. It’s not an easy job, with many caregivers feeling frustrated about the decisions they make and the level of interactions they have with their parents and loved ones. Concise and often very funny, the illustrated book How To Have Fun with Your Aging Parents: A Step-by-Step Manual for Adults Who Love and Care for Older Adults by eldercare therapist Christina Britton Conroy, M.A., C.M.T., L.C.A.T. helps caregivers bring joy and passion back into the lives of their aging loved ones.  A quick read, Conroy provides excellent advice in a workbook format for caregivers to determine the best types of daily activities and care for their loved ones.   


With an older population of 46.2 million* needing daily care and quality of life, adult children of aging family members have plenty of books that explain the financial, medical and nursing...


Advance Praise

Kirkus Review:

I WANT TO GO TO LITHUANIA OR HOW TO HAVE FUN WITH YOUR AGING PARENTS

$10.95 paperback, $3.29 e-book ISBN: 978-1-934912-77-5


BOOK REVIEW

In this guide, a music and creative arts therapist advises caregivers of aging parents.

A former director of a senior center, Conroy (One Man’s Music, 2008) shares personal insights into the challenges associated with caring for elderly loved ones. Much of this short book focuses on the inevitable emotional baggage that exists between adult child and aging parent, demonstrating that truly understanding the relationship one has with one’s mother or father is the basis for compassionate caregiving. Conroy draws from her professional experiences as well as the trying interactions she had with her own father, lending an intimate slant to this instructional manual. She suggests that the caregiver needs to identify “Three Truths” (“your parent’s basic personality type,” “your relationship to your parent,” and “what your parent needs to feel validated and whole”) to be most effective. The author’s well-constructed description of the four “dysfunctional” parent personality types is likely to resonate with caregivers. Her strategies for dealing with these personalities are simple yet dramatic in their impact. She learned, for example, that her “dad’s passion was talking about himself,” something that “did not interest me, but I was willing to be bored, in order to please him.” Conroy explains the ingenious way she leveraged this factor to construct a situation in which both she and her father could be entertained. Not surprisingly, some of the techniques the author uses revolve around music, and it is a delight to read how this universal language brings joy to senior center residents. One of the more intriguing observations the author makes is that “compassionate lies” are not only acceptable, but also necessary. In the case of her father, Conroy lied to him about where she was getting the money to pay for his home attendants so he would accept the care. “I hated lying to my father,” writes Conroy, “but I had no alternative....This lie injured no one....It insured my father’s safety, and saved my sanity.” Conroy’s descriptive text is augmented by cartoon illustrations by her husband, Larry.

Sensitive and empathetic; offers excellent suggestions for coping with the harsh reality of caring for elderly parents.

Black Lyon Publishing (85 pp.)

$10.95 paperback, $3.29 e-book ISBN: 978-1-934912-77-5

Indie, Kirkus Media LLC, 6411 Burleson Rd., Austin, TX 78744 


Kirkus Review:

I WANT TO GO TO LITHUANIA OR HOW TO HAVE FUN WITH YOUR AGING PARENTS

$10.95 paperback, $3.29 e-book ISBN: 978-1-934912-77-5


BOOK REVIEW

In this guide, a music and creative...


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Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781934912775
PRICE $10.95 (USD)

Average rating from 2 members


Featured Reviews

I posted this review on goodreads:

I received ARC of this through Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

This book wasn't what I thought it was going to be, and even though it wasn't, it was still done really well. My intention when I wanted to read this was to find out how to have fun with my aging parents. After reading the book, my parents aren't really that old (and they'd kill me if they knew I read this to learn how to better deal with them), but I have a better understanding of where they might be heading.

This short book would be better served being a full or half day course. The content is really interesting, the stories are completely applicable, and I think people would find support and validation after reading something like this.

It literally is a step by step guide starting with figuring out what type of person your parent is, the kind of attention they need, and then the amount of attention and support you can give them. When applying this formula to your parent/s, it makes it easier to figure out what they need and what they need from you. Of course everything changes over time and the applications need to be applied later as well.

It provides ideas about how to discover what your parent enjoys and how to get them to engage with others and possibly learn something new. The author adds a personal touch with her experiences at various old age homes and with her own family which I really enjoyed.

It touches on all the ups and downs people can go through with their parents as well as spouses with one another. Ultimately it shows the reader, that they are not alone and that there are many things that one can do with their aging parent, and also how to make that parent feel better about themselves.

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