Video Transcript: Pastoral Issues: Stress
Hi there. We're on to lesson two on our caring for seniors. And I want to take you this time on a little journey. Looking at what are the stress factors that come up when we are caring for the elderly, but also what are stress factors for the elderly themselves. One of the things that the elderly have a really tough time with is disappointment. Or disgruntlement. And sometimes the elderly get angry. And one of the problems that arises is, how do we deal with the fact that the doctor's appointment took too long? You know, we had an appointment for 10am. And it was quarter to 11:00, 45 minutes later, before we even got into the room. And then we had to wait another 15 minutes before the guy, that was an hour. And when an elderly person is dealing with that kind of thing, there's times when they can get very upset, and very angry. And they take it out on the people who are around them. So if you and I are caring for some senior citizen, and we say, you know, I'll take you to that doctor's appointment, we're always hoping that the doctor's appointment is going to go well. Because if it doesn't, we could run into the fact of a angry person in the car with us on the way home. Or maybe you're one of the kids in and you're trying to help your mom or dad or you go to their house and you mow the lawn and they get so angry because you did not mow the grass properly. You didn't mow it the way dad would. And it just gets to be very frustrating for people when they're trying to help others. They're trying to help the senior citizen. But the senior citizen doesn't seem to appreciate it one bit. And so they get angry, and they take that out. And that's a big stress factor. For those who care about seniors, it's going to be true in our lives as we minister to seniors, but it's also going to be true in the lives of those who are caring for the seniors. And even amongst the seniors. amongst themselves, it's going to be a difficult situation, to deal with anger and grumpiness. And sometimes that's just the way it is. So when we care for seniors, we need to be aware of some facts about that person, not just some theories of aging, we read in a magazine, we need to know that person. It's easy enough to read some stuff online, read some things in a magazine, you know, you subscribe to the AARP thing and you think you're gonna learn all about aging. And no, that's not really a good way to find things. And so today, we're going to look at some stress factors and caring for seniors that will affect how we relate to seniors, and how we help those who are caregivers for those seniors. Come on. Let's go for a journey. The ideas I'm going to be sharing with you they're prompted by a couple of articles. Yeah, I just said let's not go to the internet and read some but these are prompted by a couple of articles on the website, agingcare.com. At that website, you'll find many useful articles which can help clarify the issues we run into. I know for myself as I was a pastor, and caring for many of the elderly, I served churches that had a significant elderly population amongst them. In one church, I served for four years and in that time, I buried nearly 50 people so it was like one person a month was dying. That was just an indicator of how many elderly there were in that church and, and so we were always dealing with people who are
getting ready to die. Or people who had just lost a spouse or people who knew that there was a loss in their life because their parents had passed away. We were dealing with things about funerals, we'll deal with funerals in another another lecture too. But the the fact is that when, when we deal with seniors, there are so many things to care about. And I want us to be caring, I want us to try to be those who care about others in a very special way, with the sort of feeling that God has given us this calling. I thought I'd add this picture in here. How are the elderly depicted in our culture? Now, this may vary around the world as you, our students, come from many different cultures. But how does your culture depict the elderly, this sign? It says, you know, be careful, slow, there's elderly people, what do they have the people who are bent over and walking with a cane. And each culture has a way of thinking about the elderly. And this sign with a caution sign is talking about people who may live in the area, it's probably found at on a street, where there's a senior citizens complex where they live in assisted living, perhaps or where they live in independent living, but they're they're getting on in years. And what do we think of that? How do we do we think of the elderly as people were just bent over, and who need a cane to walk or it's just something different. Maybe there's more to seniors than what this sign depicts. My wife is a person who was an in home caregiver for the elderly and disabled. That meant that she went to people's houses and interacted with them, she was their friend she was she took them grocery shopping, she took them on little outings, they would go get coffee together. One delightful, elderly woman that she was with who was nearly blind loved to play pool with her on the pool table in her apartment facility. And my wife just really enjoyed this interaction that she had with these elderly people and he and the disabled. But there were always some funny things that would that would take place. One of them, for example, was there was this individual, he was an elderly man who had some very strong thoughts about what he wanted in life and how he wanted to experience life and what he thought he was capable of doing. Now, his three daughters, he called them the committee. I his three daughters knew that he really wasn't able to stay at home by himself anymore. So they arranged for him to be moved one day to an assisted living facility, they felt that they had convinced him of the necessity of this and that he had agreed that it was going to be something that would happen, and that it would take place on such and such a day and so on. And the moving truck showed up and they they took his furniture, and they brought it to his assisted living apartment. So that didn't it was just like home except it was well, it was in this assisted living quarters that he had now. Two days later, the moving truck was there again, he had called the movers and said, I want to go back home. And so they came and they moved him back home. Now, that was not exactly what the committee was expecting to have happen. But it's one of those things that that to me, provided so much humor, because the elderly person knows what, what they want. But
sometimes it's just not possible. And so you have these conflicting experiences, where the daughters really wanted him in a place where he would be cared for. And he wanted to be in a place by himself where yeah, he had people come in,
like my wife to help him with daily chores and so on. But he didn't want to be stuck in a place where all the old People lived. Now sometimes. On the other hand, there are difficult people. The fact is that all of us as we grow older, find our options becoming more and more limited. When we think about what do we have any say so over anymore, more and more, our options are dictated by others. And we're left with well do you want yellow jello or green jello for for lunch. And that's, that's just very difficult for some people put up with and so they become difficult. And so they're the difficult people. But there's also so so many senior citizens who are just beautiful people. They have aides, they've, they've gotten, perhaps they've gotten some dementia. But their lives are something beautiful. And so as we interact with them, we discover some wonderful things about their lives and wonderful things about what God has done with him. both difficult and beautiful people are very important when we're trying to minister to the elderly. Yeah, we have issues with health. We're going to be focusing on that in another lecture, in terms of all that, the health issues that happen and we're going to be trying to take a good look at that. But as the picture depicts, there's there. There's a lot of elderly people who end up lying in a sick bed. And discussions amongst the elderly seem to always turn to what ails and I say us because I've got several things that I can describe to people is, oh, man, I got this thing. And I got that, and I got the next thing. And fear can come to be a part of our lives when we're dealing with our health. Fear of pain, fear of the outcome of medical procedures is on one's mind. We don't want to go there. We don't want to have that poking that prodding, that drawing of blood. And yet, it's something we need to do in order that others can be supportive to our health. And so when you are ministering to senior citizens, you need to keep in mind that their health is always on their mind. And it may be the source of some real tension between them, their spouse, their children, their grandkids, it can always be a problem. Now there's some common issues that caregivers can run into, when when you and I are dealing with the elderly. One of the things that you run into chronic complaining. I know I'm even kind of good at that, where I go, man, my back is hurting again. And and my my knees hurt and my hips hurt and oh my I've got arthritis in my fingers and, and it hurts like crazy sometimes. And that chronic complaining, will will sometimes cause those of us who are looking to minister to seniors to tell ourselves, I don't think this guy wants me around here. Really they do. They really do. But they don't know how to how to get past the pain. Sometimes there's mood swings and the wild mood swing among the elderly. And what you will discover is it kind of depends on what day you're there or even which hour of the day that you're there. When you're there to care about them and they can be joyful and happy in the morning in the afternoon being just
very grumpy. There are there's some very real things like that that happen. Just as a common ordinary thing of aging. Mood swings are issues that that somebody who cares for senior citizens is going to run into and there's medication side effects. Sometimes the side effects are debilitating. And that's difficult for us as those who try to minister to people to try to deal with how, how do we encourage them to take their medication when we realize that, that sometimes this medication is giving them some side effects that are really less than ideal. And yet it's better than the disease. It's just hard to know. And there's pain. There's boredom. You know, I can't, I can't go outside anymore. We really experienced boredom amongst senior citizens during this time of COVID. And with all the lockdown with COVID. Amongst the elderly, particularly, there's just nothing to do. They look at themselves. And they said, Well, what am I going to do, I can't, I can't go have coffee with my friends, I can't, I can't go down, down to the the park and sit with my friend at a table and just talk, and so on. And so boredom gets to be something that those of us who care for seniors will run into. And, and it's something that as we minister to seniors, we can help to alleviate that boredom. Because God intends for us to have interesting lives. And then another common issue that caregivers run into is dementia, or it's, it's companion, Alzheimer's, and those, those two things are also very difficult when you're trying to interact with someone and and they ask you the same question time after time after time, and don't seem to realize that you've just been talking about various things. When we're involved with ministry to seniors, we will inevitably have opportunity to interact with their caregivers. And that could be family, it may be a person from an agency. It could be people who work in the assisted living residences, people who work in nursing homes, and we can be the presence of Jesus for all of them, that is, ministry also to seniors. Because all of these people need this, the people around them, the caregivers, that that will help them and people that care about them, they need these, these individuals who will, who will give them support. And it's important for us then to give those people support. It's this whole web of, of social interaction where when everyone has someone to talk to and everyone has someone supporting them, we all are going to do better. And so remember that, that you'll have that opportunity to interact with their caregivers and, and feel good about it. It's it's an important aspect of what you have the opportunity to do. And then there's the grandkids. They're so precious to the grandparents and and so it's important, I think for us as Miss doing ministry, seniors to encourage intergenerational contact, sometimes they're the person's own grandchildren do not live nearby. And so they only see them once in a great while. But then it would be good for us to arrange ways of having younger kids go to nursing home to go to visit elderly people and so on. When I was actively working in ministry, and I had four little girls as we were growing up, I often would take one of them along when I went to visit the elderly and it was the most delightful situation. The the elderly
person just couldn't get over the fact that this little kid would come and be present in their house with them. It was a very precious thing. encourage that. Encourage people to interact with each other. As caregivers to seniors and their caregivers, in turn were called by God show his compassion on his children. That's that's what we're called to do. And so when God wants to show His compassion on his children, it isn't just little kids. His compassion is on his little child who's 90 years old. God's compassion reaches out his, the his arms and surrounds people who are sitting by the window just looking down the road hoping that their kids are going to come to visit this week. God wants us to show His compassion also, even to the happy elderly, to the people who are really enjoying life and, and we can we can walk with them in this and enjoy this time with them. It's a very, very wonderful thing to have intergenerational contact. It'll help make the elderly, the happy, elderly. And yes, God's compassion wants to be shown through us, even to the grumpy elderly. That's our privilege of ministry. That's our opportunity for ministry. That's how we can make sure that our lives show that God cares for everyone. God's love is channeled through us, so that our very presence. And this was something I had to learn. And it was very difficult for me to learn because I found it hard to believe that I could be this. But our very presence provides a stream of living water for all of God's people. This was not something I thought could be true of me when I first was in ministry, I struggled with the idea of how do I show God's love through my presence through through encouraging others to be present with with all of God's people. But when I finally realized what was going on, I realized that just being around people and being there with them, and for them, and available to them, provides a stream of living water for all God's people. The little kids do the most elderly. And it's that opportunity for service and for ministry that I encourage you to go for. It's great. Go for it. Well, that's all for today. We'll see you next time.