"I can't get Dad to budge!"
Has your loved one ever flatly rejected your perfectly sensible solution to their problem?
Though your idea may seem like the obvious route to take, it's not so simple when you're caring for an older adult. Your relative has had a lifetime of making decisions on their own. They usually want to continue doing so.
If you are having trouble agreeing, start with one simple principle:
Take your eye off the goal. Focus on the process instead.
We all want to be treated like people rather than like a project in need of completion. Much as you are concerned about the urgency of change, ask yourself if it's really worth jeopardizing the trust and long-term communication you share with your relative.
If it truly is an emergency. It's hard to watch parents struggling. We want to short circuit their distress or immediately reduce their exposure to hazards. But what seems urgent to us may not be to them. (And unless they are legally deemed incompetent, they have the right to make unwise decisions.) The threat to your relationship because you steamrolled an idea cannot be underestimated. If you truly think an urgent change is needed, get a second opinion from a professional. A physician. An Aging Life Care? Manager. Someone with training and experience in eldercare. They can give you an objective sense of how quickly action needs to be taken.
Are you worried about an aging parent?
We can help! As the Long Island experts in family caregiving, we at Peacewell Care Consulting have a lot of experience working with families that are in the same situation: Kids see a definite problem and the older adult does not. Give us a call at 516-731-0400. You don't have to do this alone.