Gary Barg: Like so many family caregivers, you and your sisters have been caring for both parents at the same time and now, for just your dad. That’s never easy. Can you tell me about caregiving for your mom and dad?
Amy Grant: When I came back from a really busy touring schedule in the fall of 2008, I realized my parents were declining, especially my mom. She was so frail, it was shocking. And so I canceled everything for 2009—all work, all travel, and tried to be home. I tried to do special things with my parents, helping my mom with bathing and getting dressed. About that time, one of my sisters and her husband moved in with my parents. And so, we were just kind of slowly circling the wagons. But dementia is such a different player. We’ve had in-house relatives before. Both my grandmothers lived with my two older sisters in the last three years of their lives, but dementia made it impossible to just carry on in any normal way. Eventually, we had to get round-the-clock care for my mom.
Gary Barg: Your parents did something that a lot of people unfortunately don’t do. They did a great job of preparing.
Amy Grant: Yes, they did.
Gary Barg: Could you walk us through that?
Amy Grant: Basically, my father took out long-term care insurance and he put money in a savings account that provided us the materials we would need to care for him.
Gary Barg: That’s really smart. That’s a great lesson for you and for your kids.
Amy Grant: Yes, I know, and I have really been talking to people about this ‘cause you know, my sisters Kathy and Mimi and Carol and I looked at each other and we thought, Oh my goodness! We thought the biggest gift would be to help our kids through education. Now, you know to provide for ourselves, that’s just such a different message for our generation because we have not been a saving generation. But it’s never too late to start working on a plan; and I think in these financial times, I don’t know a family that has not worked hard to simplify. But the real elephant in the room, for all of us and for every family, is just when that shift starts. You know, when we realized that all of these different things were making us scratch our heads like what are Mom and Dad doing? What did she have on when she came to the door? Why did my father make this purchase or talk to this person on the phone? Oh my gosh! We were putting out all these little fires, and then we realized that dementia was at play.
And so while they still had enough mental faculties, we went to them and said this is what we see at work. And please trust us. We need to communicate right now about what matters to you and you’re going to have to trust us to carry it out. Pretty early on, we got our parents to turn over the power of attorney to my two older sisters. There were lots of conversations and lots of time spent together. All those communications are so important. We’ve learned so many amazing life lessons through this.
Gary Barg: I always call these Board of Directors’ Meetings, where you and your family sit down and discuss the hands-on business that’s caring for your loved one.
Amy Grant: Absolutely! And it’s emotional. You know, through the end of life, through death, we have a lot of opportunities to heal unresolved things—to forgive, to let go. I think when I was a kid, I was not aware of the fact that all this was happening with the much older generations. It’s really eye-opening. But you know, it’s all part of life.
Gary Barg: There’s no formula, but we can learn from other’s lessons.
Amy Grant: Absolutely, yes. That’s true of any hard time. It is our ability to see whatever it is we’re going through in a meaningful light. Otherwise, you just get trapped in why, why, why, and that’s really counterproductive. I mean, tears are essential, but you just can’t stay there. With my parents, I was frustrated. My mother fell again in her own home and we were going through a Rolodex of caregivers trying to find the right fit. Then a friend spoke these words to me, “Take a deep breath, Amy, and just remember this is the last great lesson your parents will teach you.” That immediately created a framework for me to say, “Well, you’re right. This is going to be a lesson in using my creativity, in listening to my instincts and to those moments of inspiration and direction that seem like they come out of nowhere. And trusting that, on some level, we’re all led at different points in our lives when we have the greatest need.” It has been an amazing journey, and I’m so grateful for it.
Gary Barg: So many people who have never been caregivers are always surprised about how caregiving actually brings people closer to their faith. I was wondering how caregiving influences your faith, or vice versa?
Amy Grant: There is immediacy to caregiving. I think what I felt with my mother was being more vulnerable all the way around when in moments of caregiving with her. You can’t help but feel sometimes frustrated, but also an overriding sense of compassion. If you read through The New Testament, there are so many times in the gospels when just prior to Jesus performing a miracle would be the phrase “and moved by compassion” or “moved with compassion” or “filled with compassion.” And I think that the groundwork for the miraculous and the setting for spiritual experience is in the context of compassion.
Gary Barg: What would be the one most important piece of advice you’d like to share with family caregivers?
Amy Grant: “This, too, shall pass.” Nothing stays the same. I think, that’s where the faith element really comes in. There are so many moments in a day that no one sees all of the details of how a caregiver is extending themselves on somebody else’s behalf. But God does, and the way I read my Bible, it is very clear throughThe Old Testament and The New Testament that God has always been devoted to the disenfranchised and the marginalized people in our community. And I mean, that’s what Jesus said, this is pure religion, to take care of widows and orphans. I think there is an audience for every one of us in the details of our lives that nobody else sees, except God, just the one that made us. And when we remember that, it does give value to every sacrifice that nobody else sees. And I know it comes back. I don’t know how, but I know it does.
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