The Joy of Caring

Reflections of a Daughter of the Silent Generation and Mother of Generation Y

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The Wrap: Douglas the Rabbit’s Winter Holiday Surprise

October 2, 2023

“Laughter is the sun that drives winter from the human face.”—Victor Hugo (1802-1885), author of The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Les Miserables

Across traditions, winter holidays are observed with decorations, foods, gifts, lights, rituals, and visits with family and friends. They celebrate hope and joy, even amidst hardship. In that spirit, I’m excited to offer:

In this last book of the series, Douglas invites the other animals to a gathering that captures the friendships they share. It’s a reminder of the importance of making time for what matters most: Connection to others and the world we share.

This one’s a shout-out to my spouse, Doug, and our children—Siena, Matt, and Garrett—with whom we witness the humor and beauty around us, with special thanks to the sightings that inspired the illustrations: Canadian geese skidding to a stop across fresh ice, paper snowflakes created by the kids from coffee filters, shooting stars streaking across the night sky.

I share this story today, on what would have been Dad’s 90th birthday, in gratitude for all the ways he made us laugh, including his story-telling, and for encouraging me to tell stories, too.

“Peace and quiet,” he’d say, a twinkle in his eye, when I’d ask him what he wanted for his birthday.

When I ask myself that question, as I approach my sixtieth, what I want is the gift of kindness.

So, in wrapping the Douglas the Rabbit Adventure Series, it makes sense that, even without doing so intentionally, this final story celebrates these three gifts: peace, quiet, and kindness.

I hope you enjoy!

Accepting help, Finding time, Having fun, Laughing out loud, Learning as we go, Letting go, Maintaining balance, Making peace, Navigating Concerns, Practicing faith, Sacred Practices, Taking care of self, Uncategorized Celebrating joy, Friendship, Gratitude, Keep it simple, Life after death, Natural beauty, Parenting terry@thejoyofcaring.com Leave a Comment

1, 2, 3…ready or not, here we come: Douglas the Rabbit’s Fall Field Trip

August 21, 2023

With autumn in sight, I’m eager to share another fun story:

The third book in the series, this one is dedicated to my cousin Margie (“Pea-Wea”) who fondly recalls Dad’s yarns and joins me on adventures of our own, making me laugh every step of the way (note above photo, circa 1976). I’m grateful for friends like her who offer encouragement while keeping it real, and also help me recall the details so that we can reminisce long after.

The drawings of Brown’s farm were inspired by Margie’s childhood home in Waterville, Maine, where we played all kinds of rambunctious games with her siblings, Andy and Beth. I appreciate how their parents, Uncle Bill and Ainty Joano, kept the doors open and the treats hidden… where we could easily find ’em!

Book Three merges these recollections with adult memories of R’s Farm of Mequon, Wisconsin, where my spouse and I took our own kids, year after year, for fun fall outings. I’m thankful, too, for the examples set by our bunnies, Mocha and Cocoa, who showed us how rabbits do what they do, and by our dogs, Bubby, Daisy and Yaz, who alerted us to visitors when the kids were young.

Here’s to the beauty of the upcoming season—can’t you just smell the warm apple pie?

PS: Click on the book to find it online, or go to your local bookstore and ask for it there. Enjoy!

Having fun, Laughing out loud, Learning as we go, Practicing faith, Speaking up, Uncategorized Gratitude, Keep it simple, Life after death, One day at a time, Parenting terry@thejoyofcaring.com Leave a Comment

Launching Lala, and me

October 16, 2022

Yesterday was three years since Mom died. It’s been a nostalgic month, with Dad and Grammy’s birthdays to start, followed by Mother Nature’s plentiful reminders of Mom’s last stretch—bright sun, pounding surf, brisk winds, and yellow leaves, every where I turn.

To Dad’s “when my number’s up, fill my dinghy up with gin and push me out to sea” came Mom’s “living is for living” which meant a reluctance to push off when there was still fun to be had, as evidenced by the friendships she formed with every caregiver who came through our door.

While Dad died true to form, so did Mom, who moved on, me and the animals at her side, the sun just breaking the horizon, reminiscent of this excerpt from Katherine Tynan Hinkson’s Shades Are Up, a poem Mom had chosen to share at her funeral:

Some morning I shall rise from sleep,

When all the house is still and dark.

I shall steal down and find my ship

By the dim quayside, and embark…

As I work this month with publishing consultant Lindy, finishing the last details of my caregiving story, it’s been hard to finalize, to let go, for fear of making a mistake, choosing the wrong words, misrepresenting, over-stepping. I’m sure the timing is no coincidence.

“There are times when we know we should move but we don’t even know how to push our boat out from the shoreline on which we are marooned…Part of our ability to go is to understand what we’re missing…”—David Whyte, September 2022 Series: Crossing the Unknown Sea, Life and Work as a Pilgrimage of Identity, Session 3.

While I’m not quite sure what I’m missing, I am curious where all this time and energy freed up will land me next. I take heart in another excerpt from Shades are Up:

…The winds shall bear me safe and kind…

With love… to lead me by the hand.

This morning, in the early hours, I recall Kristin Neff’s self-compassion practice which ChiME advisor Katie taught me in the days following Mom’s death:

“1. This is a moment of suffering”—I feel stressed about finalizing Living Is for Living, about being so vulnerable.

“2. Suffering is a part of life”—Other people feel stressed too, on the verge of putting themselves out there in what feel like big ways.

I lay my hands on my heart.

“3. May I be kind to myself”—I love and accept myself unconditionally. I’ve got this.

(Dr. Kristin Neff, Co-Founder of the Center for Mindful Self-Compassion, https://self-compassion.org/exercise-2-self-compassion-break/).

It’s time to shove off. Let’s do this.

Learning as we go, Letting go, Practicing faith, Uncategorized Alzheimer's Disease, Caregiving, Gratitude, Keep it simple terry@thejoyofcaring.com 5 Comments

Next Steps…

September 3, 2022

As I work with publishing consultant Lindy on laying out Living Is for Living, I launch Walk With Me, LLC. I share this endeavor here, for anyone who’s interested in what’s next for me. I’m so grateful to all of you who continue to encourage and support me each step of the way.

Uncategorized terry@thejoyofcaring.com 1 Comment

On choosing a book cover: Covering, Uncovering, Recovering Grief

August 12, 2022

Speaking of Courage!

By now, I get that grief is predictably unpredictable. So why am I still surprised by the way it surprises me?

Last week, when my publishing consultant, Lindy, sent me four possible book covers, I went from elation to tears, within moments. Seeing those covers evoked an avalanche of emotion, followed by a tizzy of activity as I jumped into tweaking (not twerking!) mode.

I’m thankful that Lindy made time for me, in the midst of a busy Friday afternoon. Upcoming jury duty was cramping my style, as was missing Mom, and Lindy delivered. When I saw the new options, the very next day, I felt confused, bereft, a little embarrassed. She’d made the changes I’d requested and, while they perfectly captured the journaling I’d done, something was missing.

What if I added more words, I wondered, to explain what I meant by Living Is for Living, Mom’s words I’d scribbled down and heeded in her care. Lindy worked her magic and sent another set of covers, pronto. Nope, I realized, it wasn’t more words that were needed, it was something else.

Daughter, cousin and spouse conversations ensued. They helped me clarify: this book called for a more elegant, finished presentation, like Mom, who liked squared corners and straight lines. Which reminded me of the comfort I felt as a kid, seeing her dressed for work—professional, confident, and approachable too. Who knew a font could capture all that?

Which brought me back around to one of the original covers… Lindy’s no dummy : )

Walking the dogs in the midst of this, the cat lurking near, I realized that grief, mine at least, resembles our feisty pack: fragile and resilient, loyal and gritty, devoted and needy, watchful and fluffy, playful and unapologetic, enduring and sweet, ferocious and funny, too. Much of the time they surround me peacefully, keeping me patient company. Then they get all riled up and make lots of noise, the knock on the door real or not. I’ve finally learned that, if I thank them for keeping me safe, they quiet down a lot more quickly than when I start barking too.

While the care of this pack asks much of me, as does feeling my grief, it brings me endless love and connection, and it gets me to laugh and to walk, which never fail to lift my eyes and my spirits.

I see today that this process of choosing a cover for my book is another opportunity to uncover where I stand, almost three years out, in caring for Mom: more than ever, I want to do her justice. Choosing a cover is also another opportunity to recover—to feel what I feel, to reach for support, to choose my path forward, and to keep on walking, like Mom would do.  

Photo, wording, style, and font selected, now I just gotta choose a background color. No need to rush, I’m right where I need to be.

Uncategorized terry@thejoyofcaring.com 5 Comments

Submitted: Living Is for Living, a Caregiver’s Story

August 1, 2022

Yesterday, I submitted the final manuscript for a book based on my experience caring for Mom and a whole lot more. Much of it comes from the blogging I did here, which helped me to keep my wits while staying the course. I’ve reworked this site to complement that effort. It feels like a huge step, wrapping it all up and letting it fly. I’m grateful to all who kept me company in Mom’s care and who’ve inspired me since. I hope that, in its sharing, this story will help others, like its telling has helped me: to laugh, to vent, to care, to grieve, to process, to let go, to heal, to live on.

Uncategorized terry@thejoyofcaring.com 8 Comments

Mom at 87

July 19, 2019

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This one’s for you Mom

June 15, 2019

Mom, #4, circa 1952, playing college hoops and later
recognized as a scholar-athlete for playing four sports!

Stepping away from caregiving to fly to the 2019 Senior National Basketball Games in New Mexico wasn’t easy. It helped to know that, if she could, Mom would be cheering us on.

—excerpt from Living Is for Living: A Caregiver’s Story

Having fun, Learning as we go, Maintaining balance, Taking care of self, Uncategorized terry@thejoyofcaring.com 6 Comments

Step Eleven, I Am Not Alone

November 1, 2017

AA’s Step Eleven: “Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with our Higher Power, praying only for knowledge of our Higher Power’s will for us and the power to carry that out.” When I’m feeling anxious and need a hand to hold, I can hold my own. Then I’ll find my hands are joined in prayer, and I am not alone. (Al-Anon’s Twelve Steps & Twelve Traditions)

—excerpt from Living Is for Living: A Caregiver’s Story

Practicing faith, Uncategorized Acting as if, Alzheimer's Disease, Caregiving, Eldercare, Gratitude, Keep it simple, Marriage, One day at a time, Parenting, Step 11 terry@thejoyofcaring.com Leave a Comment

Why Blog?

March 9, 2017

As we cared for 84-year-old Mom, diagnosed a year earlier with Alzheimer’s disease, I realized what a gift to her and to us were the scrapbooks she’d kept and the memoirs she’d penned. I wanted to create my own version of this for us and our kids. I hoped to turn all the writing I’d done into something that could help others, too. In a world where others weren’t afraid to speak up, I hoped to add a voice of hope.

—excerpt from Living Is for Living: A Caregiver’s Story

Uncategorized terry@thejoyofcaring.com Leave a Comment

I am Acadia Manset's granddaughter. Raised in Maine, graduated from Dartmouth College and Harvard Law, I have spent the last 24 years parenting. With our adult kids in the process of leaving the nest, my mom has moved in, leading to precious time and daily opportunities I never anticipated. I hope that this site will inspire insight and growth, humor and fun, questions and answers, for you and for me.

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Top Posts & Pages

  • A Mom's Love, unlimited
  • Newest Release...
  • Upcoming Book Release: A Seal Named Sunshine
  • The Wrap: Douglas the Rabbit's Winter Holiday Surprise
  • Seeing What Is Right in front of Us
  • A Giant Lesson in Mindfulness
  • 1, 2, 3...ready or not, here we come: Douglas the Rabbit's Fall Field Trip
  • Up next, just in time for Mom's birthday: Douglas the Rabbit Makes Some Friends
  • Introducing my next adventure: The Original Douglas the Rabbit Story
  • Living Is for Living: A Caregiver's Story is launched!

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Raised in Maine, I had spent the prior 24 years parenting, mostly in Wisconsin. With our adult kids in the process of leaving the nest, my mom moved in, from Maine, leading to precious time and daily opportunities I had never anticipated. I launched this site in 2017 as a way to share that experience, hoping to pass along what I was learning about Alzheimer's disease, to process the challenging parts, and to have some fun too. I never anticipated the way the community of readers would fuel me in staying the course. Today, I am deeply grateful for that, and so much more.

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