The Joy of Caring

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

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A Giant Lesson in Mindfulness

September 3, 2023

While friends welcome grandkids, we welcome grandpets. The spirited beagle and her three-legged feline sidekick have moved south, so this post is dedicated to Tula who turns three today.

A novice when it came to caring for giant breeds, I needed help coaching Tula’s Great Pyrenees instinct to scare off intruders like the pizza guy and UPS.

“If we consider a dog’s reactivity on a scale of zero to ten, the sooner we offer distraction from stressors, the more effective the intervention will be,” said Starla, the dog trainer, on day one. In other words, if we redirect Tula when she’s at level two arousal, we’re going to be a lot more successful than waiting ‘til she’s at seven, when gentle snowflake has become howling blizzard.

Sent home with the assignment to practice sit and heel and redirect attention at the first sign of reactivity, we set to work. Empowered with the tools of awareness and consistency, I was eager to take Tula on neighborhood strolls that were more intentional, less intense.

To this day, a year later, walks with Tula remind me of how I respond to my own rising stress: to her puffs I compare my held breath, to her stiff posture my clenched jaw, to her upright tail my hunched shoulders, to her low growls my deep sighs. So focused on what’s going on around me, I sometimes miss what’s happening inside me. It can take a cold sore on my face to remind me to shift focus. Like Tula, I benefit from noticing the initial signals so that I can redirect my energy before the stress boils over in unnecessary, ineffective, and even self-destructive ways.

In the midst of that first training session, I’d been incorporating mindfulness into my work.

“Mindfulness training involves the practice of bringing one’s attention to the present moment, to what we are doing and what we are feeling, without judgement…via simple exercises of breathing, body scanning, gratitude, and kindness towards oneself and others. The emerging data are promising, showing that children who participate in mindfulness programs show less anxiety, greater concentration and memory skills, and handle difficult emotions better.”—Johanna Calderon, PhD, Harvard Medical School, “Executive function in children: Why it matters and how to help,” (December 16, 2020). 

As academic coach, noting the signs of a student’s stress and offering useful coping strategies are key; helping students to recognize the signs and use the strategies on their own, like the dog trainer did for me, can be life-changing. This means slowing the learning process down: checking in to see what’s up, naming the place the student may be getting stuck, stepping outside (literally and figuratively) for a breath of fresh air, offering company and encouragement, and doing my best to bring lightness and fun while also keeping it real, each step of the way (for a great coping strategy, see Dr. Kristin Neff’s Self-Compassion Break).

Recently, while getting to know a new student, I recognized once again the importance of learning how stress shows itself in others, so that we can offer support in a way that is timely. I don’t mean to suggest that mindfulness is easy. If my walks with Tula teach me anything, it’s that this is not a short-term fix, but a lifetime practice…one that ebbs and flows, and when committed to, can change everything.

There’s no question that Tula has good reason to react the way she does, to internal and external cues. We all do. The question is whether our reactions diminish or improve our quality of life. It helps to have others in our lives who gently and consistently remind us to take care of ourselves, so that we stay on the path and even enjoy the view.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TULA!

Learning as we go, Navigating Concerns, Sacred Practices, Self-Reflection, Taking care of self, Tutoring daily practice, executive function skills, Friendship, mindfulness, Pet Therapy, tutoring terry@thejoyofcaring.com 1 Comment

Grief and Guilt, a year later, and the Magic of Fruit Loops, Pivoting, Barking Dogs, Yellow Leaves and Blue Jays

October 12, 2020

As we returned home from an afternoon hike, Siena spotted another Blue Jay, this one perched in a tree at the top of our street. We looked at each other and smiled, understanding that Mom is still right here, with us. We just need to be available to the moment, the best we can.

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

Accepting help, Having fun, Helping others, Laughing out loud, Learning as we go, Learning from mistakes, Letting go, Maintaining balance, Making peace, Taking care of self #ENDALZ, Alzheimer's Disease, Canine Caregiver, Caregiver burden, Eldercare, Gratitude, Grief, Hospice Care, Life after death, Pet Therapy, Pivoting, Progress not Perfection terry@thejoyofcaring.com 4 Comments

Speaking of pep in her step – Cinnamon’s getting hers back too!

February 14, 2020

I worried when Mom died, we might lose Cinnamon too. Then, somewhere along the way, she reset her sights. It was as if the love we’d given her as a puppy, she gave to Mom during their life together, and all the love Mom gave her during that time, Cinnamon was passing on to us now.

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

Accepting help, Having fun, Helping others, Learning as we go, Letting go, Listening first, Maintaining balance, Making peace, Practicing faith, Taking care of self Alzheimer's Disease, Canine Caregiver, Caregiving, Dementia, Eldercare, In the Moment, Life after death, Pet Therapy, Pets terry@thejoyofcaring.com Leave a Comment

Step Twelve, Whole, Not Hole

December 3, 2017

AA’s Step Twelve: “Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these Steps, we tried to carry this message to others, and to practice these principles in all our affairs.” This meant being present in the moment, right here, right now, maybe not all of the time, however, more and more of the time. (Al-Anon’s Twelve Steps & Twelve Traditions)

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

Practicing faith #ENDALZ, Acting as if, Eldercare, Gratitude, Health first, Marriage, Parenting, Pet Therapy, Step 12 terry@thejoyofcaring.com 2 Comments

The Joy of Not Caring, aka “hypersensitive” me

November 17, 2017

I’ve been called many things by those who are supposed to know me best: 

“hypersensitive”, “too emotional”, even “nuts.”

Sometimes I wonder if I’ll ever get to a place where their words don’t cause me pain.

Probably not…that’s one of the costs of being:

“hypersensitive”, “too emotional”, even “nuts.”

Here are some things I’ve realized, moving back to where I’m from:

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

I don’t need to be loved by everybody, just by some.

I can choose those who accept sensitivity, emotionality and even nuttiness.

I can live with the anger I feel at expectations unmet,

the fear I feel at being judged, and the sadness I feel at being rejected.

I can take care of me, even when it’s difficult –

exercise, hydration, nutrition, sleep, writing, friendship, animals, family, faith –

The healing these bring is within reach.

This is the way to take care of me, not believing what I am told when I am not who others want me to be.

“Hypersensitive”, “too emotional”, even “nuts” – yes!

With these three things, I’ve been blessed.

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

Maintaining balance Detachment, Gratitude, Health first, Marriage, Pet Therapy, Step 11, The Twelve Steps of AA terry@thejoyofcaring.com 2 Comments

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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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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