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Friday, December 26, 2008
Linda Chavez :: Townhall.com Columnist
Taking Care of Family
by Linda Chavez
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For the past dozen years, my family has been constantly growing until we now number 15. But this year's addition isn't a new daughter-in-law or grandchild. At 87, my mother has finally come to live with me. It wasn't an easy move for her. And the timing, at the beginning of November, meant integrating her into daily life during the holidays, when most families experience additional stress as well as the joys of the season.

Since my father was killed in an automobile accident in 1978, my mother has lived on her own in a small apartment next to her sister-in-law in Albuquerque. My dad's family has treated her as one of their own for 30 years. When she could no longer drive because her eyesight was failing, my Aunt Elsie and Cousin Margaret drove her to buy groceries each week. And they included her in all family celebrations when she could no longer travel east to be with us on Thanksgiving or Christmas.

My mother's life has never been an easy one. She was nearly killed in a devastating car crash that broke her back and shoulder and left her with a hole in her skull and pins holding her ankle together. Three of her children have died: my younger sister of kidney disease when she was just 6 years old, my older half-brother in a car accident when he was barely 15, and another half-brother in his 50s. She has survived the loneliness of widowhood and the pain of breast cancer. Yet, despite tragedies that would have left others in despair, she has remained resilient and optimistic.

As independent as she has been, however, I've always known that one day she would live with me. I couldn't imagine shunting her off to live with strangers, even though I know this has become far more socially acceptable today than in the past when adult children assumed the responsibility of caring for their aged parents. But even as she began to lose her vision from macular degeneration and became frail with the aches of old age, she's resisted making the final move.

Finally I quit asking and told her it was time. My aunt was 87 and couldn't be expected to chauffeur my mother around much longer -- and even my cousin was now in retirement, with her own health problems. And I worried that if I waited until my mother's eyesight was completely gone or until she was too sick to care for herself, the move would be even harder on her. Continued...

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About The Author

Linda Chavez is chairman of the Center for Equal Opportunity and author of Betrayal: How Union Bosses Shake Down Their Members and Corrupt American Politics .

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Your helping hand......
You said; "she has remained resilient and optimistic.".....and for being just that ....she got to live such a long life. I hope the rest of us will be that lucky. Not that her life was one of all luck.....just that the rest of ours will require a lot of that. I refer to all the terrorist and the new "regrime" (as they so often called the Bush Admin.) now "leading" in Washington. Their first steps are to dismantle the very structure that kept us all safe these last 7+ yrs.. I am glad you are there for your Mom. Ours is almost 84 and is still living on her own. She worries about our futures after she is gone. She thinks we need to have a plan for the when a national disaster happens. How we will contact each other, where to meet up, how we can combine our supplies and keeping the cars full of gas at all times? Our Mom's have lived a long time, long enough to know.....danger is near and we need to rely on ourselves to survive it. I hope the closing yrs. of your Mom's life are going to better, comforted by living with you. Make the most of them.She is blessed. Linda

Thank You
I appreciate your honest and sincere example of doing the right thing for your mother. I recently read a similar example of family taking care of an elderly mother in Seeing the Everyday magazine(www.seeingtheeveryday.com). I was grateful then as I am now to hear an example of someone remembering the sacrifice of parents and doing something in return. Thank you Linda for your life example showing that "Taking care of each other is what family is all about."
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