As parents, we care for our children until they can fend for themselves. Then one day, the roles are reversed. Our kids become the caretakers.
Perhaps you won’t need assistance in your senior years. You would be one of the lucky ones. The fact is that about 70 percent of people 65 or older will need long-term care services at some point, according to Genworth Financial.
But long before a health crisis forces the issue, you need to talk with your adult children about your later years. The problem is, many people can’t bring themselves to have that talk.
Let me offer some help to get the discussion going. Read the April selection for the Color of Money Book Club — “The Other Talk: A Guide to Talking With Your Adult Children About the Rest of Your Life,” by Tim Prosch.
Prosch, a marketing professional, uses an interesting analogy to get his point across. He equates the long-term-care talk with the conversation some parents dread having: the one about where babies come from.
“There is another equally critical time in your kids’ lives when you need to sit them down to talk about the facts of life — discomfort notwithstanding,” Prosch writes. “This time it’s not about the beginning of life or how babies are made. It’s about the end of life — yours — and the many issues and decisions that will confront you and your children.”
The same reasons you may have stumbled and fumbled trying to talk about the birds and the bees is why you may have trouble talking about your aging and the limitations you might encounter, says Prosch:
The Pew Research Center found that 47 percent of adults say it is likely that they will be responsible for caring for an aging parent or another elderly family member. Many books on the subject focus on what adult children can do to handle the situation. But Prosch wants you to be proactive about talking with your adult children while you’re still physically and mentally able to lead the conversation.
Prosch says you need, at a minimum, to discuss the following:
“I have learned, through my research, that the primary reason that the elderly begin to actively resist turning over responsibility and decision-making to their offspring is their escalating fear of becoming powerless; becoming a burden on the family, physically and financially,” Prosch writes.
You won’t find all the answers in “The Other Talk,” but it will be useful in framing the conversation that you need to stop avoiding or putting off for another day.
For information on how to bring Michelle Singletary to speak at your next event, visit PremiereSpeakers.com/Michelle_Singletary.
Source: Washington Post