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Eldercare
Reply to "Expecting a different life at this age, so help with a reset:"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]PP, people are just trying to problem solve, which is what people do, when I think what you are looking for is just some empathy/sense of shared experiences. I think you're thinking about this the right way, which is that it is a loss that you need to grieve. So, do that. There are books on how to deal with this type of grief -- not the loss of a loved one, but the loss of some expected life path. Find those books. Maybe see a therapist for awhile to help you sort through the emotions. I'm not at your life stage yet, but I think I would feel similarly to you if I ended up in this situation.[/quote] I think what the OP feels sad about is that she did everything 'right' by making family the center of her world and her children also got to interact with their cousins etc. But she seems to have no understanding of the structural reasons as to why things are the way they are. It sounds like she's never had a career so of course she was able to be so family-oriented. Now it's 2021, and people have broader definitions of family and I wouldnt be surprised if her kids prefer to spend Thanksgiving with friends than schlep all the way back to the OP's. There is more to life than having children and OP needs to get that in her head.[/quote] Ah, alright.... (pause for eye roll) I had an all-encompassing, fairly intense career, and I "accidentally" started a new one without even trying to in these last 4 years. It appears that a new one is sprouting, also without full intention. I also managed a ton of other things while I had a career and kids, and continue to do them. I still put family first and if I could do it all again, I would still make the same choice. It was the best thing ever. Yes, I had it all, and did it all. Still, I am here to inform you that there is nothing worth more than people- family, and friends who become family, and people who will become friends, who then become family. Nothing. Not money, not stuff, not houses and trips, not anything. **Ok, dogs- dogs are definitely also worth it. And my kids do "schlep" home for Thanksgiving, thank you! They schlep home for other things, and we schlep there. I'm sorry, but I disagree with you about there being more to life than that. You might not have experienced it and, if so, it might be a good thing that you don't know what you missed. I know what I am exactly missing and, well,.... I miss it. Ok, thanks everyone. I'm ending it here. I've decided to engage interactively with some Viktor Frankl literature, namely Man's Search for Meaning and then I will report back what I have learned. Or did. Or whatever happens. [/quote] OP, as you probably already know, the Cliff Notes version of Frankl's work will fundamentally identify the big three as: making a difference in the world having particular experiences adopting particular attitude "Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of human freedoms - to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way." This is coming from a guy who was in a concentration camp, remember? A suggestion - honestly look at the defensiveness which has crept into your responses. [/quote]
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