Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those that were able to do it, how many people were involved? I guess I could see it if the patient had 12 kids, and each kid is married, and at least some of them have adult children...so you have a rotation of 30-40 people. But I really don't see how it's possible with most families that only have a few kids, and those kids have young children, etc.
When my mom was in the hospital, it was my dad, my (adult) brother and me at age 21. When my dad was in the hospital it was just my mom and me at age 27. Medical emergencies ARE inconvenient and yes, I used up all my vacation time taking a shift in the hospital each day for the two weeks my mom was in the hospital. I didn't mind, and never brought it up. Yes, it was outrageously inconvenient, and yes everyone (including spouses and children at home) had to sacrifice. But this is what we do in our family.
Two weeks. As a pp pointed out, for many elderly this can go on for 5+ years!
And you had vacation time. You were 21--a lot of 21 year olds are in college. Would you have dropped out for the semester (or the next 5 years) if you had been in college at the time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those that were able to do it, how many people were involved? I guess I could see it if the patient had 12 kids, and each kid is married, and at least some of them have adult children...so you have a rotation of 30-40 people. But I really don't see how it's possible with most families that only have a few kids, and those kids have young children, etc.
When my mom was in the hospital, it was my dad, my (adult) brother and me at age 21. When my dad was in the hospital it was just my mom and me at age 27. Medical emergencies ARE inconvenient and yes, I used up all my vacation time taking a shift in the hospital each day for the two weeks my mom was in the hospital. I didn't mind, and never brought it up. Yes, it was outrageously inconvenient, and yes everyone (including spouses and children at home) had to sacrifice. But this is what we do in our family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only thing that matters is whether your husband wants to do this. If he does, then you should support him. Perhaps this is not the best year to host thanksgiving and out of town guests. At that age anything can happen during a hospital stay; you just never know. Sorry this is such a difficult time for your family; Best wishes for a smooth recovery.
This. You need to separate out what you really can't do from what you just find inconvenient. Caring for a young child and having the flu are things you can't escape. But it seems frivolous and self centered to be hosting out of town guests and worrying about Thanksgiving when your FIL is in the hospital - and you're not doing all you can to help.
Anonymous wrote:We do this for every family member, taking 8-hour shifts. When my parent had a stroke and was in the ICU for six weeks and then hospice, we never left them alone. Friends helped as well, as they were retired. I used FMLA.
Anonymous wrote:My siblings/spouses took turns staying with my mom 24/7. She needed an advocate. Otherwise, older people get ignored.
Anonymous wrote:The only thing that matters is whether your husband wants to do this. If he does, then you should support him. Perhaps this is not the best year to host thanksgiving and out of town guests. At that age anything can happen during a hospital stay; you just never know. Sorry this is such a difficult time for your family; Best wishes for a smooth recovery.