HELP LINE: How you offer help affects how it’s accepted

SOMETIMES, FOR REASONS known only to the Keeper of Reasons, I seem to get the same question (more or less) from multiple people in multiple places.

When that happens I’m inclined to think that I should probably respond.

The topic that has come up this time around is: How can I get mom to accept help?

Now, it isn’t always phrased quite that way, and it could relate to anyone (Dad, Uncle Albert, Auntie Gin, whomever), but I’m just going to talk about Mom, because I like her.

And the story always differs, as one would expect and hope, but it usually comes down to this: “I love my mom and she isn’t doing well. She needs help at home, and I can’t be there to do it myself, but she flatly refuses any help. How can I get her to accept the help she so obviously needs?”

Well, you can’t, but that doesn’t mean that everything is hopeless.

Stay with me.

Let’s begin by trying a little exercise.

Close your eyes and imagine that you’re doing something you’ve been doing for a million years (laundry, washing the car, vacuuming, sweeping the deck, whatever). Then somebody who is half your age (or less) walks in out of nowhere and says, “You look like you need some help.”

What goes off in your mind?

• “Why? What makes you think so?”

• “What business is it of yours?”

• “Who the heck asked you and who do you think you are?”

• “No! I’m fine, thank you very much!”

And then you start doing whatever you were doing faster.

Why? Well, maybe it’s because you were just made to feel less than: Less than capable, less than competent, less than you used to be, less than the person who thinks you need help … less than.

(I presume that you’ve opened your eyes by now. It’ll make reading a lot easier)

Now, what if you’ve spent a lot of your life raising/nurturing/taking care of this helpful person, who thinks you need help? (“You are going to ‘help’ me?”)

Or that you’ve at least had a hand in that upbringing, known this person most/all of their life and were making your way in the world when she/he was trying to eat chair legs:

You are going to ‘help’ me?”

How do you feel, besides angry? Right: Less than.

Now, there could be (and probably are) other things going on here such as:

• “If I need help, then I must be old, which means I’m close to dying, which is not something I want to be forced to think about”

• Or, “I don’t want you to have to help me because I want you to be able to have your own life.”

• Or, “I can’t afford ‘help,’ unless you are offering to do it for free …”

• And/or, “… besides, you wouldn’t do ‘it’ right, anyway.”

Or, or, or.

And I don’t want to be dependent.

I don’t want to be less than. Who would?

I know: This is exhausting, isn’t it? Give yourself a minute.

Better? I get it. Me, too.

OK, let’s re-read the statement: “You look like you need some help.”

Now, consider this: “Hey, you want a hand with that?”

Feels different, doesn’t it?

The first is “less than,” the second is a friendly/neighborly caring offer that could be accepted or deflected, depending, but everybody walks away OK, regardless of the outcome.

And life goes on.

I thought I could do this whole thing in one column. Of course, I also think that I can clean up all the leaves in one day, until I try it. (Maybe I need help?)

So we’ll pick this up next week.

For now, just remember this: Where there’s dignity, there’s hope.

Be hopeful.

________

Mark Harvey is director of Clallam/Jefferson Senior Information & Assistance, which operates through the Olympic Area Agency on Aging. He is also a member of the Community Advocates for Rural Elders partnership. He can be reached at 360-452-3221 (Port Angeles-Sequim), 360-385-2552 (Jefferson County) or 360-374-9496 (West End), or by emailing harvemb@dshs.wa.gov.

More in Life

Author John Vaillant stands in front of the iconic tower at Port Angeles City Pier. (Elijah Sussman/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Author visits Peninsula for Writer in Residence program

Vaillant awarded Shaughnessy Cohen Prize

A GROWING CONCERN: Volunteers a dream for playground

YOU, MY LOYAL readers, have been excellent the couple of times I… Continue reading

Unity in Port Townsend planning for Sunday services

Joanna Gabriel will present the lesson at 11 a.m.… Continue reading

The Rev. Cindy Akana
Program scheduled for OUUF on Sunday

The Rev. Cindy Akana will present “Mother Wolf, Mother… Continue reading

Unity speaker slated in Port Angeles

Terry Barrett will present “What Would Your Mother Say?”… Continue reading

ISSUES OF FAITH: Mothers: The foundations of faith

PRESIDENT THEODORE ROOSEVELT said, “Comparison is the thief of joy.” For some,… Continue reading

Senior center to host information fair

The Port Angeles Senior Center will host an Information… Continue reading

Rotary meeting for Wednesday at new venue

Wendy Bart will address the Port Angeles Noon Rotary… Continue reading

Volunteers from the Michael Trebert Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution prepare in October 2023 to clean the stone for a World War I monument in Carlsborg. The group looks to restore the stone this year. Pictured, from left, are Wanda Bean, Judy Nordstrom, Ginny Wagner, Mona Kinder, Darlene Cook, Kristine Konopaski, Pam Grider, Sharlyn Tompkins and Amira-Lee Salavati. Participants not pictured include Judy Tordini and Lindsey Christianson. (Michael Trebert Chapter/Daughters of the American Revolution)
Organization seeks soldiers’ names for WWI monument

A monument was placed in front of a public school… Continue reading

MyChart tutorial offered Tuesday in hybrid classroom

Rachel Barbieto and Cindy Koch will present “How to… Continue reading

the Hand-Book Almanac of the Pacific States
BACK WHEN: A guidebook to a Peninsula of days gone past

LET’S BEGIN WITH a Jeopardy question. “This book is filled with trivial… Continue reading

A GROWING CONCERN: When April showers bring May problems

WE’VE ALL HEARD the saying “April showers bring May flowers.” The problem… Continue reading