Wednesday 29 July 2015

Barcelona

Earlier this year, I visited Barcelona for a few days. It turns out that I am not a fan of tourist spots. Who knew.

My top 5 things:

  1. The beaches. Reminding me of Cape Town. Just don't buy a cocktail from the guy with the cooler box - the Americans next to us fell for that one!
  2. Wandering along the back roads of La Rambla. So much to see and hear.
  3. Tapas and Sangria at out of the way, vibey spots.
  4. The very generous servings, whether it is a goldfish bowl of beer, or a tumbler full of whisky...
  5. Street music. Around every corner. A constant party.
Goldfish bowl of beer

Walking on the beach at night

Health juice. Nah, who am I kidding? Best sangrias!

... and some tapas to help them down.

As close to a tourist spot as I got. The rows of buses sent me packing.

Weird architecture of a different sort. Fairground attraction.

This was a good sangria spot on the beach

Reminding me of Cape Town...

Spectacular

... and imaginative

Who thinks these up?

Almost too pretty to eat

... but plenty to go around....

.... and such variety!

Tuesday 28 July 2015

Love and the live-in carer

Love and the live-in carer. Possible?

Where would we find the time, energy, inclination, for a relationship of any sort? Where would we even find a possible candidate? Yes, some carers are married, some have left their husbands back in South Africa, Spain, New Zealand, oh and there's a wife back in Cape Town bringing up the young son while her hubby cares for six months at a time here in the UK.

But for the rest of us, many of whom are doing this work to escape (or recover from) a life of relative difficulty back home, is there room for love? Are any of us even looking? Or are we just trying to get through each assignment unscathed, so that we can enjoy the short holiday at the end of the shift, rather than hiding in a hole trying to recover from another death/stroke/cancer victim's pain?

If a carer who yearns to travel craves spontaneity, adventure, new places, and is prepared to give up everything she knows to make these travels possible, surely, surely, she can see love as an adventure too? Face it head on? Grab a moment?

Allow me to tell you a story about love in the life of this live-in carer. Yes, we will call it love. Because suddenly life feels too short to be holding back. To be hiding behind barriers. To be playing it safe.

It is possible. And the difference is, it doesn't need to last forever; it can be a moment in time. Just long enough to remind me that there are good, decent men out there. And allow me to embrace the feeling of safety, of being cared for, of being valued and admired. Someone who can balance out the rollercoaster ride of palliative care, death, suffering, bereavement, picking up the pieces of a lost spouse left behind.

As for where, well how about a chance encounter at a coffee shop on a rainy day? It could happen anywhere. It's what we do with these connections that can change our lives. This time, it was a case of realising that as this lifestyle does not often allow for meeting new people, when there is an offer of a connection, we should take it.

Let's say that we will be separated by 5,500 miles for a full year after what adds up to, over a length of time, just ten nights together. Ten incredible nights, filled with music, fireworks, thunderstorms, talking as if we've known each other all our lives. A connection that neither of us has felt before. A "secret link that people spend a lifetime looking for" as he puts it. Isn't that worth the lowering of the barriers, the risk of hurt, the pain of a goodbye?

Or would it have been better for us both to walk away that first day?

I am hoping that it was worth it. We say goodbye tomorrow. For the last time. Although we plan to stay in touch. And we have a date set for twelve months time.

I am dreading the goodbye, but am so grateful for the time we've had. He has changed my life. Reminded me of who I was before I picked up this anonymous label of "carer". Makes me want to rekindle the person who has been lost and buried during this past year. He has inspired in me the simple (forgotten) art of shopping for pretty clothes and shoes, and I now have the urge to wear them rather than the sensible shapeless practical outfits that get packed and unpacked from the suitcase week after week, month after month. I want to be the real me again. He's helped me to find her.

Says I've made him a better man. That he admires me, I'm his hero. Wouldn't any of us find that flattering?

We will never forget each other. And maybe "love" is too strong a word. Whatever label we put on it, it's been good.

Love or not, whether I miss him hopelessly or not, there is always another holiday to look forward to. More adventures to be had. And one thing I've learnt during this journey? I am no longer frightened of falling in love. However, I may be looking for an alternative line of work.

Your experiences:
What stories do you have on finding love and friends as a live in carer?

Do you find yourself letting yourself go? Not putting as much effort into your appearance as you did in your old life? Do you still wear makeup, even if the only person you will see all day is a 90 year old nearly blind lady? Are you eating and exercising properly?

How do you keep a hold of the person you once were?

I'd love to hear your experiences and share them here.

 I think this is leading to a whole new story....

Monday 27 July 2015

It's the small things

On the one hand, you'll find that live-in carers are strong, independent women.

We are survivors.

We do what it takes to make our lives work for us.







On the other hand, hell it would be good to have a bit of spoiling. Some self-indulgence.

5 things I do to perk up my day:

  1. Read for half an hour on a bench under a tree
  2. Have a real conversation with a good friend, a son, or my Mum
  3. Go for a walk (or some retail therapy if it is raining)
  4. Put on make up if the boiler/alarm/ANY service is due (don't judge me, any visitor to the house is worth the effort!)
  5. Take lots of deep breaths and remind myself that I am doing this for a reason, and nothing is forever.
What do YOU do to make your day just that little bit better?

Saturday 25 July 2015

Carer's survival kit

Good for those days when it all just feels so... so.... well not very good.

Chocolate treat for wellbeing

Allsorts for variety

Health bars to make up for the wellbeing and variety

Headphones for surreptitious listening to music while nobody is looking....

What is your favourite treat?

GUEST POST: Lorraine

Dear Margi,

I went on the Care to Travel Facebook page and noticed your blog. Started to read it and felt most depressed.

I hear your sentiments, understand your frustrations...... Because your voice is my voice.

Selling your house - that was letting go of the one thing you had that belonged to you, a foundation, a root, like a plant; once you pull it out it dies and that is how I feel, dead.

I sympathise, I understand the loneliness. I respect the vulnerable side of the elderly, but does that mean I must die inside to give further life.

The more I think on this the more I realise it's not the job, it's living their life, it's giving of yourself and losing who you are. Where we give hope and enlightenment, we lose who we were once upon a time.

My self identity seems to have got lost in transit

It's finding that happy medium

It's making sure that our lives do not sail away, where one day we awake to find we need a Carer, so in actual fact our life just carries on from where it left off... With a client

In life we have got to learn we were all put on this earth for a reason. We all have a certain time given to us. They have had their time, do we have to throw away ours?

That is how I am starting to look at what I am doing , and right at this moment, I do not believe this was the life carved out for me!

We all need a foundation, we all need roots, we all need to embrace life, and not death that will come one day and maybe sooner than we expect.

Care life can be rewarding but we must not become a prisoner of our own emotions.


Thank you to Lorraine for this response to my "Independent and free, or homeless" post. It does help to know that we all have our ups and downs and doubts about our current way of life.

Friday 24 July 2015

Independent and free, or homeless?

Sometimes, I really miss having a home. Is that a common thing for live in carers? I will be meeting up with some colleagues next week so will ask the question!                                                                                                                        I thought I was going to be free, having fun, the eternal traveller, but it sometimes seems that all I am doing is trying earn enough to take short vacations, and I never make it home. I sold my house back in Cape Town last month. It has just hit me. The finality of it. The place I raised my children, where most of my memories were made.                                                                                                                                So the obvious solution would be to make some more memories. Starting on Wednesday... with two weeks off to play....

Tuesday 21 July 2015

Cambridge. A city of romance, art, history, books...

... and lots and lots of bicycles.

The colleges are impressive 
I made some new friends....

St John's College - I got the guided tour, courtesy of a real "Johnian"

A real feeling of the past


Bridge of Sighs. Look familiar? Think: The Theory of Everything.

Now this bin used to have arms, and a guitar, and it sang...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Db8DpIlgcg

City of romance

... and interesting places

next time!

... and sunsets

A moment to absorb it all



Monday 20 July 2015

“You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with”. Jim Rohn

That said, I spend my time with a 99 year old lady with severe dementia. All of my time.  Constantly. Each shift being three to five weeks long. 

How many people am I the average of now?

From one minute to the next, I don't know what I am going to be met with. Who am I? Her sister? A long lost friend? A stranger?

Where am I?

What story am I walking in to? 

Does she eat porridge today, or does she despise it, as was the case yesterday? Will she take her medicine? Or spit it out? Or politely refuse it, with all the charm and grace of the Queen Mother?

Will she be happy to see me? "Oh, my darling, how lovely of you to visit. Will you be staying long?"
Or will I be in the way? "Stop it! You are always interfering when I need to discipline this boy! Get out!"

How many plates will she break today? Will her tea end up splashed over the wall as she tries to fend off a threatening stranger (or the little boy who teases her?)

When she calls for her mother, is it because they are rushing to catch the midnight train? Or looking for her sister? Or is she simply wanting to die?

Will she allow the assisting carer in today? Or will she send her packing, with a "and don't you come back here, you are not wanted!"? Leaving me with a bedridden old lady to spend the night in tea-stained pyjamas and a wet diaper? And the fourteen hours of complaints that will follow before the next carer arrives, at 8am the following day?

Why do I do this? Who is it helping? Does the old lady even know that she is in her own home? "I just want to go home to my dog and my mother" is the plaintive cry I hear at least once a day.

Is it helping her family? Who visit once a month for two days, work permitting? Do they feel less guilty for leaving her, knowing that she is at home with a live in carer, and not in an institution? 

I wish I knew the answers.

What I do know is this. As I opened her curtains this morning, she reached her arms out to me, told me how much she loves me, wishes we could spend just one more night together as if I was a soon-to-be-gone lover, and my heart broke. With love for this poor old lady who retains all the vibrancy of youth. With sadness, knowing that one morning she will not wake up. With despair, because I don't know if I can carry on with this lifestyle for much longer. But for as long as I can, I will strive to make her last days, months, years at this rate, as good as I can for her.