When Guilt and Resentment Live Side by Side
If you’re a caregiver and feel guilty for being resentful—or resentful for feeling guilty—please know this: You are not broken. […]
If you’re a caregiver and feel guilty for being resentful—or resentful for feeling guilty—please know this: You are not broken. […]
One of the hardest parts of caregiving isn’t the work.It’s the conversations. The ones where expectations quietly creep in.The ones
Yes. Women with dementia can — and do — forget they are married, forget their spouse, or forget the meaning
There are moments in caregiving that feel unspeakable — not because they’re rare, but because they’re deeply uncomfortable. One of
One of the quiet shocks families experience — especially when a loved one enters a nursing home — is this:
Concern doesn’t always arrive with urgency. Sometimes it settles in quietly — a steady awareness that something needs watching, even
There’s a version of caregiving that doesn’t get talked about enough—the kind where you’re being pulled from both sides at
If you are caring for someone you love and feel like you are disappearing in the process, please know this
There’s a question caregivers ask quietly, often with shame: “What do people do when their loved one needs 24-hour care…
Not all rest looks the way it’s supposed to. Sometimes it’s quiet but not refreshing. Sometimes it’s stillness paired with