Treasure your parents. Make time to spend with them. Listen to their concerns. Value what they have to tell you. Provide them with special things that they need-like reading them a book or newspaper. Have no regrets.
Maintain an inter-generational link. Your children should hear stories about their grandparents and great-grandparents. They should experience the food of their ancestors. You should share pictures of your parents and grandparents when they were young. You should discuss how their ancestors arrived in this country.
Record an oral history of your family members and provide it to your children.
Every day, think about a wise saying or direction your parents once gave you that made a difference in your life.
Carry a memento of your parent(s) to keep them close to your heart.
It is important for us to do the best we can while our parents are still alive and to honor them after their passing. I may feel like an orphan but then I remember there was a time when I was a part of a very special family. No one can take my memories away.
I choose to write about my memories in order to help others through the pain of losing their parents and as a result, it will ease my pain.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
For those of you whose parents have passed on or are in ill health
Labels:
caregiving,
dying parent,
losing parent,
memory,
remembrance
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Nice looking blog. I will be back ever so ofen to read your posts, although I don't always comment.
ReplyDeleteI left this comment on twitter too. My dad would have been 100 Tues. I celebrated his life with a balloon release. http://missdazeyballoons.blogspot.com
Yes, treasure your parents, treasure everyone you love because when they're gone they are gone.
ReplyDeleteWhen I hear of someone who is "not talking" to a loved one over some silly incident I always tell them I wish my loved ones were still alive and creating silly incidents.
Look around at your family, your friends and ask yourself "is this silliness really that big a deal?"
Trust me, it isn't.
Thanks so much so stopping by and reading May You Live in Interesting Times - your comment was greatly appreciated.