Lorenzo Gritti |
I went hoarse shouting at my mother last week.
“You really got into your building elevator with someone else?”
She
blamed the other person for standing in the middle of the elevator; I
blamed her for getting in, putting herself at risk of catching the
coronavirus.
By the time my
88-year-old father got to the phone, I remembered the researcher Brené
Brown’s theory that vulnerability opens all doors. I would move my
father by sharing my deepest fear.
I told him I loved him. I said the thought of losing him was devastating. I asked him, “Dad, are you afraid?”
He laughed. “What’s to be afraid of? If I get it, Sayonara!”
Despite the virus’s heightened risk to older people, my parents seem inexplicably casual about it.
And
I’m not alone. From every corner of our new virtual community, in Zoom
cocktail hours, Google hangouts and private message boards, I’ve been
hearing from fellow members of the sandwich generation fighting to
persuade older loved ones to protect themselves from a potential death
sentence from Covid-19.
“My mother’s still going to the market and post office, even though she
has an aide,’” said Claire Muirhead, a writer from Los Angeles who
recently recovered from Covid-19. “She’s 90. She knows how sick I was,
and still, there’s no stopping her. I’m beside myself.”
We have good reason to worry. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, eight out of 10 deaths reported in the United States have been in adults 65 years old and older.
“We can’t pretend this is not life or death,” said Tara Brach, a psychologist and author of “Radical Acceptance.” “This is the real thing. These are beings we love, and we’re scared we’re going to lose them.”
For some adult children, this means grappling with the anguish of not being able to see parents quarantined in nursing homes.
For
those whose parents live independently, it is often a challenge to get
our older loved ones to take the risks as seriously as we do. I caught
my father-in-law, a radiologist, on his way out to play cards with
friends in Boca Raton, Fla., one day before Florida issued its
stay-at-home order.
“Just because
they’re friends doesn’t mean they don’t have the virus,” I told him. He
laughed and said, “We appreciate your concern.” And then he left for his
game.
It turns out, according to experts, my approach was doomed to fail.
“If
you go in with anxiety and with the very innocent and loving intention
to control, every human being on earth will push back against that,”
said the sociologist Martha Beck. “There’s something about being
self-determined that is fundamental to being human.”
Also
at play is a high-stakes role reversal in the parent-child
relationship. “Earlier in your life, you were on the other side of this
fighting-for-autonomy battle,” said David Fish, a therapist specializing
in dialectical behavioral therapy. “Now aging parents are the ones
struggling with limitations to their freedom and with others telling
them what to do.”
The Age Positivity Effect
Part
of the problem, according to Claudia Haase, a psychologist and the
director of the Life-Span Development Lab at Northwestern University, is
that older adults may not experience the same level of threat as
younger people do.
“A massive body of
scientific work has documented age-related shifts in the service of
making negative emotions smaller and positive emotions bigger,” Dr.
Haase says. “Older adults are often masters in turning their attention
away from information that is threatening, upsetting and negative.”
The priority of
older adults, Dr. Haase explains, is to make the most of their limited
time on earth, and their highest value is social connection. “For them,
being home alone with just their thoughts and nowhere to go can be a
frightening place.”
And then there’s the fact that older adults may not see themselves as, well, old. “Older adults may not think of themselves as being at heightened risk for Covid-19 because old age carries a lot of stigma. There’s a huge reluctance to view oneself in those terms.”
How to Be Heard
So how do you explain your concerns to older relatives?
Dr.
Brach believes it begins with self-understanding. “When you talk to
them, ask yourself, what’s going on for you? Once you start to name
what’s going on underneath under all the agitation, you get to your
anticipatory grief: You don’t want to lose them.”
Dr.
Beck recommends a simple, practical approach for coping, and managing
anxiety, when older relatives don’t see the risks the way you do. “The
idea is, you want to invert that — you have to manage your own anxiety
first.”
She suggested being direct,
providing solid reasoning and being clear about the consequences. “You
tell them why you’re worried, and why you want them to do this thing,”
she said. “It has to be rational. It can’t just be because ‘I know
better and I say so.’”
And you may
have to acknowledge the worst-case scenario. “So it might be like, ‘Mom,
you’re living in Florida, and you’re going to the beach. I cannot stop
you. But if you get sick, I can’t come see you. And if you die, you may
die alone, and I won’t be there.’ This may sound harsh, but it’s true.
Let them sit with the real possibility of what may happen.”
Radical Acceptance
When all else fails, Dr. Brach espouses the art and power of radical acceptance, both for our loved ones and ourselves.
“There has to be a letting go, because
ultimately, you cannot control them,” she said. “They’re responsible for
their living and dying.”
Once we
understand that, Dr. Brach said, “You say to yourself, ‘I am afraid. I
am helpless. I am feeling the grief of what could happen.’ And this is
where the real pain is. You put your hand on your heart and offer
compassion to the place in yourself that is helpless and fears the
loss.”
The act of physically putting
your hand on your heart is vital, Dr. Brach said, to coming to peace.
“There’s a network of neurons in the heart area. When there’s warmth and
pressure on it, it actually calms the sympathetic nervous system and
reduces the fear centers in the brain.”
And what about those anxious, racing thoughts?
“We
need to remember that just because this feels like it’s a catastrophe
doesn’t necessarily mean that it is,” Mr. Fish said. “What you’re upset
about right now is your imagination. It’s not what’s actually happening.
Our minds are really good at anticipating consequences and making them
very present for us, which is useful, except when it’s not.”
Full Article & Source:
When Older Relatives Shrug at Coronavirus Restrictions
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