Ask Amy: A depressed parent worries a depressed child
Dear Amy: My 83 year old widowed mother is depressed and I don’t know how to help.
He refuses to see a doctor and sees drugs as a way to protect himself. She has always been a private person, generally distrusts doctors, and will never leave her shields to a stranger.
I told him that I’m not a doctor, but recently he started telling me things that even when I’m older I shouldn’t have heard.
Depression runs in the family. I’ve seen a doctor in the past and am on medication, so I understand and sympathize, but it’s getting to the point where I’m afraid to see him, yet I know I’m the only one who can save him.
How can I help him?
— Anxiety
Dear Worried: Sometimes people begin to reveal a long-term or suppressed trauma very late in life, when – for various reasons (medical, emotional, and cognitive) – their defenses are lowered. Studies of WWII survivors have shown that the strong and stoic “Greatest Generation” had nightmares, flashbacks and depression late in life.
He cites one study: “In older people, early symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) may not appear, but major depression can I was born out of rehashed memories of traumatic experiences.”
Therapy helps. Medicine helps. However, many elders are opposed to the idea of therapy in the same way that your mother is.
My first suggestion is that you should resume your treatment (or telehealth) immediately, in order to deal with this burden, which is your cause.
I encourage you to find healthy ways to open up and be present to your mother, while resisting the temptation to try to provide answers or your own form of therapy for her.
Being with him now is a special and challenging type of witnessing. You caress his hand. You say, “Mom, I’m so sorry. I am very sorry.” You stay quiet, and if you can, stay quiet during that time with him, let him talk.
I wonder if you might be able to encourage your mother into therapy by asking her if she would consider doing this “for” or with you.
A skilled and competent professional helps their clients to change from being a stranger – to a loyal and helpful friend.
Dear Amy: I got married (at the age of 30) to a man who had two children.
The girl is seven years old, the boy is two years old.
We were together for 16 years before we divorced, and although I have a close relationship with my first sister who is now 53, I have never had a successful relationship. and son.
Now, 30 years after I divorced her father, I received an invitation to attend her daughter’s high school graduation.
I am scared and not sure how to respond to this action.
I do not know this young woman and I have never been included in their lives.
Should I send a nice card?
— On the Fence
Dear Fence: Yes, just send a nice card. There is never a problem with sending a good card.
In the far corners of your universe, someone, somewhere, suggested that this young woman reach out to you to invite you to her graduation party.
The graduate’s aunt (the first girl who lived next to him) may have encouraged his brother and daughter to make efforts to know a little.
Some people may accuse this girl of “wearing gifts,” but my theory is that a high school graduation party is usually the first party that young people have the right to be invited to including circle than their closest friends – and they tend to abandon. the net is wide and sometimes vague.
Dear Amy: The “Bride of a Distressed Future” had no men in her life to lead her down the path and her mother didn’t want to do it either.
My nephew just got married. It was an older bride getting married for the second time and I was happy to see their procession. She went in alone, slowly descending looking at her groom who was waiting for her at the halfway point. When they were there they held each other’s hands and went forward together.
I thought about the symbolism of their entrance: two people, one, meet in the middle, and walk the rest of the way together. Sounds like the definition of marriage, doesn’t it?
— Witness to the Wedding
Dear witness: This is good. I hope it will continue.
(You can email Amy Dickinson at askamy@amydickinson.com or send a letter to Ask Amy, PO Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068. You can also follow her on Twitter. @askingamy or Facebook.)
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