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'Honor Thy Father' for Grownups <BR>Or, how not to be a deadbeat son or daughter. <BR> <BR><blockquote><hr size=0><!-quote-!><font size=1><b>quote:</b></font><p>... <BR> <BR>The generations handling care for dying parents are facing something their ancestors never did. They're part of smaller and less-stable extended families. They're less likely to live near their parents—sometimes they are thousands of miles away. And the amount of time spent caring for elderly family members can extend from a few tough years to many difficult decades. Even the strongest families will be stretched to the limit when attempting to fulfill the commandment to honor one's parents. So what do you do? <BR> <BR>You take care of your parents. <BR> <BR>It's never been easy. There's a reason the psalmist cries, "Do not cast me away when I am old; do not forsake me when my strength is gone." Old age is almost always a time of physical and mental deterioration, of pain and loss, of fear and loneliness. Watching parents become chronically ill or senile is unbearably painful for their adult children. <BR> <BR>...<!-/quote-!><hr size=0></blockquote> <BR> <BR> <BR>If everyone took care of mom and dad, as a Nursing Home Administrator, I would be out of a job, but is there a difference between taking care of your toodler and you "senile" mom or dad. Since they wiped your backside, do you owe it to them?? or even an aging, stroke ridden spouse??? <BR> <BR>What of our national budget???
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