For Those of You Who Play at Nursing Homes - A Look at Some of Your Audience

TBB

TheBathBird
UU VIP
Joined
Oct 11, 2014
Messages
811
Points
93
This is incredibly sad. Since my dad died last year, leaving my mum on her own after 60 years together, I’ve been thinking a lot about how awful old age can be and how much more difficult it must be for people who don’t have any family to help them out.

Having been diagnosed with cancer in my 40’s I definitely think that growing old beats the alternative (imo living fast and dying young only seems romantic while you’re fairly confident it’s not going to happen to you), but there’s no getting around the fact that old age can be brutal.
 
OP
OP
SweetWaterBlue

SweetWaterBlue

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2009
Messages
2,330
Points
63
This is incredibly sad. Since my dad died last year, leaving my mum on her own after 60 years together, I’ve been thinking a lot about how awful old age can be and how much more difficult it must be for people who don’t have any family to help them out.

Having been diagnosed with cancer in my 40’s I definitely think that growing old beats the alternative (imo living fast and dying young only seems romantic while you’re fairly confident it’s not going to happen to you), but there’s no getting around the fact that old age can be brutal.
Playing at such places can be sad sometimes, but I also feel blessed to be able to do so. I am also thankful that I was able to care for my Dad in his later years, as he did for my Mom.
 

TBB

TheBathBird
UU VIP
Joined
Oct 11, 2014
Messages
811
Points
93
Playing at such places can be sad sometimes, but I also feel blessed to be able to do so.
It’s a lovely thing to be able to do, and must be a real joy for the residents.
I am also thankful that I was able to care for my Dad in his later years, as he did for my Mom.
I agree, I’m so grateful that I’m able to look after mum now, a little payback for all the care my parents have given me all my life.
 

eyedoc

UU VIP
UU VIP
Joined
Dec 28, 2017
Messages
476
Points
43
I routinely play in care-facilities and hospitals, often 2-3 times a month. It is very rewarding for the residents/patients as well as me.
We are sponsored by a grant to do so, which gives us a small honorarium for each performance, (which goes towards gas and music!)
I also get to perform for many residents there that are my patients....though many don't recognize me out of context!
Ron
 

Nickie

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
10,754
Points
113
We don't play in SNFS per se. But I've worked in a few, saddest places I ever saw. We do play in several ALFs. For the most part, they are alert and attentive, some even come up to us and offer to tow our gear to the bandwagon at the end.
I just read the other day where the last year of life is the most expensive. So nice to have that to look forward to. /S
My Mom, age 94, is considering relocating to an ALF. I hope there are some decent entertainers going there for her, she'll still be 1200 miles away. If our band ever breaks up, I'm headed out that way.
 

Voran

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2021
Messages
2,225
Points
113
I don't plan on getting all that old. Enjoying being alive right now, but I refuse to rot in a nursing home. No one is going to be wiping my bottom, preventing me from wandering around remote mountain areas, or telling me I can't drink Red Bull.
 

Nickie

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
10,754
Points
113
I don't plan on getting all that old. Enjoying being alive right now, but I refuse to rot in a nursing home. No one is going to be wiping my bottom, preventing me from wandering around remote mountain areas, or telling me I can't drink Red Bull.
Believe me, 0% of the SNF patients I've cared for chose that path. Most people's families don't want to let go of them when the quality of life goes downhill. Mom is 94 next week, and if she says it's her time to go, I'll believe her.
Americans in particular, are taught that death is bad. i don't think so. Dying, the process of it can be a beeotch, and that's why I became a hospice volunteer, then a hospice nurse.
Compassion and Choices is a non profit group that is trying to get legislation passed in all 50 states to allow Dr assisted suicide. I joined it. All people deserve to die with dignity.
 

Eggs_n_Ham

Well-known member
Joined
May 15, 2021
Messages
649
Points
93
not only are seniors stripped of their hard-earned pension and living 10000 % below poverty level, items brought to residents by family and friends are often stolen by staff. My late friend was in a nursing home rehab and we brought him all sorts of modestly priced clothes and shoes. They were stolen within a couple days.

It's sad and frightening.
 
Last edited:

Voran

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2021
Messages
2,225
Points
113
Believe me, 0% of the SNF patients I've cared for chose that path. Most people's families don't want to let go of them when the quality of life goes downhill. Mom is 94 next week, and if she says it's her time to go, I'll believe her.
Americans in particular, are taught that death is bad. i don't think so. Dying, the process of it can be a beeotch, and that's why I became a hospice volunteer, then a hospice nurse.
Compassion and Choices is a non profit group that is trying to get legislation passed in all 50 states to allow Dr assisted suicide. I joined it. All people deserve to die with dignity.

What can I do to join and help? I'm from Ireland, but I feel strongly about this.
 

captain-janeway

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 8, 2015
Messages
1,277
Points
83
Believe me, 0% of the SNF patients I've cared for chose that path. Most people's families don't want to let go of them when the quality of life goes downhill. Mom is 94 next week, and if she says it's her time to go, I'll believe her.
Americans in particular, are taught that death is bad. i don't think so. Dying, the process of it can be a beeotch, and that's why I became a hospice volunteer, then a hospice nurse.
Compassion and Choices is a non profit group that is trying to get legislation passed in all 50 states to allow Dr assisted suicide. I joined it. All people deserve to die with dignity.
I absolutely agree. I had families who basically flogged their loved ones back to "life." They're bed bound and non communicative . At this point it's about the "loved one." They'll blame it on some religious thing or the fact that they're not ready to let go. They all say they wouldn't want to be in the same position and don't see the contradiction. It's so sad.
Make sure you all have your Durable Power of Attorneys done to list your wishes and make sure family knows. Everyone knows what they want, just get it in writing.
 
Last edited:

Voran

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2021
Messages
2,225
Points
113
I absolutely agree. I had families who basically flogged their loved ones back to "life." They're bed bound and non communicative . At this point it's about the "loved one." They'll blame it on some religious thing or the fact that they're not ready to let go. They all say they wouldn't want to be in the same position and don't see the contradiction. It's so sad.
Make sure you all have your Durable Power of Attorneys done to list your wishes and make sure family knows. Everyone knows what they want, just get it in writing.
At that point it's just vicious selfish cruelty.

I refuse to live in a communal facility full stop. I like being able to piss off for a walk at 3am if I want to, and I will end the care worker who tells me I can't drink Red Bull and I have to eat 'healthy' food.

At least, I can't imagine a 90 year old me would be allowed to bring a crate of Red Bull to a home with me, or disappear for a walk at o dark thirty.
 

Nickie

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
10,754
Points
113
What can I do to join and help? I'm from Ireland, but I feel strongly about this.
Look up hospice in your town. Volunteer if you can. Join Compassion and Choices. Advocate for the legality of Physician Assisted Suicide, if Ireland doesn't have it. Fill out your own Advanced Directives choices for yourself, give it to your Dr, your dentist, and your closest friends.
 

Nickie

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
10,754
Points
113
At that point it's just vicious selfish cruelty.

I refuse to live in a communal facility full stop. I like being able to piss off for a walk at 3am if I want to, and I will end the care worker who tells me I can't drink Red Bull and I have to eat 'healthy' food.

At least, I can't imagine a 90 year old me would be allowed to bring a crate of Red Bull to a home with me, or disappear for a walk at o dark thirty.
A close freind of mine just put her house (over 30 years there) and is moving to an ILF soon. She's very gregarious and teaches resdients there to play ukulele and sing. She's in her late 60s, and wants to do it while she still feels good. She gets to take her dog. But she's moving out of 900 sq ft into 700 sq ft.
 

Voran

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2021
Messages
2,225
Points
113
A close freind of mine just put her house (over 30 years there) and is moving to an ILF soon. She's very gregarious and teaches resdients there to play ukulele and sing. She's in her late 60s, and wants to do it while she still feels good. She gets to take her dog. But she's moving out of 900 sq ft into 700 sq ft.
Nope. All of my nope. Nope backed up with an 80 person orchestra and a towering high F from Sergey Kryzhnenko. Nope. Nope.
 

Voran

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2021
Messages
2,225
Points
113
Look up hospice in your town. Volunteer if you can. Join Compassion and Choices. Advocate for the legality of Physician Assisted Suicide, if Ireland doesn't have it. Fill out your own Advanced Directives choices for yourself, give it to your Dr, your dentist, and your closest friends.
I'll join Compassion and Choices, I think. I'm not a people person. I don't tolerate people well even when I'm getting paid, let alone volunteering. I lost an ESL teaching job because I raged at work and told someone to put live eels up their rear.
 

Nickie

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
10,754
Points
113
I'll join Compassion and Choices, I think. I'm not a people person. I don't tolerate people well even when I'm getting paid, let alone volunteering. I lost an ESL teaching job because I raged at work and told someone to put live eels up their rear.
I used to lose jobs for stuff like that. I have a little more patience with stupid people than I used to. Why? Cause I needed the money.
 

Voran

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2021
Messages
2,225
Points
113
I used to lose jobs for stuff like that. I have a little more patience with stupid people than I used to. Why? Cause I needed the money.
I've never been good at patience.

Lost another language job I'd almost secured, too. They kept sending me reminders to complete an interview process which I COULD NOT DO because their software was broken and no one fixed it despite me repeatedly asking for help.

I finally snapped after one too many pointless reminders and sent them back a swear-filled email telling them I'd love to finish my application but couldn't because they were too busy munching on the COVID-infested organs of a dead pangolin to fix their broken software (this was a Chinese company, and I was mad and felt like being racist).