Journaling for Caregivers
So many women at midlife are involved in some kind of caregiving. It could be for an aging parent or two, a spouse or significant other with an illness, or helping to get a friend through an illness.
B. Lynn Goodwin is a woman who knows what it’s like and she’s become an expert in self care for caregivers. The stress without relief can be deadly. She’s written a book titled, “You Want Me To Do What? Journaling for Caregivers” that I thought some of you might benefit from.
The rest of this post is from Lynn, some advice for all of us. According to Lynn, Making Time to Write Saves Lives.
”Are you a caregiver for a spouse, parent, child, special needs child, or yourself? If so, you are probably a multi-tasker and a nurturer who spends hours driving to appointments, stopping at the pharmacy, cooking, answering questions, paying bills, and controlling the resentment that can rise up when you have no time for yourself.
Why write about it?
Writing gives perspective and restores sanity. Writing is a lifeline as well as a record. Writing saves lives. Do not underestimate its power.
How do caregivers make time to write?
Some people write as soon as they get up in the morning. Some write while they are waiting for the coffee to brew. Some write during a lunch break. Others write before they go to sleep at night.
Some disappear into the bathroom with a notebook tucked into their pocket and emerge fifteen minutes later feeling less stressed. Some people jot down a few ideas while they are waiting in line at the grocery store or pharmacy. Others write while they wait for their children to get out of school or while their loved one naps. Making time to write even a few words will help clarify your thoughts and feelings. More always comes up once you start the pen moving across the page.
Journaling allows you to vent, delve into issues, and untangle messes. It lets you analyze or celebrate. It allows you to finish a thought without interruption. Journaling releases mental toxins and deepens awareness. It enables you to strip away the daily stress and let the strong, sane, safe, healthy, hopeful parts of you emerge.
What do you do if you have nothing to say? Try using sentence starts. All you need to do is finish the sentence and keep going. Go wherever the writing takes you. Explore fearlessly. Don’t worry if it’s not related to the topic, because topics are only suggestions.
Ready to give it a try? How would you finish a sentence that started “Today I feel…”?
Let the writing take you wherever it wants to. Feel free to make leaps. Trust yourself and trust the process. Write as much or as little as you want.
Here are some additional sentence starts for you to try:
Ø Today I believe…
Ø Today I want…
Ø Today I am…
Start where you are. Start with the mood you are in. Start with what you see and hear. Start with what needs to spill out.
Writing is therapeutic. It saves lives. Carve out a niche of time and just do it. Your truths are eager to come out. I’d love to hear about the doors that journaling opens for you.”
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B. Lynn Goodwin is the owner of Writer Advice, www.writeradvice.com and the author of You Want Me to Do What? Journaling for Caregivers, which contains encouragement, instructions, and over 200 sentence starts to help you journal any time.














Thanks for sharing this, Gregory Anne.
Did you know that November is National Caregivers Month? Who are you honoring and how will you celebrate?
Lynn
http://www.writeradvice.com
Author of You Want Me to Do WHAT? Journaling for Caregivers
I gave a cursory glance to this post, at first, dismissing it with a little pout because I didn’t GET to care for my mother.
Here’s the story. After Mom was diagnosed with stage four malignant melanoma and given a 6 to 9 month life expectancy, we, my sisters and I, started making plans for caring for her. We looked forward to giving back to the mother who had given us so much. The doctor was wrong – we lost her after only 14 days. We didn’t get to care for her at all.
I tend to look at these caregiver journals and such with great sadness and a little anger that I was robbed of caring for my mother. How lucky everyone is who gets to care for their parents! So, I must admit I’ve been a bit unfeeling about caregivers and their needs. I was envious.
However, after actually reading this post, I was humbled by the pain that people go through when they are caring for someone. That pain is equal to the pain I felt NOT being able to care for my mother. Pain is pain. I’m sorry anyone has to experience these heartbreaking and difficult times.
I was also reminded that my husband is older than I am and I could, one day, be called upon to care for him. I believe now, after reading this post, that I have a better understanding and more empathy for anyone in a caregiver’s role.
Thank you for opening my eyes – and heart.