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Coping with new situations

If you are caring for a relative with serious health problems, you are probably in unfamiliar territory. For most of us, the shaky feelings of uncertainty are very unpleasant. We feel vulnerable outside our comfort zone. We worry we will do something wrong.

According to noted researcher Dr. Brené Brown, to protect ourselves we often turn to three strategies:

Although these strategies might help short circuit the discomfort of vulnerability, Dr. Brown warns that they also rob our lives of meaning. When we are vulnerable, we are emotionally exposed. This type of openness is frequently the springboard to life’s most meaningful moments: Changing careers, falling in love. In the context of family caregiving, it might be starting a difficult family conversation or caring for a relative in their last few weeks of life.

It is when we take risks and navigate terrain outside our comfort zone that we experience courage, growth, creativity, joy, and self-esteem.

Here are tips for embracing vulnerability as a family caregiver and getting to the other side:

Are you caring for someone who is seriously ill?
That can be challenging indeed. You don’t have to do it alone. As the Roanoke and Lynchburg experts in family caregiving, this is very familiar territory for us. We at Gentle Shepherd Hospice can walk beside you with education and support for those areas that feel daunting. Give us a call at 1-800-789-0586 (toll-free).

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