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This is How We Look After the Elderly! My Brother Came Over from the States.

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14April2025

Today I reflected on the way we tend to look after our ageing parents. My older brother, James, finally turned up from the States after more than a decade of living in Boston with his wife. He hardly ever finds the time to visit home, and this was only his third callup since he moved abroad. He arrived bearing a suitcase full of designer threads and a handful of imported gadgets for Mum and Dad, a gesture that certainly brightened the house.

When James set off for his own fortunes overseas, I took it upon myself to help Mum and Dad. In hindsight I realise I should have handled things differently, and it nags at me that I only see it now.

His arrival lifted Mums spirits straightaway. She forgot her aches and set about whipping up her famous meat pies and biscuits for his wife, Claire, and for us. The whole family was over the moon to have the son and daughterinlaw under one roof. While James and Claire were staying, Mum and Dad were running around like headless chickens, never quite sure how best to keep the guests comfortable and well fed. Dad liked to play with his Englishborn grandchildren, while Mum bustled about the kitchen, her aprons dusted with flour.

For two weeks the house hummed with a festive buzz. Claire spent her days either in the kitchen or glued to the telly, nursing a cup of tea. Not once did she offer to lend a hand or tidy up after herself. When the week drew to a close, Dad slipped an envelope of cash into our hands. James laughed, What am I supposed to do with pounds in America? yet he didnt refuse the money.

That evening, after the guests had left, Mums blood pressure spiked again. Emilymy wifehad to brew a calming tea and sit with her all night, looking after her health. Dad asked me to chop some firewood; hed boasted just the day before how deftly he could swing an axe, but he couldnt manage it now. I watched Emily juggle the kitchen, my mother, and the cleaning, and I felt a knot of frustration tighten inside me.

Living with my parents has become the norm. Emily and I have been married for almost nine years, and throughout that time weve lived in the family house. My parents are retired and have deliberately slowed down: no more endless trips to the shops or needless errands. All the upkeeprepairs, cleaning, gardeninghas fallen to us. Together weve refitted every room, replaced the windows, reslated the roof, and put up a new fence, funding everything from our own pockets.

Jamess visits are rare, but when he does come the house seems to spring back to lifepeople become alert, active, cheerful, as if nothing else bothers them.

We decided to move back in with my parents so we could lend a hand whenever needed. It now dawns on me that my decision was misguided. Weve poured a great deal of money and energy into the property, and walking away feels like throwing it all away. Yet my parents seldom acknowledge the daily grind we endure. They sing Jamess praises at family gatherings and label us, the ones still living at home, as deadbeats. Im at a loss for what to do.

Looking back, Ive learned that caring for those who once cared for us demands more than occasional gifts or a tidy home; it calls for honest communication, shared responsibility, and a willingness to let go of pride. Only then can we truly honor the people who raised us without losing ourselves in the process.

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