A different form of aged care: Yvonne’s family commitment to her elderly Greek parents

·

By Martina Simos

When elderly Greeks are resistant to being placed aged care facilities, their adult children have to make decisions on how they will be cared for.

Yvonne from Adelaide, South Australia, spoke to The Greek Herald about her family’s decision to support her ageing parents, Nick and Helen, in their home.

In 2018, Yvonne, her husband Nicholas and son Jamieson moved back to the family home. It was, she said, the ‘right’ thing to do.

“We wouldn’t say that it was a hard choice, more so we knew that it was the right decision,” she said.

“The ‘hard’ part was acknowledging that we were going to be living a different type of life than what we had been used to.”

Her elderly father Nick had onset dementia with constant mini seizures affecting how he interacted with people. To watch him change from a happy and social person to one who became argumentative was difficult for the whole family.

Yvonne with her father Nick and her mum Helen.

“I recall the time that I left the house, drove to the beach and broke down and sobbed for hours. Then having to compose myself in order to come back home and start the routine all over again,” she said.

Despite working full-time, Yvonne drove her parents to appointments and assisted with chores – shopping, cooking, cleaning, washing, ironing and organising their medications. Support also came from her husband Nicholas, who helped with medical emergencies – and there were many.

Nicholas would take his in-laws to the emergency department and stay on for interpreting and support. Often, he would stay at the hospital all night, drive his mother-in-law home and then go to work.

“There were also times where mum would call my husband at work (as he worked closer to home) to say that dad had fallen over in the back yard and she couldn’t get him up,” Yvonne said.

“Nicholas would have to leave work to come home, help get dad back into a chair, make sure he was okay and then go back to work.”

On 17 October 2019, Yvonne’s father passed away at the age of 94 and the family are now looking after her mum. Within weeks of her father passing, her mother’s behaviour changed. They noticed Helen was forgetting, not remembering recent events and conversations.

Late last year, Helen, 87, was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and displayed changes in her cognitive and social behaviour. She finds it difficult performing familiar tasks, misplaces items, has left pots cooking unattended and has difficulty planning or making decisions.

Yvonne and her mum Helen

“Mum is my best friend,” Yvonne said.

“But I lost that special bond when Alzheimer’s took over. I grieved for months over that course of change.”

Yvonne found working full-time and supporting her mum was wearing her down.  At times she would leave her job, which was 45 minutes away, pick up her mum, take her to appointments, take her home again before returning to her workplace and working till late to make up the time lost.

“I started to feel physically, mentally, and emotionally exhausted, where I neglected my own physical and emotional wellbeing,’’ she said.

Yvonne’s mum and dad enjoyed attending social events.

“I felt so overwhelmed, stressed and guilty that I was in and out of the office frequently, I felt that I was on a constant treadmill and I couldn’t come off.”

Although Yvonne had dropped to working four days, it was still too much so she resigned, found a part-time role closer to home and began to look into in-home support through an aged care package.

Despite the journey, Yvonne is proud that this experience was a factor that influenced her son Jamieson to study counselling to help others in the mental health field. Jamieson was 16 when they moved in her with her parents and he also pitched in to help.

“Jamieson feels tremendously honoured and humbled that he has been blessed with the opportunity to care for his grandparents in the same way they looked after him,” Yvonne said.

“He wants younger people to know that there is no greater blessing than to care for those around us, especially family.”

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Thousands fill Bay Street as Greek Fest returns to Brighton-Le-Sands in spectacular style

The Greek Orthodox Community of NSW (GOCNSW) has celebrated another hugely successful return of the Greek Fest at Brighton-Le-Sands.

Mytilenian Brotherhood of NSW marks liberation of Lesvos with pride, history and kefi

The Mytilenian Brotherhood of Sydney & NSW hosted its vibrant celebration for the 113th Anniversary of the Liberation of Lesvos.

Greek Macedonian heritage shines at the 44th Dimitria Festival in Adelaide

The 44th annual Dimitria Festival once again brought the vibrancy of Greek Macedonian culture to the heart of Adelaide, drawing many.

Socceroo legend Jim Patikas named Marrickville FC Men’s Premier League coach

Marrickville FC has announced former Socceroo and Australian football icon Jim Patikas as the club’s Men’s Premier League coach for 2026.

New Penelopes stitching together a cultural revival in ‘Threads of Memory’ display

Every thread carried a story at Threads of Memory – Reviving the Textile Traditions of Our Ancestry, the Ithacan Historical Society’s event.

You May Also Like

Greek Orthodox Church at Liverpool receives $50,000 grant to help boost security

The Greek Orthodox Church of St Raphael, Nicholas and Irene in Liverpool has received a $50,000 grant from the NSW Government.

Albania appoints ethnic Greek as prefect of the Vlora district

On Wednesday, March 13, Albania's Prime Minister Edi Rama appointed Vangjel Tavo, an ethnic Greek, as the prefect of Vlora district. 

HACCI National Federation names new Chair and unveils stronger national collaboration

The HACCI National Federation has announced that HACCI NSW has officially joined the National Federation. Read more updates here.