@chansen , do they have a location to move to?
I'm sorry that they are both not well
Youre a good son....most of us parents don't want to give up all of our independence till we have to.
I'm thinking I should change careers to do makeovers for housing.....hmmm.
The intention is to move north to the cottage. Only problem with that is the lack of doctors, and the better furniture for sleeping while elevated is at home. They prefer to spend their time up there. The place is pretty nice. Neither ski anymore, but it's quiet, they see their granddaughter all winter and every month or so in the summer when we cut the grass, and there is a stray cat that needs my mom's attention.
Honestly, it's mostly about the cat. My dad has been trying to make the move for 20 years.
The strong intention was to move 4 years ago. I came through, took loads of junk to the transfer station, gutted the basement down to the studs and rebuilt it. The year before, I tiled the pool walls in preparation. Then my mom decided not to sell.
Every year since was supposed to be the year. And then my mom could not bring herself to sell.
Finally, this year my dad has been having more problems with his eyesight and the 2 1/4 hour drive just wasn't feasible, so she agreed. Got an agent and everything. I came through and continued the cleanup. Claire pressure washed all the concrete surfaces. We cleaned most of the house. Got the garden tilled and planted. Cleaned off the roof and the eavestroughs. Cast a new concrete table for the back yard. The garage was a disaster and now it's not. So many trips, so much work, and now they're saying maybe not this year, lol.
It is what it is.
What I do know is that my mom, who looks like she could blow away in a stiff breeze, has lost weight she could not afford to lose. My dad has been in pain for over 30 years with his head. Broke his wrists 25 years ago. Broke his back 20 years ago. Broke his ankle 5 years ago which ended his skiing.
My mom survived a grapefruit sized tumor 20 years ago. Her preferred approach to health care is to avoid doctors when possible, not listen to them when she can't avoid them but she's not about to die, then maybe think about their words and treatment when she can no longer stand. How she's alive is a testament to stubbornness, plus new cancer treatments.
There is a note on her file at Juravinski Hospital that reads "uncooperative".
Now they're saying they may winter in the city. I doubt they actually will. We'll see. They've cancelled Thanksgiving. They don't want us bringing a turkey the day of, or leftovers the next day.
In the interim, I make "proof of life" calls daily. We joke about them. "Still alive?" "Yep."
Time for today's call.