The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘The Agony of Putting Your Life on Hold to Care for Your Parents’
Episode Date: April 30, 2023In January 2022, Randi Schofield was a 34-year-old single mother who, not long before, left her full-time job of eight years as a personal bailiff to a local judge. She pulled $30,000 from her retirem...ent savings and was planning to give herself all of 2022 to expand the small catering business she had always dreamed about. This would be the year she bet on herself. Then, that month, she received the news that medics were pulling her father out of his car.The collision splintered the bone in his left thigh down to his knee; three days later, a metal rod held the broken pieces together. Until his leg recovered from the surgery, he would not be able to walk without assistance. In hindsight, there were warning signs that her father’s health could upend Schofield’s life. But he was also youthful and spirited, and it was easy to believe that everything was fine, that he was fine and that if she were to take care of him some day, it would be occasional and in a distant future. She didn’t see this day coming the way it did, so abruptly and so soon.Increasing numbers of adult children are taking care of their parents, often shouldering the burden with no pay and little outside help — making their meals, helping them shower, bandaging their wounds and holding them up before they can fall. The social-work scholar Dorothy A. Miller once described this as the “peculiar position” in the modern American nuclear family, between the care people give to their aging parents and to their children. Today’s “sandwich generation” is younger than the version Miller described four decades ago, but it faces the same “unique set of unshared stresses” that she warned of then: acute financial strain, a lack of reciprocated support and “fatigue from fulfilling the demands of too many roles.”This story was recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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Hi, my name is J.A. Lee, and I'm a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine.
I wrote a story, which you'll hear in this week's Sunday Read, about the growing number of young people who are becoming caregivers for their parents.
The story is definitely not about me, but in some profound ways, I do see myself in it.
But in some profound ways, I do see myself in it.
So for the whole time my husband and I were dating, which was like 11 years, I knew that his mother had serious health issues.
But that said, she mostly managed.
And she lived relatively independently in her own place.
Then came 2018.
I was 32 years old. My husband, who was still my boyfriend at that time,
and I were coming home from a vacation in Japan when he got a call saying that his mom was in the hospital. We went to stay with her after she was discharged. She was weak and needed help in the
middle of the night. While we were there, someone
known as an end-of-life planner came to visit. We knew nothing about what an end-of-life planner did,
but there we were, jet-lagged, half-asleep, suddenly needing to make major decisions about
power of attorney and life support. That was the day my husband turned to me and said,
I don't think mom can live on her own anymore.
I remember feeling instantly overwhelmed.
We're both self-employed.
We had just moved into our first apartment together,
thinking it'd be the two of us.
But we set up an air mattress and took in my
husband's mother and tried to get her back to stability. It took months. With our help, she was
able to continue living in her own apartment. But two years later, in the thick of the pandemic,
she had a heart episode. This time, we moved in with her. Because of COVID, everything we needed
to keep ourselves safe, to keep food and medicine in the house, to keep up doctor's visits, all of
that got so much harder. And I can remember how isolated we felt because none of our friends were
going through this. We had to juggle our caregiving
duties while working from home. So our whole situation sort of crept out while I was speaking
to colleagues. And I also saw parallels to my situation on the news. Stories about the chronic
caregiver shortage and daycare and senior care centers shutting down. One day, my editor and I started talking about
what all this meant for people who had both kids and aging parents. I began looking on Facebook
groups for caregivers for people around my age, and I was shocked to see how many there were.
It's weird to say this, but that was the first time I really understood that I was one of them, a family caregiver.
Scrolling through postings, there were people carrying toddlers on their shoulders, desperate just to get some playtime outside, only they're also pushing wheelchairs.
One person mentioned needing to lock away the refrigerator in the garage so that their father with dementia wouldn't get to the food in
the middle of the night. Many of these caregivers are part of what's known as the sandwich generation.
They're taking care of their aging parents while also raising kids. 40 or so years ago,
these caregivers were mostly people in their 50s, when you might be close to retirement and in a
financially stable position, and it often referred to women. But what's happened over the decades
is that this demographic has gotten younger and younger. The share of caregivers who are under 45
quintupled over the past two decades, as their parents, many of them baby boomers, are living longer,
but with more health complications and less financial security than the generation before
them. Today's sandwich generation is much more likely to be someone in their 40s or 30s or even
in their 20s. I wanted to really get inside the toll that this life can take on someone when it hits them
at such an early age. And that's when I found a woman named Randy Schofield. Randy was like me
in her 30s, but she was also a single mom. She had recently made a big decision to switch careers
and start a business, something she dreamed about doing. But around the
same time, her father Keith got into a really horrible accident. That day changed everything
for Randy. Randy took it upon herself to move in with him so she could help him get better.
She thought it would be temporary, that Keith would eventually get better and go home.
But as we see in this
story, that doesn't end up happening. My husband and I no longer live with my mother-in-law,
but now with help from my parents, we've continued to give her daily care.
It's been fulfilling in a lot of ways, but I also know how easy it is to lose your sense of self
while caring for an aging parent.
Many of us do it because we feel we don't have a choice,
and that was certainly true for both me and Randy.
So here's my article,
The Agony of Putting Your Life on Hold to Care for Your Parents,
read by Robin Miles
Randy Schofield tried her best to not dwell on all the ways her life changed,
on the pieces of herself that got lost in the shuffle.
She was a 34-year-old single mother who not long ago was in the throes of a big life transition.
She had left her full-time job of eight years as a personal bailiff to a local judge.
She was burned out, ready for something new.
She pulled $30,000 from her retirement savings and was planning to give herself all of 2022 to expand the small catering business she had always dreamed about.
This would be the year she bet on herself. It was risky, but she had a plan. She applied for
part-time, remote office jobs so she could keep up with the bills, maybe save up for a summer
vacation with her two daughters, Alicia, then 13, and Amira, who was 15. She felt guilty for having spent so much
of her time working at the courthouse or on call by her laptop. She started going to bed early
and updated her budget every two weeks. She got the girls ready to begin the spring semester
feeling like a new person. Then, in late January 2022, she received the news that medics
were pulling her father out of his car. Randy's father, Keith Schofield, then 61, had been driving
home from the gym after a snowstorm when a car in the next lane lost control and sent Keith's Chevy over a Cleveland freeway overpass.
The collision splintered the bone in his left thigh down to his knee.
Three days later, a metal rod held the broken pieces together.
Until his leg recovered from the surgery, he would not be able to walk without assistance.
In hindsight, there were warning signs that her father's health could upend Randy's life.
The heart episodes that landed him in the emergency room almost every year. The tray full of open
medicine bottles that he swore he took on time. But he was also youthful and spirited, and it was
easy to believe that everything was fine. That he was fine, and that if she were to take care of him someday, it would be occasional and
in a distant future where she had more of life figured out.
She didn't see this day coming the way it did, so abruptly and so soon.
Yet increasing numbers of adult children are taking care of their parents,
often shouldering the burden with no pay and little outside help,
making their meals, helping them shower, bandaging their wounds,
and holding them up before they can fall.
The number of people living in nursing homes or assisted living facilities
make up less than 5% of the population 65 and older.
In its most recent survey of unpaid caregivers published in 2020,
AARP found that there were nearly 42 million people
caring for an aging friend or family member,
more than tenfold the number in 1989.
The fastest growth is happening among younger generations. The share
of caregivers who are under 45 quintupled over the past two decades to nearly 66% from 16%
as their parents, many of the 72 million baby boomers, are living longer but doing so with
more chronic diseases and disability and less means than the generation before them.
I always knew it would happen, says Adrienne Glusman,
who at 29 took care of her mother in the final decade of her life,
and now hosts the podcast Young Life Interrupted.
But it happened 30 years sooner for me than I ever anticipated.
And since the pandemic, as caregivers available for hire became rarer and impossibly expensive,
the estimated number of unpaid family members who have stepped in nearly doubled.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported in early 2021 that 34.1% of Americans 18 and older are either
caring for an adult or juggling the care of both adults and children. In another poll,
60% of first-time caregivers were millennials or Gen Z. An unprecedented number of people in their 30s and to a lesser degree 20s are entering what the social work scholar Dorothy A. Miller once called a peculiar position in the modern American nuclear family between the care they give to their aging parent and to their children.
Today's sandwich generation is younger than the version Miller described four decades ago, but they face the same unique set of unshared stresses that she warned of then.
Acute financial strain, a lack of reciprocated support,
and fatigue from fulfilling the demands of too many roles.
Following her father's accident,
Randy postponed the start date of her new part-time remote office job
so she could look after him as he recovered from surgery
in the intensive care unit.
For weeks, she held his hand and prayed.
In March, when her father left an outpatient rehab center
and moved in with her,
she pushed back the start date of the part-time
job again. Randy, her sisters and brother-in-law, moved most of the furniture out of her room to
make space for an extra-wide hospital bed, a leather recliner, and a commode. Randy took over
Alicia's bedroom across the narrow hall. At night, she could hear the hissing of her father's oxygen
tank in one room and her daughter's bickering over their shared space in the other. Randy's days
filled up with a series of small but life-dependent tasks, emptying her father's portable toilet and
urinals every few hours, handing him a shot glass of medications, 8 a.m., 4 p.m., 8 p.m.,
measuring his blood pressure morning and night,
driving him to and from doctor's appointments
at least twice per week.
The trauma of her father's leg injury
accelerated his chronic heart and kidney disease,
causing his body to retain water,
which meant he could have only six cups of fluid a day.
Randy kept a log of how much he drank and urinated in a red spiral-bound notebook.
The time she once planned for herself disappeared. Her aspirations faded. She eventually gave up the
job offer entirely and shut down the website for her catering business. The unemployment benefits she started receiving after leaving the courthouse job barely covered
the basics after her mortgage, property tax, car payment, insurance, water, gas, and garbage
bills.
Only $100 remained, and soon those checks would run out too.
The savings Randy pulled from retirement after quitting her job were supposed to last her into the next year,
so she watched her spending carefully.
But there were unforeseen necessities.
Repairs for the furnace, for one.
And after her father moved in, the list grew.
Compression socks to help his blood circulation,
a shower bench, nitrile gloves,
trash bags for the portable
toilet, Lysol wipes, extra-strength Tylenol. Amira was accepted into summer programs at Brown
and then Howard, which made Randy proud but also stressed, because it meant she needed to buy
round-trip flights and a few nights in a hotel. She stopped paying her bills on the first of the month as she was used to doing.
Instead, she leaned on grace periods, paying the minimum balance to avoid triggering a late penalty.
Keith was a youth basketball coach and worked as a county social worker for 13 years.
Two years before the accident, he retired and received $2,000 each
month from his public employee pension, part of which paid for his rent. He insisted that he would
return to his one-bedroom apartment as soon as his leg recovered. The benefits put Keith over the
income limit required to receive federal financial assistance for long-term in-home care,
which could essentially pay Randy a minimum wage for looking after him.
Most American households make too little to afford a hired caregiver or a bed in a nursing home,
the median costs of which are about $3,000 and $8,500 a month, respectively.
Yet most Americans also make too much
to qualify for the public benefits
that exist for this very reason.
The price of long-term care, meanwhile,
has risen for nearly two decades in a row.
In 2019, the average cost of in-home care for one year
equaled 80% of the median household income for seniors.
A year in a nursing home cost more than two times the median income. The result is a kind
of generational compounding effect for family caregivers inheriting the financial burdens of
their parents while facing their own precarious future. In AARP's survey, about a quarter of family caregivers reported
that they stopped saving or that they went deeper into debt.
Nearly a fifth reported they paid bills late or stopped paying altogether.
Three percent filed for bankruptcy.
Millennials, according to a 2018 AARP report,
spent a higher share of their incomes on caregiving than previous generations,
while earning less on average.
A majority juggled a full-time job with their care duties
and earned less than $50,000 per year.
They were also more likely to receive warnings from employers
about performance or attendance,
turn down promotions, quit, or be fired. Amy Goyer, an author and an expert on caregiving for AARP, decided to move in with her parents in 2012 when they required 24-hour attention
and could no longer afford their mounting medical and living expenses. They had been paying $4,000 per month at an independent living community
and a mortgage on the house they bought in the 1980s,
which drained her father's pension and the Social Security that both parents received.
Her sisters helped out, but Goyer absorbed most of the work and expenses.
She maxed out her credit cards.
She hired help during the day so she could continue her full-time job
and took over on nights and weekends.
I provided 60 to 80 hours a week of care myself,
and it was still so expensive, Goyer said.
After her parents died, Goyer filed for bankruptcy. According to AARP's
latest data, Goyer said, one in three caregivers has no other help. How are they doing that,
she asked. They're either not working or they're just about killing themselves.
killing themselves.
Randy was not, strictly speaking, alone.
Early in her father's recovery, her mother and two younger sisters were hands-on, coming over several times a week to drop off food, help him practice walking, or take the girls
to the mall.
Randy's parents divorced when she was a teenager, but remained close.
On a few occasions when her father was still in the hospital,
they even took turns filling in for Randy overnight so that she could catch up on sleep.
Their group thread buzzed with inspirational quotes and memes and schedules and eye rolls
over Keith's refusing to take his medicine when they asked him to.
Gradually, though, the visits and texts slowed.
A series of disagreements distanced Randy from her mother and sisters.
Randy's mother told me that one of their first arguments
started when Keith was still in the hospital.
She worried that taking care of him would overwhelm Randy
and felt that he should instead be looked after by medical professionals while the family helped.
But Randy refused.
During her father's brief stay in the rehab facility,
she said staff members failed to treat his fluid retention,
which ultimately resulted in another trip to the hospital.
When Randy's mother learned that Keith was in a relationship,
she no longer felt
it was her place
to be by his side.
Keith's girlfriend,
Jackie Davila,
a former nursing home administrator,
dropped in regularly
to help him shower
and accompany him
to doctor's appointments.
She and Randy moved in sync
when helping Keith
to and from the car.
But Jackie's support
could feel fragile at times.
She juggled a full-time job managing cancer patients and also checked in on her own ailing
family members. On nights when she left after an argument with Keith, Randy could only hope
she would return before too much time passed. Randy also had a boyfriend, DeMonte Cummings, who was 28 and worked as a
truck driver. On his days off, he came over with his eight-year-old son, an expressive,
inquisitive third grader, to watch football with Keith or take the girls shopping. The girls lit
up when they were around. When big DeMonte was on the road, Little DeMonte sometimes stayed with Randy for a week or
more. In a pioneering study of adult children caregivers, the social worker Elaine Brody found
that in every family in which an aging parent required care, there was usually one burden
bearer, a single member who bore the brunt of the responsibilities, even when there were,
in theory, others who could help. This phenomenon appears with striking regularity and frequency,
Brody co-wrote in the journal Family Process in 1966. The burden-bearer could be patient
and self-sacrificing, but also bitter.
About one in three caregivers reported their relationships with siblings deteriorated.
Those who lived with their parents experienced more stress.
Problems may be more exacerbated if the home is small or ill-equipped for care,
resulting in crowding or loss of privacy.
Daughters, Brody found, were more likely to report symptoms of depression,
restlessness, and feelings of isolation and missing out.
In a later study of sandwiched caregivers with siblings, published in 2003,
two-thirds reported an inequitable spread of labor and feeling considerable distress as a result.
One woman told researchers that her sisters helped somewhat.
One flew in for a week out of the year, and the other helped with finances.
But there are still times when it just pisses me off royally.
Women remain the majority of family caregivers today,
although among millennials, the share of men is closer to half.
Two months after Keith moved in with Randy, his ankles swelled like water balloons,
a common side effect of a heart that doesn't pump hard enough and a kidney that is malfunctioning.
Randy took him to the hospital, where he was hooked up to an IV drip of a diuretic
to drain the fluid out of his body.
That week,
a heart failure specialist
delivered some sobering news.
Without a major intervention,
Keith might only have
six months to a year left to live.
The doctor recommended
a cardiac ablation,
a procedure in which a surgeon
burns scar tissue in your heart
to block irregular electrical signals.
If it succeeded and his arrhythmia improved,
the doctor would recommend him for a heart and kidney transplant.
At the next family cookout,
Randy snapped at her youngest sister
for not helping their father move inside when it began to rain.
Everyone started arguing.
Randy cursed out her mother and sisters and stormed out.
The tension festered.
One day, Randy walked by her father's room and overheard him telling someone on the phone
that his other daughters didn't come around as much because they couldn't stand to see him sick.
Did he think that she to see him sick.
Did he think that she enjoyed seeing him sick?
Watching him every morning slumped in his recliner, waiting for his chest to rise?
Randy resented how the rift in the family made her daughters feel like collateral damage.
She blamed herself, too.
She was so occupied with her father's recovery and keeping up with bills that she hadn't taken the girls to a movie or the mall in months.
She knew they were trying their best to adapt.
Amira often stuck around the kitchen,
asking if Randy needed any help.
Alicia withdrew to her bed and into her phone.
As the heart procedure approached, Randy tried to be optimistic,
but she had so many questions.
What were the chances it would succeed?
When could he start physical therapy again?
She wrote them in her red notebook
and took it to a meeting with her father's cardiologist,
but her father stopped her before she could ask.
Randy knew he was probably anxious about the risks, but she felt she deserved some answers. Would the doctor's appointment slow
down or speed up? When could she start looking for work? She needed to start saving again soon.
In the spring, she would have to take Amira to visit colleges. How much longer would she be on
call? That summer, as the bills stacked up, Randy and Demonte decided to move in together.
There was barely enough space for two more in the house,
but it was hard to ignore the upsides of splitting the bills.
He became the one person
she could share
her unfiltered thoughts with,
about the sense that her life
was on permanent pause,
that she was wasting away,
the doubt and guilt and anger
that weighed her down.
Keith made it through the procedure,
but his recovery was slow and unsteady. His weight could climb nine pounds in two days, a sign that his body could be retaining
water, then drop below his normal range, a sign that his kidneys could be failing. Randy felt
uneasy each time she left him alone in the house. She kept the front door unlocked in case someone needed to get inside,
a neighbor, Jackie, paramedics.
The days were relentless and disjointed.
Now with three children in school and on different schedules,
Randy drove between two and three hours every weekday.
Big DeMonte started a new job trucking long distance,
which paid more, but required him to be away for most of the week.
Numbers and to-do lists ran through Randy's mind. At night, she had trouble sleeping. Relatives and
friends cheered her on, saying things like, I don't know how you do it, Randy, and I'm praying
for you, Randy. She appreciated the sentiment, but she didn't want sympathy.
She wanted someone to take her place.
She didn't always notice her mood dip until one of the children picked up on her impatient tone.
Why did you say it like that?
Little Demonte asked her one time.
Often, she pulled into her driveway
after school drop-offs or errands
and just sat there,
the engine still running.
More than once,
she walked out of her house
and hid behind her car,
crying out of sight
until Amira came out looking for her.
Of all the challenges
that a family caregiver faces,
the emotional toll has been consistently documented as the most pervasive and severe.
A widely cited review of 30 empirical studies published between 1985 and 1998 found that the risk of psychiatric morbidity was high among caregivers, especially for women.
was high among caregivers, especially for women.
More recent studies have found that caregiver distress and depression were often followed by changes in physical health
that ultimately lead to illness and possibly to death,
though the precise causes were unclear.
The 2021 CDC survey of more than 10,000 family caregivers found more troubling trends.
About 70% of respondents said that they experienced adverse mental health symptoms
within the previous month, including anxiety, depression, or suicidal ideation.
Among people who cared for both their children and parents,
about half reported experiencing suicidal thoughts.
Randy's own breakdowns began six months after her father moved in.
One weary night in September, she waited until everyone had gone to bed,
then sneaked out to her car and drove away.
She called DeMonte and told him she couldn't be there anymore, that she worried
she would become a danger to herself and others. DeMonte called several family members and the
police. Then he, Jackie, and Randy's middle sister, Megan Crespo, rushed to the house.
They had a right to panic. At 21, Randy was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and checked into a hospital several times
after her daughters were born. It had been years since her last breakdown. Therapy and meditation
were helping her manage her mental health. She was sorry for alarming everyone that day in September,
but she knew it would be worse to hold in what she felt. She did not want to live this life anymore.
She had been sitting outside her father's apartment for what felt like ten minutes
when Amira called, worried about her and the officers knocking at the door.
The police were gone by the time Randy returned home.
A few weeks later, Megan called the police again.
Two officers pulled up
to find Randy
sitting in her car, sobbing.
She tried not to,
but Randy thought often
about how this chapter
of her life might end.
In the best
but least probable scenario,
her father would recover
and go home.
Perhaps she would go back
to school and become a nurse,
turn all this new knowledge into a job.
Maybe in a few years, after the girls left for college,
she would sell the house and leave Cleveland,
just her and the DeMontes somewhere warm by the water.
In these daydreams, she found a fleeting semblance of escape, of possibility, but also of
guilt for imagining a future without her father. If, God forbid, he was to die, she wanted to mourn
him without resentment. By January, one year after the accident, Randy applied for part-time jobs again,
and she enrolled in a local nursing program.
Her father's recovery stagnated.
A second leg surgery helped him avoid an infection,
but he was weaker than ever and lost nearly 20 pounds.
That month, Randy broke down again.
Alicia texted her grandmother to say Randy needed her. The next day, Randy's mother came over. They talked for a while. She also had some news. She was recently diagnosed
with stage one breast cancer. They caught it early, thankfully. She was heading to see the
doctor that week to find out her treatment plan.
Brandy decided to go with her.
Her mother would need daily radiation
and eventually hormone therapy.
But she was well enough to manage on her own.
At least for now. Thank you.