Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The Tender Middle

Linking today's post with Talking About It Tuesdays hosted by Joanne


We've recently moved my mom south, out of my sister's home in PA where she's lived for the past six years, and into an assisted living facility. Safety is paramount when you're in your ninth decade and that was the tipping point for all of us in making this hard decision. By all of us I mean myself and my three siblings. We've had a loose plan knowing this might someday become necessary but not going to lie, reality hits harder than you might imagine. 

I'm not going to talk too much about the process because every family has to do what's right for them. I will just say my younger sister did her homework and knew all the questions to ask. We looked at many places in two different states and between the four of us saw each one in person. 

There are so many factors to consider coupled with a lot of emotion, so if a move like this is on your radar start visiting and collecting information now. Just know that nowhere is perfect and settling in takes time. For everyone. 

I have a mishmash of thoughts I want to put into writing but the mishmash is real. Hubs has asked me a number of times this month, 'What are you thinking? I can see the wheels turning." 

Turning but not really getting anywhere. 

So what am I thinking? 

I'm thinking about how difficult it is to reach a point in life where your decisions are not your own. Not where you live or if you drive or sometimes even what you eat. 

I'm thinking about how every member of a family has feelings about how best to meet the needs of an elderly parent and how emotions run high where love, sadness, and exhaustion coexist. I'm thinking about how much grace is required in those moments. Grace given, and also grace accepted. 

How sometimes we have to do hard things we wish we didn't have to do. 

How giving an elderly parent as much independence as they can safely handle is a good thing, but knowing when too much is too much is maybe the more important thing. 

I think about everything our parents once did for us, and how that memory helps us now do for them. 

How often we frustrated them, tested their patience, wanted our own way, didn't want to be told what to do because we were certain we knew best. Suddenly that gets flipped on its head and now you're the one digging deep for patience and a gentle tone. The one trying to give in a little whenever giving in is possible. 

How you learn the parent you've known all your life is still there inside the person who now needs a walker and some help remembering the life they lived. 

There is also, somewhere in the middle of all this thinking, the unsettling realization that one day you might be that person too. The one needing all the things you're now being asked to give. 

How you will likely buck and dig in your heels because you still feel like yourself, an independent capable person who cannot imagine being anything but. 

Except now you kind of can. 

And it's a little bit frightening. 

I think about the term sandwich generation and how apt that moniker is. I'm the filling and sometimes I feel squished. 

And sometimes completely overwhelmed with love for those doing the squishing. 

I think about how I don't have the energy I had even a decade ago, yet I still have opinions and wisdom and things I want to contribute. I still want to matter. Everyone does. 

I think about how time shrinks and expands at the same time and  how I want my children to have big beautiful lives, but not forget mine as it gradually but naturally will grow smaller. 

Mostly I think about how God holds each one of our lives in the palm of His hand. How He knows the number of our days from beginning to end, and how He walks beside us through every season we encounter. 

We are never forgotten. 
Never unseen. 

We are known and loved by the One who made us. 

21 comments:

  1. Really beautiful and true words! I feel the emotions you're going through as you penned your thoughts so well. You and your siblings are showing your mom so much love by taking care of her, making sure she's as safe and comfortable as possible for her. You've done good and you're doing good- quite an accomplishment as you're wrestling through emotions and other responsibilities that you have.

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  2. Oh man. I think the most important thing now is that the siblings stay close. I am sure it is a huge change for your PA sister. 6 years is a really long time but also I am sure she misses her presence. Every family has to do what works for them. I hope you have a sibling nearby to share the geographic load with you.
    My Dad was running 5 miles a day and then was gone 7 weeks later - he spent the last 7 weeks of his life in and out of ICU but all of that time at the hospital. Gosh, it was so hard, but he also didn't ever want to me the old frail man. My mom played bridge (and won!) and the next morning collapsed and was gone. We had had two summers worth of scares from her and didn't know what we would do when she needed care and she never did.
    I have many friends going through this now and empathize. You are in transition and you are definitely the filling. You might even say you are double stuffed as you have your mother, your daughters, and your grandkids. I hope that made you smile. Thinking of you.

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    1. My older sister lives about ten minutes from my mom now so she pops in most days. My niece is also nearby and visits. I'm about an hour and 20 so right now am going once a week. It has been a big change for my sister in PA though, but I think she's getting used to it. I'll see her more since she'll come visit more than in the past.

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  3. This is so beautiful. My mother's health declined so rapidly that I didn't have to walk this journey with her, but I know we will face this with my mother-in-law in the coming days. I think it will be a tough battle. You are so right to talk about how hard it is to find the right place, and that there is no perfect spot. I have a friend whose father is in memory care, and she is happy with the facility. Recently, they had a lot of staffing changes, and she feels like she has to completely relearn everything and make new connections with the staff. Even when you find the right place, there will be new challenges that arise. Your mother is so blessed to have 4 children who care so deeply for her!

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  4. Oh, Joyce. My heart goes out to you and all, including your dear mother. It is so hard. I remember crying in the attorney's office when I signed guardian papers for my grandmother, taking away her right to vote, to sign contracts, to drive. I hope to never have to do it again and have done all I can so that my loved ones will be feel better about those same decisions for me someday (if it comes to that). Bless you all, and faith keeps us grounded. Keep believing that! xo

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  5. Oh, my Joyce! This brought back sooooo many hard but precious memories for me. I've walked this road and it's been such an adjustment this past 16 months that I haven't had anyone to oversee their care since my Dad's death last January. I over saw his care in an assisted living facility for 14 years. What a journey with so many blessings and so many heartaches. May the Lord sustain you and your siblings during this time. Blessings abundant!

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  6. Dear Joyce, thank you for sharing your heart with us. I was able to remember every emotion and feeling you so beautifully expressed when my sisters and I were faced with making decisions for our dear mother's care. She needed handicap facilities we were not equipped to provide. I also did my homework, and with the assistance and knowledge of our son, found an excellent place not far from my house. Thankfully, Mother's mental faculties were still keen, so she helped make this move as comfortable as possible. Nevertheless, it was the most difficult decision I've ever had to make. Now, my husband and I, in our early and mid-eighties, are beginning to think about what might be ahead for us, and trying to make decisions that are impossible to make at this point. We love where we live, yet our daughter, who lives ten minutes away, is too busy with work and six grandchildren to be personally involved in our lives. Our son, who lives a thousand miles away, and is very faithful to stay in touch, has a huge job that requires a lot of travel and long hours, and his wife is a full-time babysitter for their grandchildren. All this to say, we have no direction or inclination, just feelings that change at a whim; therefore, we wait and trust that God's plan will be revealed when that time comes. We live by faith, trusting in His love and mercy and unfailing goodness.

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  7. You expressed 'all the things' so well. Makes me teary.

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  8. Beautiful words Joyce and I can imagine how difficult this stage is. Life is so precious and times like these remind us of that.

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  9. I can see where you are coming from. That could not have been easy with your mom. Mark's mom went into a facility several years ago. It's a lovely place only now she needs more care and she doesn't want them to move her. It would be in the same facility just she would be taken care of differently. It appears she is not taking her medications. She seldom goes down to eat. Her memory has changed a lot. Mark visited her in Texas before he went on to his fishing trip in Canada. Her one child, the only one who lives in Texas near her, is going to Colorado for 3 months. I will keep your mom in my prayers and praying for you too.

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  10. Joyce - such a beautiful post. I thought I commented this morning but my computer blipped right as I hit publish. If I am "double commenting," please forgive me. From June 2021 through June 2024, I watched my husband and his siblings take care of their mother. She was almost 99 when she died. It is a difficult time - praying for you and your siblings and your mama (plus your families, too!)

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  11. This is so beautifully written, thank you for sharing. It sounds like you are all doing the best for your mom. Sending love and hugs!

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  12. Aw, how wonderfully written. I'm glad you had so many choices! When it came time for my grandparents to need full time care it was nearly impossible to find ANY place for them even somewhat locally. My grandmother ended up about an hour away because my father worked at a local home and was able to get her in using his contacts/connections. Luckily it seemed like a great place and she as really happy since they had all sorts of animals and pets and sweet old retired nuns.

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  13. You articulated very well a hard transition of life. I've been through that with my mother, who passed at nearly 100 years of age in late 2024. The answers to the many questions are not especially easy. You do the best you can, and you and your siblings are doing exactly that.

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  14. Thank you Joyce,
    This is beautiful and full of truth from the heart.
    "I think about how I don't have the energy I had even a decade ago, yet I still have opinions and wisdom and things I want to contribute. I still want to matter. Everyone does."
    The above really spoke to me. My husband has an aunt who is really struggling to want to matter, she does not feel she does anymore because she is wheel chair bound. We do everything that we can to make her feel involved and that YES she matters.
    Thank you so much for sharing.
    Carla

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  15. I liked this, it made me feel somewhat emotional

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  16. Gosh, I love this rambling, stream of consciousness type writing. It reads as if you were just venting or sharing with me personally over a diet Coke. My parents made the decision to enter into a retirement community before they actually needed assisted living but it served as both and was a good place for them for about 8 years. Once my dad died, we had to move Mom several times and that was very difficult for everyone. It was all within the same city but I had begun looking at places out here in El Paso as we came out of Covid and knew Mom needed more care.
    It is so important to remember that everyone has feelings and opinions about this including the MOM!! And it all goes so much better if everyone remembers to speak with love and grace. My brother and sister and I did pretty well figuring things out for our very independent Mom when she no longer could be but it was tough with the 3 of us living miles apart. I am certain your mom will be very happy in her new home and will adjust well. We are so blessed that we never walk a minute of this life alone alone, aren't we?

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  17. You have such a beautiful way with words Joyce. Being the filling is not easy but knowing you, and if your sisters are anything like you, you will have not taken any of the decisions needed to get where you are now lightly, or without proper consideration, and always with your Mom's best interests paramount. Transitions are always hard, we don't like change. But we're also very adaptable.

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  18. Oh my goodness, Joyce! Your post touched me in BIG ways! Your thoughts summarize so many of the feelings. I've had over the past few years as we've said a quick good-bye to my mom (she was gone in 3 weeks following a grim diagnosis but she was ready to be with my dad once again) and then a longer one with my MIL (she faced Alzheimer's and decisions made after my FIL passed hit her hard). Then add in all the feels I had retiring and being an empty nester with one of our daughters moving further away than I hoped. You captured it all! I now have a friend who is blest to still have her mom with her, but they are on the same journey you've been on with your mom. I hope you don't mind if I share your post with her. Thank you for sharing such wisdom!

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    1. Very happy for you to share Laura. It's a challenging season in so many ways.

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  19. This is beautiful. There are so many thoughts, and so many wheels a-turning in my mind, too. My Dad was recently diagnosed with cancer and the roles almost immediately flipped from them being my primary support (as I still have young children), to me being their primary support. I feel like I've aged a decade in the two months since the diagnosis!

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