Federation Star - March 2021

Page 22

22

Federation Star

March 2021

Join Us for

"Triumph 2021 - Triumph of Memories" with Special Guest Stephen D. Smith, Ph.D.

JEWISH INTEREST

Caregiving during COVID – What not to say Aging Jewishly — What our traditions tell us about growing old By Rabbi Barbara Aiello

“M Dr. Smith is the Finci-Viterbi Executive Director of USC Shoah Foundation. He also holds the UNESCO Chair on Genocide Education, and is a founder of the U.K. National Holocaust Centre and the Kigali Genocide Memorial, Rwanda. We look forward to discussing with Dr. Smith a current project of the USC Shoah Foundation, "Dimensions in Testimony," which creates holographic images of Survivors for an interactive Q&A experience.

Our virtual Triumph 2021 program will also include an original “Curated Experience” section featuring commentary by our own SWFL Survivors and Museum community members. Triumph is our annual fundraising event benefiting our Student and Teacher Education programs. Sponsorship Packages are still available. All sponsors will receive recognition on event promotional materials, the Museum's website and during the Zoom program. For ticket and Sponsorship details, please contact Susan Suarez, President & CEO at Susan@HMCEC.org or call 239-263-9200. Visit our website for more information www.HMCEC.org. We look forward to your participation in this very special virtual evening!

975 Imperial Golf Course Blvd., Suite 108, Naples, FL 34110 239-263-9200 www.HMCEC.org Info@HMCEC.org

y brother and I made plans to have Mom move to assisted living. But then COVID-19 hit the nursing homes, so we kept Mom at home. My brother helps some, but I am Mom’s main caregiver. It’s been almost a year and I’m burned out, exhausted and on edge. My family and friends mean well, but some of the things they say — well, it’s clear they just don’t get it!” Shira K. Shira K. is not alone. Her words could have been said by hundreds, maybe thousands, of family members who, during the long months of the pandemic, provide the majority of daily care to an elderly family member. In fact, according to Vitas Health Care and other agencies and organizations, regardless of the COVID-19 crisis, “family members and close friends continue to provide daily care (to frail elderly men and women). That means that caregivers can be the frontline recipients of well-meant, but often misguided, commentary that hurts more than it helps.” Just ask Ann Brenoff, whose writing on the subject was nearly prophetic. Indeed, well before the pandemic took hold, Brenoff alerted readers to what has become an important issue for those who serve as caregivers. Writing for the Huffington Post six years ago (“A Dozen Things You Should Never Say to a Caregiver,” October 29, 2015), Brenoff highlighted 12 specific comments often made to caregivers that, for the most part, “won’t go over well.” These are the highlights of what caregivers wish others wouldn’t say.

“I could never do what you do!” Brenoff notes that no one knows when they themselves will be thrust into the role of caregiver, having to spring into action when a loved one needs help. Brenoff found that caregivers felt “whether you think you will be up to the task when your time comes is pretty irrelevant to someone already doing it.” A better alternative would be a kind compliment.

Wishing You & Yours All the Joys of the Passover Holiday May You Be Blessed with Good Health, Peace, Prosperity and Togetherness on Pesach and Always! Please come visit our

Garden of Remembrance

Hodges Funeral Home at Naples Memorial Gardens

“You’re so brave!” Caregivers who responded to Brenoff ’s survey said that courage has nothing to do with the care they give. Others said that assigning superhero status to caregiving is a way to create distance between family members and friends who might step back from helping because they’ve deified the caregiver to the point that they feel they could never measure up.

“If you ever need a break, just call me. Let me know what I can do to help.” Caregivers surveyed pointed out that a

vague comment is not as helpful as a specific offer. Like Shira, caregivers are often exhausted and burned out and would appreciate concrete help, such as, “I am Rabbi Barbara bringing dinner Aiello to your home. What night is best for you? Would you prefer chicken, beef or pasta?”

“You really must make time for yourself.” Most caregivers understand that balance in life is important. “We’re not martyrs,” Shira says. She agrees with most caregivers who ask for specificity. If a friend or family member notices that the caregiver has no personal down time, offer to provide her/ him with time and space. One caregiver says, “Buy a bag of groceries, shovel the snow, wash the car, walk the dog, sit with the patient [so that] the caregiver has a free hour or two, bring coffee and a newspaper, do the dishes, vacuum the house, clean the bathroom — the list is endless.”

“God never gives us more than we can handle.” The Jewish mystics, among others, taught that God is not the giver of trouble. For this reason, it is moot to affirm that God will not give you more trouble than you can handle. Instead, as Jews, we are taught that we work in partnership with the God of our understanding. In this partnership, based upon gratitude and faith, we are taught that we are not alone in our difficulties and that a working relationship with God will provide us with strength. Ann Brenhoff reports that, according to a 2015 survey from AARP and the National Alliance for Caregiving, approximately one in three Americans are providing care to someone who is ill, disabled or elderly. In that same study, 78% of the caregivers said they needed help. Thanks to the COVID-19 epidemic and its effect on an aging population, the challenges facing family caregivers is particularly acute. For caregivers like Shira, what we say and how we say it can make more of a difference than we might think. For 10 years, Rabbi Barbara Aiello served the Aviva Campus for Senior Life as resident rabbi. Her most popular columns are now published in her new book, “Aging Jewishly,” available on Amazon Books. Rabbi Barbara now lives and works in Italy, where she is rabbi of Italy’s first Reconstructionist synagogue. Contact her at Rabbi@RabbiBarbara.com.

525 11th Avenue North | Naples, FL 34108

239-597-3101

www.HodgesNaplesMG.com

For a continuously updated community calendar, visit www.jewishnaples.org.


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With students back at school, Chabad gears up for a new semester

2min
page 38

Shalom Naples Families!

1min
page 38

Garden of Arts provides hands-on learning

3min
page 37

Chocolate Seder

1min
page 37

Chabad Center update

3min
pages 36-37

Allow us to introduce ourselves

1min
page 36

How to best express gratitude during the pandemic

2min
page 36

What a year!

1min
page 35

Beth Tikvah update

2min
page 35

Temple Shalom events open to the community

1min
page 35

Hadassah happenings

2min
page 34

Let’s reclaim the America our founders imagined!

1min
page 33

Marching forward

3min
page 32

What does Freedom mean in 2021?

2min
page 31

Pasach

2min
page 31

The small things count

3min
page 30

Passover deconstructed

3min
page 30

FIDF launches new broadcast platform

1min
page 29

Virtual Passover cooking class with Debbie Kornberg

1min
page 29

Sarah live!

3min
page 27

Pastelito – Sephardic Kugel

5min
page 26

Holiday’s woes, D.C. universe stuff, Grammys and Diamond

4min
page 24

Caregiving during COVID – What not to say

4min
page 22

How Jewish women have led the way in America

3min
page 21

Required “reading” for daughters, mothers, grandmothers – and those who love them

3min
page 20

Ten timely tips for Zooming into the Book Festival

1min
page 18

Southwest Florida Jewish Pioneers series

1min
page 14

MEMBERS IN THE NEWS

4min
page 13

What makes a “good man” a hero of the Capitol siege or a hero of the Holocaust?

2min
page 12

2gs reflect on January 6

4min
page 12

WCA programs are Zooming along

4min
page 10

MCA unprecedented season marches on

3min
page 9

A Message from your Book Festival Co-Chairs

2min
page 8

Freedom

1min
page 8

Israeli innovation benefits mankind

1min
page 6

Can we speak with one voice?

5min
page 6

From our donors

3min
page 5

Virtual trip to the wonders of the Negev

1min
pages 4-5

Your support makes our new home possible

3min
page 4

The annual Jewish Community Day of Learning with evening bonus — a not-to-be-missed event

2min
page 3

Collier County Sheriff’s Office chief to speak on hate crimes

1min
pages 2-3

Day and Evening of Learning

1min
page 2

Spring and new beginnings

2min
page 1
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