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An Uncertain Inheritance: Writers on Caring for Family

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Thirty million people today care for ailing family members in their own homes—a number that will increase dramatically over the next decade as baby boomers enter old age, as soldiers return home from war mentally and physically wounded, as medical advances extend lives and health insurance fails to cover them. Offering both companionship and guidance to the people who find themselves caring for their intimates, An Uncertain Inheritance is a collection of essays from some of the country's most accomplished writers. Poignant, honest, sometimes heartbreaking, often wry, and funny, here is a book that examines caregiving from every angle, revealing the pain, intimacy, and grace inherent in this meaningful relationship.

304 pages, Paperback

First published November 13, 2007

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Nell Casey

7 books9 followers

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5 stars
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45 (45%)
3 stars
18 (18%)
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Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews
Profile Image for Masika.
49 reviews
August 8, 2008
Opend my eyes to the truth of actually having to constantly subject or avoid someone who is dying or needs immediate care. It made me realize the psychological demands being cared for have. I highly enjoyed the compilation from so many different perspectives. There were many aspects that crossed over from story to story. These stories were very sobering to the reality and truth of dying.
Profile Image for Marge.
274 reviews7 followers
January 8, 2009
As a longtime caregiver, I read this book hoping to find some comfort, but, I found the book a very disturbing reminder of much that I have already put behind me. Still, the writing is all vivid and some of it is searingly honest, and, all in all, I'm glad I read it. It's unsettling, though, definitely.
Profile Image for Crystal.
363 reviews8 followers
August 16, 2011
Collection of short stories about being a caregiver-- mother/child, spouse/spouse, child/parent, etc. Some were better than others, but nothing great.
Profile Image for Phyllis Searles.
154 reviews
October 30, 2015
I think anyone with a family or a friend, should read this book. It provides some incredible perspective and points of view many never get to consider. I might increase my rating.
702 reviews10 followers
February 27, 2020
This collection of essays contains powerful, emotional, vivid, personal, and talented writing. We are all going to leave this world at some point but often in our society we totally avoid the subjects of illness and death. I loved the frankness of these writers and I appreciated their vulnerability in sharing their challenging end-of-life experiences. Rarely have I read a collection where all of the entries are equally strong and powerful and yet so very different. From a mother losing her young child, to caring for family members with chronic conditions, to the journey through cancer, and the devastation of dementia, the challenges and suffering are widely different and yet there are elements of similarity. I was nurtured by these essays, finding comfort in knowing that others have walked similar paths to my own and thus I understand that I have never been alone. I grew from reading these essays, gaining compassion for conditions like autism, understanding the loss of autonomy that comes with being "the patient", and grasping the pain of watching the person you love have a personality change as a result of an accident or illness. A devastating, yet beautiful, collection that is not to be missed. There were many memorable quotes, but I believe this is my favorite:
"I've heard that it's perfectly natural to remember a dead loved one once or even several times a day for the rest of your life. Yet many people over time begin to feel indulgent for doing so. They begin to worry that it means they're not letting go, moving on with their lives. Much needless guilt and suppression can result. Ironically, at the same time, it's perfectly normal, after only a few short years, to begin to forget exactly what the loved one looked like at the end of life. You always remember the person's essence and personality, the spirit . . ." p. 162
Profile Image for Annie McKavett.
64 reviews
November 7, 2021
It's so nice to find honest portraits of caregivers and the thoughts we keep to ourselves and our therapists. It's a raw, unvarnished, inescapable mess which opens up the least desirable sides of humanity (as does any stressful ongoing event). Highly recommend for everyone, whether you want to find someone saying "me, too" or have been lucky enough to avoid caregiving thus far. We can wax poetic all day about the joys and rewards of caregiving, but ultimately it demands sacrifices few would volunteer for.
326 reviews7 followers
March 16, 2019
I was drawn into the experience of each author of these essays. I am glad there are so many essays and perspectives and grateful, too, for the broad range of experiences described. We will all, likely, give and all, likely, receive care of family members and friends. The sharing of experience is both poignant and useful. It’s amazing to have such good writing in the essays with all but one hitting home.
17 reviews
August 20, 2022
Well written, interesting range of writers.
First edition published in 2007.
Some of this is dated, but overall an insightful and
valuable read.
Profile Image for Sofija.
199 reviews1 follower
August 29, 2019
Some beautiful and powerful stories, but damn it was quite depressing.
Profile Image for Judy.
426 reviews
July 11, 2016
Really good book. Each short memoir was an interesting true story of being a caregiver or or being cared for.

Meaningful to me passages:

page 32 "My Other Husband" by Ann Harleman: "Now I can see that going into the nursing home not only saved Bruce's life but his spirit. And not only his but mine. At the time, though, there was no promise of this, or even hope of it.

There was the terrible aloneness of making the decision. I kept picking up the phone to call someone and talk it over, then realizing the person I wanted to talk to was Bruce.

There was emptying the house, dismantling twenty years of a life together. The day and a half I spent weeping while I unscrewed grab bars all over the house, feeling each room release Bruce and go slack.

There was the hunger strike Bruce went on his first day at Tockwotton, disconnecting his feeding tube and refusing to talk to anyone, even me.

There were the nights in my bare new apartment when I slept with the phone on the other pillow, so that I could meet Bruce in the ER whenever he had a crisis. And the nights when I didn't sleep at all, wondering what on earth I had done.

page 73 "Caring Across Borders" by Julia Alvarez: "In fact, that Shakespeare play, King Lear, has come to mean more and more to me as my family enters this caretaking stage of our lives. The old can be as demanding and peevish as children, and as with children, we must set limits in order to curb the understandable self-centeredness of those who are needy, often sick, lonely, and powerless. By the same token, compassion flows out to them. Do we haggle over how much they need? "O, reason not the need," King Lear cries out to one of his daughters who promised him everything but now quibbles over each thing he asks for. Though I've tried to be clear with myself about what I can reasonably give my parents, when I hear their frail voices on the other end of the phone, the heart floods with feeling, and I yearn to give myself over to them."

Page 74 (same story): "In fact it's my mother who more and more is the little girl with four mamas, each one trying to figure out how to be the best caretaker she can be. How to work in concert when the balance that is right for one sister might not work for another? No one can make that judgment for me, not even my husband, whose reasoned German Lutheran approach I've tried to emulate, only to end up dissolving into my own messy Caribbean self. What seems an unbearable sacrifice or too great a demand to one might be another's wish or desire or need. I recall how the third sister recently told my husband that she would be going down every few weeks to check in on my parents. My husband responded that there was no need to be a sacrificial lamb.

"That's insulting!" my sister told him. "It's my privilege to go down."

Where do I stand? Somewhere between these two -- I won't call them extremes but poles of how to take care of our viejitos.

Sometimes I am more Cordelia. Sometimes a chip off the old Latina familia."
25 reviews6 followers
November 24, 2008
This book is depressing, but it is supposed to be. It is compilation of short stories written by people who are required to care for loved ones who are aging and deteriorating, or suffering from a disability of some sort. If you are not currently caring for a loved one, this book is a picture into your future. It made me wonder how I will cope with the responsibility.
9 reviews
December 20, 2007
heart wrenching true life experiences written by writers who have been caregivers to loved ones. All the stories are different and the experiences are very personal. This book can help someone faced with illness or loss.
Profile Image for Michele.
80 reviews13 followers
July 17, 2008
some absolutely amazing heart-breaking stories including one by a korean-american guy caring for his father in florida. and an absolutely hilarious story by a lawyer/writer in new york about her mother.
Profile Image for Melissa.
816 reviews
February 26, 2009
Thoroughly sad (and seriously NOT for those who easily turn to contemplating their own mortality), but otherwise an excellent collection of essays on the grief, futility, and unceasing work of caregiving and living through a loved one's pain.
241 reviews
May 1, 2009
I liked the variety, ranging from care-givers to those receiving care, from family to friends to others, as well as the variety of styles of writing. Much of the book was painful to read, yet this is the reality of the subject. Perhaps the book tilted a bit much to the most difficult situations.
Profile Image for Candy.
1,531 reviews21 followers
November 22, 2011
Each of the essays brought up different aspect of giving or receiving care. "Planet Autism" made me think the most of any of the stories.
This book is not an easy read, but at some time most of us will either be a caregiver or need someone's care, so it is a timely topic that deserves attention.
27 reviews1 follower
February 2, 2008
Case histories of people dealing with loved ones who are dying and how they cared for them up until the end.
16 reviews
February 19, 2008
Great book. Essays about caregiving in different situations. Read the library copy but liked it so well I bought a used copy from Amazon
Profile Image for Courtney Workman.
15 reviews3 followers
July 4, 2008
This is a collection of stories about caregiving. It was a surprisingly engrossing read.
Profile Image for Martha.
113 reviews
April 25, 2012
Excellent, especially for those entering the world of the caregiver, or being cared for. Moving and insightful.
1 review
September 21, 2015
Excellent collection of memoirs that makes this book your friend, with real life examples of family caregivers
Profile Image for Jodi.
44 reviews1 follower
July 15, 2008
This is an absolutely amazing book.
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews

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