Friday, April 26, 2013

Looking at the "Sandwich Generation"


                                                    Statewide Meeting NASW 2012
                                                               Accepted Proposal



Alan S. Wolkenstein, MSW, LCSW
800 W. Dandelion Lane
Mequon, Wisconsin, 53092
262 243 5489


Title:
The View from My Window: Looking at the Sandwich Generation

There will be a time for every family in which they do not seem to know what is important to do and what is not. At other times, they know what is important to do, but are unable or unwilling to do so.1   Maybe, this is such a time for your intervention in behalf of the family…


Extended Abstract:
A significant component of any comprehensive and holistic health care assessment includes “Quality of Life” of patients and clients. The best of the bio-psychosocial models of care include a definitive and easily integrated psychological sciences (Social Work) evaluation and assessment of a client’s quality of life.
Among our elderly, such an assessment is especially necessary. Our ability to recognize, understand, empathize, and provide problem-solving experiences for and with them focuses on enhancing their attempts to successfully cope with the tasks of their age: regardless of illness, inhibited activities of daily living (ADL's), their continuing losses and grief experiences, and ongoing transformation as elders.

The Family Life Cycle, consisting of anticipated stages of family life, tasks by the family and its members to complete, and skills needed to accomplish these tasks frame our Quality of Life review.2

Families move through predictable stages by utilizing specific skills to accomplish appropriate tasks. Without the necessary coping and adapting skills, families may be forced to move ahead regardless of whether they completed their tasks or not. Many of these families become problematic and dysfunctional by not being able to really do well in any subsequent stage(s), and thereby become deficient in meeting individual family member needs, goals, and aspirations.

We had defined five initial stages of the family. Subsequent evaluation revealed that there may be more than five, but unlikely be less than five stages. Variations that alter stages and their tasks can include: severe family problems, permanent marital separation, divorce, widowhood, remarriage/blended families, and single parent-hood, late in life family development, alternative lifestyles, traumatic social/cultural events, war, depression, and natural disasters.3

Our session will focus on the stage that includes the interdependent components of the sandwich generation is called “The Transitional Years (Children becoming non-dependent to leaving home).
      Tasks: Launching children
                  Reevaluation of roles: evolution from parents back to partners as                
                  their primary roles
                  Possible career changes
                  Body changes
                  Learning/enhancing skills to cope and adapt to changing   
                  circumstances                  
                  Sandwich generation*

*The sandwich generation is an important facet of this stage of the family, for children are becoming more independent and elder-parents are becoming more dependent on their adult-children. This is potentially a time of very emotional and anxiety producing experiences. (Difficulties here spill over into other important areas and have a negative impact on achieving family tasks and on overall family stability). Not only for the elders themselves, but for their adult-children, who describe feelings of being "caught" by the differing and opposite needs of their parent(s) and their children.  They can perceive themselves as being emotionally unprepared and sometimes even feel inadequate in caring for both their parent(s) and their children: not only because of the difference in needs, but in their real or imagined lack of skills and experience-based wisdom to be effective.

The Pew Research Center offers the following numbers to highlight our discussion. One out of eight families (regardless of their own needs and coping concerns), with adult-children as parents, between the ages of 40-60 provide some form of care of their own aging parents. That is about 10 million of us!  In addition, 7 to 10 million provide assistance to their dependent parent(s) by long distance. And, that 65% of all home care assistance is still provided by families. Go Families!  

The National Alliance for Caregivers reports that over 43 million of us look after someone age 50 or older, and not necessarily a member of the immediate or extended family. That number has jumped almost 30% since early 2000. The issue is not that we do not care. We do care about and for our elders. Our challenges are more complicated and frequently difficult to fully understand: they generate the dynamics of this session.

Let us choose one loss and subsequent grieving issue for this session:  An emotionally tough and anxiety provoking conversation between aging and more seemingly dependent parent(s) and their adult children is the uncomfortable discussion of the probable need for living arrangement changes for their parent(s).
This need generally follows a number of potential-loss experiences by the parent(s). Loss of a partner, significant changes in health status, degrees of declining mobility, loss of income, changes in social status, financial setbacks, and loss of important family and friends due to death or moving away, are some of their losses of great significance. They respond with deep grieving to these losses, especially if there is no respite between them and little chance to try to re-balance their lives and cope with both their losses and their grieving.

 This may be the first time adult-children witness their parent(s) becoming afraid, anxious, and emotionally unsure of their own future. Elder-parents are facing a new world for themselves, one of different rules and expectations. It is also a world in which their dependence on their adult-children intensifies, and the adult-children may also share the same insecurity and anxiety. We know they may share feelings and emotions of anger, great sadness, and fear. They may soon come to realize that their lives will never be quite the same again, and suddenly, the future for all in the family is the “potential unknown”4.

The dynamic process of the need to consider selling a family home, with its myriad of memories and sense of earlier family stability, and then moving to a down-sized  apartment,  adult community, or assisted living facility is an excellent subject to reflect on. It is certainly not an existential experience in itself. It oftentimes follows a period of major losses by the parent(s) and emotional grieving that can tax both the elder parent(s) coping and adapting skills and the resiliency of their adult-children.
We will also offer a number of scenarios based on different individual/family styles of interacting and coping with potentially distressful situations.  We hope to outline a number of situations and then ask participants to act out the interactions, reflect on them, seek new hypotheses, and plan to incorporate important components into their skill set.

Ernest Hemingway once said “The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong in the broken places.” 5 While we believe some of us, but not all, are so negatively affected by our experiences, we also believe that the most difficult experiences can make us stronger than we were before. Sometimes, but not always, we need assistance from guides and mentors. Both elder-parents and their adult-children can benefit from consultation with an experienced Elder Family Therapist who has already traveled these same paths, or has much thoughtful experience in working with such families, and can cautiously guide a family through these difficult times. While we know it affects adult-children, their families, and their elder parents, intergenerational strength is possible as a response to its greatest struggles. However, the extended family must give itself what it needs to safely navigate through its difficulties. We believe that a family can reinvent itself through choosing a different path to follow, rather than accepting its course as inevitable. Then there is the opportunity for them all to grow, achieve goals and wishes, and grow stronger as a family.


Unfortunately, what can happen is that losses in elder continuity (the home and its sense of belonging), and losses in elder connections (important persons in their lives) impacts negatively on all other parameters of Quality of Life among our elders.6 It is not surprising that family conversations about the possibility of changing residences invoke such high degrees of emotionality for all of the family...


1.      Kidd, Sue Monk. The Secret Life of Bees. Penguin Books. New York. 2002.
2.      Wolkenstein, Alan S., Lawrence, Steven L., and Butler, Dennis J. Teaching Family: The Family Medicine Chart Review. Family Systems Medicine. 3(6), 1985, 171-178.
3.      Wolkenstein, A. and Butler, D. Quality of Life Among the Elderly: Self Perspectives of Some Healthy Elderly. Gerontology and Geriatrics Education. 1992, 12, 59-68.
4.      Small, Jeffrey. The Breath of God. West Hills Press. New York. 2011.
5.      Hemingway, Ernest. A Farewell to Arms. Scribner’s. New York, 1929.
6.      Wolkenstein, M. Evan. A Quality of Life Index. Unpublished Thesis. JCHS of the Bay. San Francisco, California.2011.


Ouline: 95 minute workshop
10 minutes:
Intro and reasons for attending session
35 minutes:
Exploring concepts of the Sandwich Generation
Case examples
35 minutes:
Development of new hypotheses of strategic interventions
15 minutes:
Feedback and Evaluation

Connection to Theme:
Sharing ideas of care of the Sandwich generation from this group and developing new treatment techniques energizes us by including the valuable experiences and skills of us all.

Style:
Highly interactive through use of adult education principles, experiential education, and reflective learning.

Learning Objectives:
  1. Exploring concepts of the Sandwich generation as part of the Family Life Cycle.
  2. Assessing the loss-grieving-transformation of our elders as a means to facilitate meaningful guided conversation between them and their adult-children.
  3. Appreciating the change of residence as not an existential experience, but following a series of losses and deep grieving of elders.
  4. Facilitating the use of self as a mentor and guide for both elders and their adult-children.
  5. Using case scenarios of differing individual/family dynamics to “practice the practice” of this work.
  6.  Learning to emotionally acknowledge that there is no magic wand to quickly making things easier for those in the Sandwich Generation.


Bio:
Professor Alan S. Wolkenstein, MSW, LCSW, is Clinical Professor of Family Medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health (Ret.), and Senior Educator and Consultant-Wolkenstein and Associates, LLC. .Alan is a veteran of over 30 years of teaching, education, and research in graduate medical education, and is nationally recognized as an expert in the education of physicians in human behavior and family dynamics. He also has a 40 year private practice in which he guides individuals and families struggling with health issues, dysfunctional relationships, and attempting to find balance and focus in a world that is often perceived as harsh, unpredictable, and seemingly unforgiving. Nevertheless, we all have “inner voices” that can direct us towards using our deepest inner wisdom to guide us through the challenges of life.





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