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A lot of the people I work with (clients/customers) are getting older and it's sad to see how many of them struggle with simple tasks but that's old age for you and it happens. It's not just the physical stuff like cleaning the rain gutters but the mental stuff like completing paperwork. This is made harder by the fact that so much business stuff is done almost exclusively online, just imagine an 80 or 90 year old trying to mess with an app or e-sign or whatever.

Some of them don't have anyone to help, or at least they don't think that they do. Be the person they can trust and rely on for stuff like that.

Paperwork, mail, bills, memos, computer stuff, and of course physical tasks like taking the trashcans out to the curb, shoveling snow, etc.

It's easy to overlook and we all get caught up in our own busy lives but please take a moment and think about the people in your life that can use help. Maybe a parent or grandparent, or maybe even an elderly neighbor.

And if you consider yourself a trustworthy person, all the more reason you need to do this because in your absence, these old people might resort to someone else who *isn't* trustworthy and will take advantage of them (squat in their home, steal from them, abuse them). Occupy that space in their lives to prevent it from being occupied by someone that will do them harm.

And yes, sometimes it will be a pain in the ass. But they are basically like kids, but older. Easily confused, physical incapable, maybe incontinent, and more so than at any point in their lives they need your patience and compassion.

Also, if you have someone getting up in years but they are still "with in", then start getting things lined up in advance. Prepare for what to do next if they die, or if they simply become mentally fatigued and can't keep up anymore. There's this gray area between mentally sharp, and brain soup and in that gray area a lot of people aren't sure what to do. Do you help and risk offending them? Do you wait for it to get undeniably bad?

Talk to them. And set up dedicated alternative points of contact that can be used in the event they start to struggle with basic tasks. So for example, their CAP/accountant, their insurance agent/company, their mortgage company, the utilities, etc. Reach out to all these parties and set things up so that your elderly friend doesn't have a problem. If something happens, you or whoever you designated can step in and help them out.
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11 comments:
BlackPillBot on scored.co
9 months ago 7 points (+0 / -0 / +7Score on mirror ) 1 child
It’s wild how fast it happens too. Unfortunately, most people die twice after retirement. Once the day they retire, and then when they expire.
Rumor_HasIt on scored.co
9 months ago 4 points (+0 / -0 / +4Score on mirror ) 1 child
Ive heard the avg is 3-7 years. But then again, not Everyone Retires at 65. 💁🏼‍♀️

Body in Motion, Stays in Motion 😉
BlackPillBot on scored.co
9 months ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
Agreed
EyesSewnShut on scored.co
9 months ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror )
Fuck the elderly. The most entitled and prosperous generous in history.
PointyStick2 on scored.co
9 months ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
Thats what you get for aborting your children for "free love", taking pills, etc.

There are 1 million abortions per year, or about 20% of all births (and that's just the documented ones, not the "morning pill after" abortions).

These people abort 20% of their future population and then wonder why nobody is there to help them when they're old.

Hypocrites
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
9 months ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
Yeah, I help my elderly neighbour out on a weekly basis with various things.

He's got a ton of kids (and grandkids) all over the place but none of them will help him because he's a piece of shit.

I still help him though. Not because I care about him, per se, but because of how much a pain in the ass he'll be to me and everyone else in the building if I don't.

What I don't do is feel bad for him. He's a Boomer, through and through, totally ungrateful, totally inconsiderate, and now his body is slowly but surely shutting down, trapping him in the mess he made throughout the course of his life.

I think we have a duty, as Whites, to care for our elderly but, fuck me, if this generation aren't completely undeserving of it.
Niemo on scored.co
9 months ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
I absolutely disagree. Do not waste your time doing nice things for old entitled people to take advantage of you. This doesn't apply for your own family and close friends, as you have a duty to help them as they have a duty to help you.

But the average old person is isolated and stupid about things because they do it to themselves. They are super proud and entitled mostly, so don't waste your time trying to help old people that have turned their backs on their own kids. That's the price of isolation and living apart from your family as you get older, you get victimized because you are out of touch and mentally weaker. It's a lesson to keep your family close
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
9 months ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
I get what you're saying (see my other comment) but I view it more as making myself a better person, rather than serving them. If I can take care of someone as shitty as a Boomer, I can take care of anyone.

Also, there are perks. Boomers spent their entire lives having their stupid, selfish, ill-informed opinions catered to. Now that they're old and have to rely on strangers, there's no reason no to disabuse them of their BS. They can only politely listen to me pilling them on Jews, governments, and foreigners, or find someone else to help them.

Niemo on scored.co
9 months ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
Its not that boomers are shittty as a demographic, but its more like don't throw pearls before swine, it doesn't make you a better person. Take care of the old within your group that actually give back. Stop giving charity to random old people just because they are old.

Also they don't care what you have to say, usually. The ones that do listen and stay active with younger people usually have plenty of family they are on good terms with. You're stuck with the isolated old ones that are there usually by their own actions.

I take care of tons of old people and these are my experiences.
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
9 months ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
Not random, a neighbour. I make it a point to take care of people close to me physically (my family all split up across the continent to better serve mammon) under the basis that, if I don't, they'll make my life harder anyway.

As for changing minds, I've got him voting my way (might not do much, but that's all he can do), and he's completely turned on immigrants since I met him. I think there's a difference between taking care of old people because it's your job (they know you can't just leave) and doing it solely because you decide to do it.
Niemo on scored.co
9 months ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
Sounds like a friend then. Carry on.
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