
picture: Archive Manon Meijer
Manon Meijer has lived and labored her whole lifestyles within the Netherlands. That adjustments when her mom, Silvia Marsera, born in Rincon, develops dementia. Meijer makes the life-altering resolution to drop at the back of the lifestyles she is aware of and progress to Bonaire along with her mom. “People with dementia want to return to their island,” she explains. On her mom’s birthplace, Meijer faces the 5 toughest years of her lifestyles occasion giving her mom the most productive conceivable ultimate years.
“After my father passed away, my mother began showing the first signs of dementia alongside her grief,” Meijer starts. To start with, her mom strikes into an assisted dwelling condo, the place aid is akin by way of. However her mom’s situation worsens, and she or he begins reminiscing extra steadily about her early life. Meijer makes a decision to progress to Bonaire with and for her mom. “The care in the Netherlands may be very good, but there’s nothing like growing old in a familiar environment.”
Proper progress
The proceed to Bonaire is grueling; at the airplane, her mom turns into utterly unresponsive because of pressure. “Great start,” Meijer thinks. However when they begin on the people house in Kralendijk, it temporarily turns into unclouded that they made the fitting progress. “She felt so at ease there; it was really her home.” At that date, her mom was once nonetheless cellular and talkative. “I talked to her a lot, gave her newspapers to read. I took her everywhere with me, but I could also leave her alone for a while without any problems.”
Two years after, Meijer returns in short to the Netherlands – her first date clear of her mom. She leaves her mom’s serve within the hand of others. Then again, this finds in probably the most dramatic approach how the most important the non-public consideration is. “She suddenly deteriorated completely.” Her mom may just now not exit or talk. “The vacation feeling disappeared quickly.” Then her go back to Bonaire, her mom began to support slowly once more, however was once by no means the similar. Taking good care of her turns into more and more hard.
Channels
“There is help available, but it’s hard to find. You have to know about all sorts of channels. There isn’t a clear resource for caregivers that lists all the support options clearly, indicating where to get them. How is it possible that I only learned about the existence of a Caregiver Foundation after my mom passed away?” Meijer wonders.
Picture: Manon Meijer
“The last six months, I really couldn’t handle it anymore; it became so overwhelming,” she recollects. Meijer advises someone who desires to change into a nanny to create a listing in walk of family who can aid when issues get difficult. “When you suddenly become a caregiver, you don’t know what you’re getting into—and maybe that’s a good thing. But once you’re in it, it’s too late to start looking for help. You’re just trying to survive.”
‘Call me’
Being a long way from house, Meijer didn’t have buddies or people round to help her all the way through her caregiving proceed. “My mother’s sister was the only one who said, ‘Manon, you can always call me,’” she stocks with gratitude. “That makes all the difference.”
Latter hour at Pentecost, the surviving ended when Meijer’s mom gave up the ghost. Best next may just Meijer mirror on that length. “Caregiving changed me as a person,” she says filled with conviction. “I now actively seek out positivity. I do things that make me happy and practice gratitude.” She feels extremely robust, mentally. “Caregiving is the hardest job in the world. If you’ve survived that, you can handle anything.”
Tales, field, eco-resort
Nowadays, Meijer makes use of her power and revel in to recommend for caregivers and help them. She is operating on a stock that includes tales of caregivers and has based De Huiskamer (“The Living Room”), a web-based field for caregivers. Meijer believes reputation for caregivers’ paintings is particularly notable. “We do incredibly important work. If we weren’t here, what would happen? The people who need care would suffer, or they’d be much less happy in nursing homes. I think our society would become harder, harsher, and more difficult. Plus, we save the government a lot of money.”
Meijer now lives on the people house within the kunuku similar Rincon. “I didn’t know what I was getting into, but luckily, I fit well with Bonaire. I love the tranquility.” She lately works in schooling, however her dream is to begin an eco-resort for overworked caregivers on her detail. “That way, they can take a break and, for a change, be the ones cared for.”