Showing posts with label You CAN Thrive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label You CAN Thrive. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

15 Scriptures that Inspire Us to Live Boldly for God



When our days are gray, there's nothing like God's Word to remind us of God's strength and comfort. When we remember all He is and all He does for us, we are inspired to trust Him and to live boldly for Christ. Refresh and embolden your day with these fifteen verses from the Bible. (All Scriptures are taken from the New American Standard Bible.)

The Lord is my strength and song,
And He has become my salvation;
This is my God, and I will praise Him;
My father’s God, and I will extol Him.

-Exodus 15:2

I have set the Lord continually before me;
Because He is at my right hand, I will not be shaken.

-Psalm 16:8

The Lord is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer,
My God, my rock, in whom I take refuge;
My shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.

Psalm 18:2

taste and see that the Lord is good;
How blessed is the man who takes refuge in Him!

-Psalm 34:8

Cast your burden upon the Lord and He will sustain you;
He will never allow the righteous to be shaken.

-Psalm 55:22

In my trouble I cried to the Lord,
And He answered me.

-Psalm 120:1

On the day I called, You answered me;
You made me bold with strength in my soul.

-Psalm 138:3

The name of the Lord is a strong tower;
The righteous runs into it and is safe.

-Proverbs 18:10

Behold, God is my salvation,
I will trust and not be afraid;
For the Lord God is my strength and song,
And He has become my salvation.

-Isaiah 12:2

The Lord is good,
A stronghold in the day of trouble,
And He knows those who take refuge in Him.

-Nahum 1:7

Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.
-Matthew 11:28

Looking at them, Jesus said, With people it is impossible, but not with God; for all things are possible with God.”
-Mark 10:27

Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your heart be troubled, nor let it be fearful.
-John 14:27

Casting all your anxiety on Him, because He cares for you.
-1 Peter 5:7

Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have its perfect result, so that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.
-James 1:2-4


Monday, March 7, 2016

Sort It Out: Triage in Caregiving






Not long ago, Carole Bradley Bursack of Aging.com posted “10 Caregiver Confessions: Secrets We Aren’t Proud Of,” in which she listed ten “non-angelic” thoughts she had heard caregivers express over the years. They are the dark confessions of people under stress.

Loving, devoted, committed people get burned out caring for their loved ones. 


It doesn’t make them evil. It makes them human.

Is it possible to survive and even thrive as a caregiver? I believe the answer is, “Yes.”


After we received the call about Kevin’s accident, we drove through the night from Idaho to meet him in Calgary. Shortly after we arrived, we had to fight back a push for euthanasia. He was on life support and needed surgery to stabilize his spine and provide an access point for the tube into his airway. Until the surgery, he had to have the tubes in his mouth. After surgery, the tube to the ventilator was attached to a tube in a hole in his neck, called a tracheostomy.

He was flown back to the United States for rehabilitation and nearly died twice before making it to rehab. In rehab, Kevin learned how to live in his new body. We learned how to care for him. We went through an intensive program, because we had to convince the hospital we could care for him at home. This hospital had never released a person with this high of a spinal cord injury home. 

They told us in the beginning it would be “impossible” to care for him due to his fragile condition and high medical needs.


For us, there was no doubt. We would be taking him home.

During rehab, he surprised the doctors by gaining back some function and feeling. Eventually, he was able to return home to live. Although he gained back more than was first expected, he still was mostly disabled.

He came home on life support and required 24-hour care. At first, the state of Idaho provided nursing care for him under the Katie Beckett program. After two years, when he turned 21, the program ended for him, and we became his full-time caregivers.

I quickly realized why we were told at the rehab hospital that it would be “impossible” to care for him at home. Everything fell into pieces around us as we spent all day and all night, every day, keeping Kevin alive. Emotionally and physically, we were soon exhausted.

I knew that if our lives centered around Kevin and his care alone, we weren’t going to make it. We were committed to keeping him at home, but we had to do something differently.

So I began to employ the principle of triage. Now, I wasn’t a nurse at the time. This was something I did instinctively at first.

According to Taber’s Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary, the term triage comes from the French and denotes “sifting” or “sorting.” Keep those words in mind. They are important words to remember. It is thought to have been developed during the Napoleonic Wars and further developed during World War I by French doctors.

The medical definition of triage is enlightening:


1:  The screening and classification of casualties to make optimal use of treatment resources and to maximize the survival and welfare of patients.

Although triage originated in the military as a way to allocate scarce resources on the battlefield, today it has been expanded for use in disasters and emergency rooms. 

Triage has evolved into sophisticated models but still strives to address the dilemma of how to allocate scarce resources in urgent circumstances in a way that is both fair and compassionate. These models are based upon the so-called “primitive” model, in which patients were usually divided into one of three categories:

Category 1. Those who will not survive, even with treatment.
Category 2. Those who will survive without treatment
Category 3. Those whose survival depends upon treatment

Out of those three categories, who is going to get treatment first when catastrophe strikes and resources are scarce? 

Imagine being one of the first responders on an earthquake scene and the ambulances haven’t arrived yet. 


You find three people in the rubble. One person is obviously dying. You do what you can to make him comfortable and move on to the next person. This second person has a superficial scrape. Again, you make him comfortable and move on. The third person requires your immediate care to live.

This is the one you treat first, because he is the one whose survival depends upon you.

I love this comparison. When you have gone through a catastrophic illness or injury with a loved one, you feel like you have been on a battlefield. Life literally becomes a daily fight for survival.

But I think we’re made for more; not just to survive life’s challenges, but to conquer them.


Life is a battlefield. Your loved one is the wounded. You are the scarce resource.

Now let’s take this and direct to the sorting and sifting of life’s issues in order to learn how to care for your loved one, your other relationships and duties, and yourself without falling apart.

Remember Tabor’s definition of triage as a way to maximize survival and welfare? 

This is our goal in “sorting” out our lives according to a system of priorities. Remember, we are not deciding who lives and who dies. We are applying this system to prioritize our lives.

When we first brought Kevin home from the hospital, our goal was survival. But as the years have gone by, we have come to a place where I can honestly say we’re happy. We’ve moved beyond mere survival to a place of well-being.

Sometimes people ask us how we’ve made it so long caring for Kevin. My first response is that we have been granted the strength by the grace of God. Remember that they told us it would be “impossible” to care for Kevin at home. Through God’s grace and prioritizing our lives, we have been able to accomplish “the impossible” every day for nearly two decades.

But I also know it has been the result of a daily process of learning to sort out our lives.

So how do we employ triage as caregivers? 


Let’s take those three categories and use them to “sort” or “sift” out our lives:

1. Those situations that cannot be salvaged, no matter how much time and energy we invest in them.
2. Those situations that will resolve themselves without our help.
3. Those situations for which we are uniquely qualified and which will only improve with our attention and resources.

We are only human. We can’t waste our energy, time, and tears on those things which are beyond our control (category 1) or which will resolve by themselves (category 2). The trick is to know which is which!

Here’s my formula:

1. I made sure Kevin isn’t the center of my world, even though his care needs are extensive. Kevin felt very guilty about what he had done to our lives. That was too much pressure for any one person to bear. For our family, we established our faith as our center. That means we are all serving something beyond ourselves. It gives us a reason to work together toward a common goal. It eased Kevin’s guilt and gave us a sense of destiny and purpose. Our situation became a vehicle for moving forward in hope instead of idling at a dead end filled with regrets.

2. Next I “sorted” through our lives and decided how I was going to spend my energy and time. I knew that Kevin would die if he were sent to an institution, because his medical needs demand one-on-one monitoring day and night. I thought about what that would cost me and made the conscious decision to put my energy into helping him live. My next priorities were my husband, children, and grandchildren –my most important relationships. 

3. I have tried over the years to keep a solid boundary around those priorities. As Kevin has improved (He’s off the vent on days now and can move and even walk with help), I have been able to add new activities, such as writing and speaking. But these aren’t in the same category for me. I know I can cut them out should our situation change.

4. I understand that my health is also in the third category. Because of this, respite is crucial for us. I know it isn’t that simple. We always hear people telling caregivers to “take care of yourselves.” That’s easier said than done. Getting respite for most us is difficult.

Sometimes respite is more of a change in attitude than a change of scene. When the weather’s nice, my husband and I will sit out on the deck with cheese and crackers and pretend we are at a street café in France. We’ll have coffee in the breakfast nook and ignore the fact that it’s noon and Aaron just awakened from a night of watching Kevin. Because we love the ocean, we painted our bedroom in colors that remind us of the Caribbean and put an aquarium in there. It was a struggle at first to learn how to enjoy life again without feeling guilty. But that came, too.

5. After I determined what priorities are non-negotiable, I experienced a sense of freedom in knowing that it wasn’t up to me to take care of everything that came my way. I began to sift through the other events in my life and choose those things upon which to spend my energy. I learned to allow other people to make us dinner in our house (I used to have a hard time turning my kitchen over to others). I tried not to worry if the toilets had mold in them and someone stopped by unannounced for a visit. I also learned to speak up and ask others not to come over if they were sick. Drawing boundaries helps us stay sane.

6. I gave myself permission to say no to things that I don’t have the energy for. I have discovered that they will survive without me.

7. I try to save my heart for the truly important things in life and not waste emotional energy and tears on things I can’t change.

Caregivers are nurturers. 

It’s in our nature to fix everything. We keep going until we crash.

But by sifting through the many demands on our time and resources, we can sort out what’s really important and live beyond simple survival. 

In medical triage, patients are periodically reassessed for possible reclassification.
It’s crucial that we do this, too. By periodically reassessing our roles as caregivers, we can forestall potential problems, keep our loved ones safe, and stay centered.

We can maximize our survival and our welfare and the welfare of those we love.





Wednesday, July 8, 2015

You CAN Thrive

"That you, being rooted and grounded in love, may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge, that you may be filled up to all the fullness of God." -Ephesians 3:17-19


Rooted in Love: You CAN Thrive

 Practical Tips for Successful Caregiving


When our son was paralyzed in a fall back in 1997, we were told it would be “impossible” to care for him at home. We were determined that he wasn't going to a nursing facility, though. He came home with us after his discharge from the hospital, and he has been at home ever since. We are thankful for the support of family, friends, and the medical community which have helped make the “impossible” a reality. Every day we are thankful to a faithful God who has taught us this:

“For with God nothing will be impossible.” – Luke 1:37 NKJV

“Possible,” however, doesn’t mean “easy.” Caregiving is a marathon, an ongoing investment in the life of another human being. Since our son’s medical needs require twenty-four-hour supervision, it has been imperative that we develop strategies to cope with the pressure.

Over the years, I’ve learned some vital practical tips for keeping sane. Today I want to share one tip that has helped me.

Simplify your home


I know that's lots easier to say than to do. Especially if you're a new caregiver, you may feel like you have the energy for anything else. But life beyond caregiving does go on. Along with caring for your loved one, there are bills to pay, birthdays to remember, and appointments to make. I recently had to spend hours digging through twenty years of non-digital photos for a memorial service for a relative. Nothing was in the right place. Nothing was dated. What a mess! It was my reminder that a couple of simple changes could have kept this from happening.

Hopefully, I learned my lesson.

Trust me. Life is easier if you get organized.

1. Use what’s on hand. 

Get shoe boxes (or plastic tubs if you want to invest in them). Label them “Pics,” “2015 Receipts,” etc. Set them in a place where they will be easily accessible. When you run across a receipt, photo, or anything else you need to save, throw it in the right box right then and there.

2. Label photos immediately. 

Take the extra 30 seconds to write a date and any other pertinent info on the back of non-digital photos before you toss them into the abyss of a box. Believe me, there will come a time someone will thank you for that.

3. File, file, file. 

Place important papers and medical information in file folders and 3-ring binders. Don’t turn this into a project. Just grab some folders at the store, label them, and put them in a drawer or box that you can keep handy. The important thing is to get into the habit of tossing things in the right place right away, before they get lost in a pile or, God forbid, thrown away.

If you’re tech savvy, you can take screenshots or digital pics of bills and papers and file them digitally. Be sure to back them up on a system like the cloud, external hard drive, or flash drive.

The important thing is to know yourself. Don’t set up a system that you’re not going to use. I’m old-school, and that’s why I love using file folders and boxes. It’s so easy to just pitch them in their proper place. But do what works for you.


4. Communicate. 

Keep a large calendar in the kitchen with a pen and sticky notes nearby. This way, family members post their appointments and events on the calendar so everybody knows what’s going on for a particular day. 


Let's get started!


Just doing these things should help relieve the mental burden of trying to coordinate a home and caregiving duties. We'll be sharing more as we explore how to survive - and even thrive - as caregivers.