Welcome to the Misadventures of Widowhood blog!

Welcome to my World---Woman, widow, senior citizen seeking to live out my days with a sense of whimsy as I search for inner peace and friendships. Jeez, that sounds like a profile on a dating app and I have zero interest in them, having lost my soul mate of 42 years. Life was good until it wasn't when my husband had a massive stroke and I spent the next 12 1/2 years as his caregiver. This blog has documented the pain and heartache of loss, my dark humor, my sweetest memories and, yes, even my pity parties and finally, moving past it all. And now I’m ready for a new start, in a new location---a continuum care campus in West Michigan, U.S.A. Some people say I have a quirky sense of humor that shows up from time to time in this blog. Others say I make some keen observations about life and growing older. Stick around, read a while. I'm sure we'll have things in common. Your comments are welcome and encouraged. Jean

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Privacy

 

 "Privacy is not about hiding something. It's about being able to control how we present ourselves to the world." 

Bruce Schneier

Let’s talk privacy. What’s too much? What’s too little? Does it matter who controls your privacy or lack there of? What do you do when you are overwhelmed and need more privacy or on the flip side, you are lonely and longing for a conversation with someone other than a supermarket cashier?

My privacy was just invaded by city inspectors on a mission to find faulty overhead sprinklers in our independent living apartment buildings. I have twelve overhead sprinkler in my 1,000 square foot unit and this was our second, annual inspection. At least the two inspectors and the maintenance man didn’t stay long. They look to make sure no one had painted them or damaged them and in my case last year they made me move some stuff off the top shelf in the closet that was too close to a sprinkler head. Someone else said they had one that fell off the ceiling when it was inspected and they wrote up a maintenance request ASAP. We were told they’d start on the top floor and work their way down to the first floor where I live, but I’ve learned by experience that that rarely ever happens when they do mass maintenance projects. I’m the first apartment in the first building and inspectors and outside contractors seem to be programmed to start with me. This matters because even if I wasn’t home, they will let them in. Even if I was home and in the shower or on the toilet or getting dressed, they’d let themselves in. I don’t fall for that trick anymore. I’m up and dressed at an ungodly hour and am glad to have it over with by the time I’d normally be rolling out of bed. 

Last week it was our annual fire alarms testing and that day is dreaded by one and all, especially for people with pets, who have learned to ship them off to daycare or a groomer until the day over. The week before that it was our annual smoke alarms that got inspected which is time consuming. They have a smoke creator thingy on a long pole that they hold up over the smoke alarms and thank goodness they know how to keep the smoke away from the sprinkler heads. Other mass maintenance projects include them coming around to replace batteries. We have them in our key locks, our hand-free kitchen faucets and the thermostats. Another mass maintenance day has the maintenance department changing the filters in our dishwashers, washing machine and a hidden one in our clothes driers---no one knew they have two! Our furnace filters they can change from the hallway. With all the above maintenance and inspection days we’re told in our morning emails a few days ahead and today’s email announced we can’t use our clothes washer or dish washer next Wednesday morning because our boilers are getting inspected. I can see why they do all this stuff in October---because that’s when we all moved in---but really wish they’d spread them out more. Keeping my place spic-and-span for so many weeks on end makes me feel like I live on a sound stage, like someone at any moment could yell, “Action!” and the place must look perfect.

Having lived in single family homes my entire life, it’s a two-edged sword having no control over inspection dates and maintenance workers. Some people do try by making sure their apartments are tagged on their records as DO NOT ENTER WITHOUT THE RESIDENT PRESENT! And it sends out a message that you don't trust them. But all that does is put your maintenance requests lower down on the list. My record is listed as, “Don’t enter before 11:00 without calling ahead” but our guys often ignore that and apologize for forgetting to call. The other edge of the sword is having a maintenance department that takes care of stuff. What ever happens, they can and will fix it---from unplugging toilets to hanging pictures to putting IKEA furniture together to getting your WiFi connected.

This is a long wind up to the topic of lack of privacy that happens down in the Assisted Living or Memory Care buildings. My brother complains about not having any privacy and who can blame him. The way the rooms are set up your back is to the door whether you’re in bed of sitting in your La-Z-Boy and every half hour the staff comes in to check on him---all day long and at night. Assisted Living and Memory Care residents can’t take walks or sit outside alone and they eat most of their meals together, only eating in their rooms if they don’t feel well or there is Covid in the building. When my brother talks about moving it’s the lack of privacy and lack of control over his comings and goings that is at the heart of his unhappiness. 

But I’m not in Memory Care or Assisted Living now so I try to resist borrowing trouble from the future which has been a life-long flaw of mine that I’ve tried turning into a silk purse. (The pig’s ear thing into a silk purse? I guessing you have to be old to know that idiom.) Instead of owning up to borrowing trouble I tell myself I’m a long range planner and trouble shooter and I’ve already decided I need to buy a privacy, divider screen to dress behind for if and when I get moved on down the line to the Assisted Living or Memory Care building. Or is up the line? It would be down in terms of losing personal freedoms and up the line for the amount of care I’d need. Either way I have eleven months to enjoy my inspection-free privacy and I was going to celebrate that today....and then I turned on the world news. How silly my 'privacy post' seems, now, given how many people no longer have homes or ways to protect them from the horrors of war.

Until Next Wednesday. ©

* Is anyone else having trouble with google.com not allowing you to upload photos? I keep getting a message that I need to turn on my cookies. If you see a picture at the top I was able to figure it out after a week of trying.

 

30 comments:

  1. I really appreciate you sharing what your life is like. Thank you.

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    1. Thank you for reading here, but what I'm really doing is exercising my brain and trying to keep computer literate.

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  2. Good for you! 11:00 am is the earliest that I am up for interacting with others. Glad all the annual checks will be finished soon. What a safe environment and they do all the remembering! I hear Google is going to be upgrading in the near future ... maybe the trouble with posting photos is the start? Thanks again for blogging!!

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    1. I think I got the upgrade and it is still giving me trouble with photos. Sometimes these things work themselves out with time and I hope that true with this glitch because we have an event coming up that I planned on doing a photo heavy post with.

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  3. (Doggone it, I hit "publish" by mistake. Sorry.) I don't think I've ever thought about the loss of privacy in a CCC/Memory Center/Assisted Living. The closest I've come is when I'm hospitalized. Oh my, just when you think you might fall asleep, a medical professional comes in. We're thankful for their care, but gosh, it wears you out!!

    I appreciate the way you bring things full circle, Jean. Your last sentence says everything. No matter what we're facing, it probably will never compare to what people are enduring in the Middle East.

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    1. They always say you loss all sense of pride and privacy in a hospital. I think in assisted living and memory care you still have the pride. That's my sense anyway.

      It's by the grace of God that we weren't born in places that are not facing hardship because of wars, earthquakes, floods or fires. We as a nation can't forget that and turn our backs on those just trying to survive.

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  4. This is interesting. I sometimes wish people would come to check stuff I either ignore or didn't know needed checking in the first place. I figure I gave up 95 percent of my privacy when technology evolved and I decided I'm "my name," have a blog and do FB. But there are a few limits! I understand the memory care thing -- it's a double edged sword.

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    1. I know what you mean about having limits on what you blog about. As much I blog about my life, there are things I keep to myself.

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  5. It's always a tradeoff, isn't it? In cyberspace you trade some privacy for convenience, like allowing cookies so that you can move more easily and quickly through the Internet. As we age we give up some privacy for safety and security, as in the case of your inspections and your brother's wellness checks.

    I'm a private person in that I don't like to splash my entire identity and life all across the Internet or in real life. The latter made me mysterious and intriguing to my students, who hung on every detail about me they could get. A vehicle like facebook is a nightmare to me; they'd all find me. Ugh.

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    1. I know a few teachers in my offline world and they'd don't do social media because their students would find them. Stuff shared online could get you fired in some professions so why take that change?

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  6. This maintenance routine sounds nice to me as you don't have to do anything and all of your appliances, etc. are taken care of. I'm sure your place is always clean enough so I wouldn't fuss about cleaning up for them.
    I can see a picture at the top of your post so I guess you figured it out! Good job! Technology can be so frustrating at times!

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    1. It is nice not to have to worry about maintaining stuff. It's one of the reasons why I moved to a CCC. The inspections are an annoyance that I can live with for the piece of mind.

      I tend to get messy when I'm working on a project. I swing from that and what I call 'stage set ready' and always have. My entire life. One of my earliest memories of my dad is of him complaining that he couldn't finish an entire cigarette without me emptying the ashtray half way through.

      The picture thing is still not worked out. I had to 'trick the system' to get this one in at that top and it's not following through on my side bar. It's frustrating the heck out of me for all the time I've wasted on it.

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  7. I am a very private person yeah workmen or should that read workpeople need to come into our homes at times and many feel they need to be present i use to feel the same till a tree came through our roof and we could not be here when workpeople came and went for days while we were not home and since then I have become less concerned over such things.

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    1. I figure the maintenance men who work here go through background checks so I'm not worried about that sort of thing and the outside contractors are always escorted by the staff, so are never left alone for these inspections.

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  8. That's a lot of maintenance tasks. :-) Glad to get them behind you, I'm sure. I am like you and would want to set a time to limit the visits, although the mornings when I have to get up earlier, I do get more done. lol.

    As for borrowing trouble from the future, I'm an expert. It's a lifelong task to break that habit for me.

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    1. A few people here are so afraid of the cleaning ladies and maintenance stealing from them it's crazy. I know that sort of thing does go on but they get back ground checked thoroughly here.

      Welcome to the Borrowing Trouble Club LOL

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  9. The only thing that really annoys me is the fire alarm testing. Of course I want the system to be working, but gracious: when they set those things off, it's time to go elsewhere. Poor Dixie Rose used to quiver under the bed when one took place -- and the number of howling dogs was something. They do inspect the sprinklers, and do a property walkthrough every six months or so, but that doesn't bother me. If one's on the schedule and I need to take a shower or such, I just put a note on the front door and throw the deadbolt until I'm ready for 'guests'!

    As for borrowing trouble, I dip from time to time into the Stoics, particularly Seneca, and love this: “We are more often frightened than hurt; and we suffer more from imagination than from reality." Ain't that the truth! Most of the 'disasters' I imagine never come to pass.

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    1. Here, the dead bolt wouldn't stop someone with a physical key. We use a key fob on a pad to get in but there is a place for a regular style key---two separate locks---and maintenance can bypass both. Of course, they would know someone is in the apartment if they had to do that to get in. That note on the door is a good idea. But because I want an ambulance driver to be able to get in without the night security guard having to track down a master key, I don't use the dead bolt...just when I go to the trash room and I don't want the door to close while I'm gone. On time our security guard was missing in action and the fire department guys were ready to axe a door down!

      I like your quote. I wish I could remember one about how reading lets us experience hardships and disasters without ever having to live through them and that makes us stronger.

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  10. Strangers just walking in on me would not be something I'd like either. I suppose if you deliberately were Naked and make it awkward for a lark they might ship you off to Memory Care? *winks* I just think knocking first before entering would be too much to ask, so that the Resident has some forewarning and can make sure they're presentable or not sitting on the Toilet first before people just let themselves in? I think sometimes at a certain Age they assume you no longer have inhibitions about anything... but, some people are more private than others and it should be respected. Of coarse here, with so many Generations together, I couldn't tell you the last time I had any Privacy, so... I'd probably Transition well... *Smiles*

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    1. In our independent living apartments they do knock and call out that they're coming in plus we know ahead what day they plan to do the inspections and mass maintenance. But if you're hard of hearing and have you aids out while in the bathroom many don't hear them. If you have an appointment and you HAVE to get ready you could get caught unaware they're in your place.

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  11. As I read this, I was thinking to myself: I would not want to be the maintenance person that has to deal with all those different residents. You seem very accommodating; I am sure many others are not quite so.

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  12. One of our maintenance men used to be a maintenance for a grade school and he says we seniors are much easier to deal with than teachers. We mostly love our maintenance men and are happy when they show up to get our problems solved without a long wait times like spouses often do or paid help. There are only a handful who are distrusting....which makes me think THEY are the ones who are not trustworthy.

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    1. P.S. I just tried posting a comment on your blog and the system won't let me. Reading your 'about me' made me homesick for the years when when we did a lot of RVing. Love your house.

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  13. I take your point. I know how weird I feel about just having the furnace tech come inside the house for an annual tune-up. On the one hand your dwelling is safer, on the other hand there are strangers in your space. Your last sentence does sum it up, though.

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  14. Inspectors are never alone without someone from our staff with them. I feel really safe here but there are others who are almost paranoid scary cats about their personal safety.

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  15. I share your anxiety about workers or installers in my personal space. Nothing to hide here, but still, it gives me the creeps! As I read your post, I did have glimpses of thinking that some care homes are so negligent they ignore their residents as they call out for help. Maybe better to be constantly monitored? That doesn’t diminish our unease. Not at all. But then you put it into perspective with the multiple crisis the world is plunged into now. As you said, abruptly unrooted with no home to return to ever. God help those people.

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    1. I would rather give up some privacy to live in a place where they do monitor their fragile residents than to live in a health care facility with substandard care and those places are unfortunately not hard to find.

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  16. Happy Halloween 🎃 Jean... Dawn the Bohemian

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  17. 11:00 - I love it. My maintenance man knows I sleep late so he comes late in the day. Buddy knows him so I don't worry if he comes in while I am gone. I did have the problem of not being able to add photos. I also had the problem of a malware that defaulted to a Yahoo Search. Those two almost made me give up computers but I finally figured both out. Sorry I can't share the cure. By the next day I'd forgotten how I did it. This memory thing is killing me.

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    1. If you ever remember let me know, I've found a work around but it's time consuming and I have no control over size or placement of photos in my blog posts. Very frustrating.

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