“Not in Assisted Living (Yet): Dispatches from the Edge of Independence!

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, April 15, 2026

M is for Manuals—Notes for Whoever Draws the Short Straw


 “Manuals?” you ask. How does that word fit my theme for the April A to Z Blog Challenge? At first glance it might seem like a stretch, considering I’m supposed to be writing about the humans, habits, hidden joys and heartaches that shaped my world. But this post is my attempt to write a manual for my own care—just in case, near the end of my days, I can’t communicate with the caregivers and family around me.

Yes, I know none of us can orchestrate how others will treat us when good health leaves the building. But that doesn’t mean I can’t try.

This isn’t my first rodeo with manuals. After my husband’s stroke, I volunteered at a large website for stroke survivors and caregivers. It didn’t take long to work my way up to the management team, even had a seat on the board. With so many people trying to navigate chat rooms, blogs and forums—many of them brand‑new to computers—I asked my boss if I could write a how‑to manual.

And I did. Clear, step‑by‑step directions for people who were overwhelmed, grieving, hopeful and learning to double‑click all at the same time.

Meanwhile, on the home front, I wrote another manual—this one for how to care for Don and the dog if something happened to me. Neither of them could talk, and someone needed to know things like, “Don’t feed them spinach unless you enjoy cleaning up vomit.”

Some might say it was busywork, a way to feel in control while life spun wildly out of it. Maybe. But it was definitely true that I hated the way people made assumptions about disabled people like Don. Too often those assumptions included a belief that a lower IQ comes bundled with a wheelchair and a limited vocabulary.

Depending on where in the head the stroke occurs, that might be true. But my husband’s stroke was smack dab in the middle of the left frontal lobe which is where speech sentences and grammatical structure is produced, causing what is known as non-fluent aphasia aka difficulty getting words out. It’s akin to having a car where the motor and wheels work fine (Don’s brain and lips) but the transmission that makes the wheels turn (or the words to come out) is broken. He knew exactly what he wanted to say but in the 12 ½ years after his stroke and after six years of speech therapy his vocabulary never increased beyond a core of 25 hard earned words.

But his intelligence was untouched, and his desire to communicate never dimmed. He was a born storyteller and he found a way to still be one. That way was to put me in a position where I had no choice but to explain what was on Don’s mind. Like the day he parked his wheelchair right in front of the door to a cigars and cigarettes store and he wouldn’t let anyone in or out. In a militant way only an x-smoker on a mission could do, he held up three fingers while repeating the word “three!” over and over again. This forced me to tell Don’s story to the gathering crowd about how he used to smoke three to six packs of cigarettes a day and he blamed the habit for earning him heart by-pass and a stroke.

 His special shorthand for all he'd gone through since the stroke was to hold up two fingers and say the word, "two then look up me which was my cue to explain that two neurologists had told the family he’d be a vegetable for the rest of his life. The universe response was usually the same: “You sure fooled them!” And it was true.

To friends and family who spent time with Don after the stroke, it was clear that despite his disabilities he was still the same, intelligent and caring person he’d always been. Before the stroke, we used to tease him that we should number his stories because we all knew the by heart. After the stroke that's exactly what he did.

Only someone who knows you deeply can speak for you when you can’t. I don’t have that person in my life, which is why the idea of a manual keeps tugging at me.

It’s embarrassing to admit I’ve already written a 'manual' for what to do after I die—complete with pictures of who gets what—so why not take it a step further and write one for any future caregivers who might cross my path before I kick the proverbial bucket?

A few sample entries:

  • Don’t call me sweetie or dear.

  • You can never feed me too much ice cream, but never—ever—try to feed me liver unless you enjoy having it spit right back at you.

  • Don’t talk religion at me. You take care of my body; I’ll take care of my soul.

  • If you set the TV to an old‑people black-and-white channel, sports, or a game show, I’ll consider it waterboarding. If you must leave me with a fictional character as a distraction when you leave, choose the Hallmark Channel so I can binge on happily‑ever‑afters. (I’ll explain why when we get to the letter R.)

So that’s the starting bones of my manual—I’ll finish while I can still boss people around. And if it also reveals a few of the humans, habits, hidden joys and heartaches that shaped my world, then I’d say M for Manuals earned its place in the alphabet. ©

23 comments:

  1. My middle son couldn't speak or swallow for awhile after emergency brain surgery when he was a senior in high school. His vocal cords were frozen.. He could scribble words and his Speech Therapist cousin gave him a paper with pictures of things he might need that he could point to (like water, toilet, food, etc.). Luckily, his vocal cords started working again after 3 months of therapy and he went off to college. Now he's a Doctor who does medical research. I hope no one ever has to use your manual, Jean, but it's good you are getting it ready.

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    1. My husband's speech therapist tried to have him use that same manual your son had but he would shove it aside and keep trying to vocalize his needed. It's got to be really frustrating to lose your language skills.

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    2. It is!!! Immediately after my stroke I had aphasia, it was SO frustrating!! After 13 years, it is mostly gone, but it comes back when I'm tired or emotional. And people who try to finish my sentences for me really aggravate me. Just slow down and let me say what I have to say! Fortunately my family have learned and don't do that anymore, and I have recovered most of my speech, but because I was right-handed and had a left-side stroke, my right hand no longer works and writing with my left hand, while it's legible, is pretty difficult and I'm really slow. I didn't find speech therapy very helpful, either (much like your husband).

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    3. My husband couldn't write either. The reason he was in speech therapy so long is because four of those six years he was being used at a teaching college where students practiced evaluating, testing and doing therapy treatments on him. I would sit behind a one way mirror with a professor and other students while the professor explained what was going on. I learned a lot over those four years and what you mention about family and friends finishing sentence or guessing which word the survivor is trying to get out is a real no-no. The healing in the brain comes from the effort of trying. While he didn't gain anything from it the professor thought he taught the students a LOT about patients being more than a text book and found other ways to communicate when speech wasn't' there. He was even filmed for a video text book that colleges across the country, back then used.

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    1. I'm half serious and half kidding about the need for a manual, leaning more towards doing one.

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  3. Oh my goodness, I love that idea of a manual on how to care for me. I hope I won't need it, but I very well could.

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  4. That's an excellent idea. My grandmother lost her speech towards the end, but her eyes conveyed meaning. Mostly she told me how pretty I was.

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  5. I have a "what to do if I am abducted by aliens" notebook which is my death book with attachments like bank records, the will, a copy of the poa, etc. I think your idea of the manual is a good one.

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    1. I have that kind of notebook too but this manual will be more for personal dislikes and likes.

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  6. This is a great idea! We should all write manuals for all sorts of things!!

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  7. I'm so enjoying your A to Z posts! I love hearing about Don, and hearing about your life. Thanks.

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    1. Thank you but it feels like I missed a lot of life experiences that other have had.

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  8. Jean : I was so grateful when our paths crossed & I met you & Don through you blogs. Seeing how Don handled his disability gave me courage & inspiration to give a good fight, & I am so happy I did it cause I got to enjoy raising our only child to fullest & seeing him becoming doctor was proud moment for all of us & I could release sigh of relief that my illness did not mess up his life.
    Asha

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    1. Don helped a lot of people both in person here at the college and online by me sharing the ups and downs of the challenges all stroke survivors and caregivers face.

      I'm really proud that I got to watch you pull your life out of the fire after your stroke, get stronger and see the blessings still around you. Your son was so young when you had your stroke but in a twist of fate I think it led him down a path where he'll do great things for others with the empathy your husband modeled for him and the determination you modeled for him.

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  9. thank you Jean now my son is able to forgive me after I had written his college essay for him for his college application though in my defence I had made Author review my essay before AI was even born, though he was so mad at me when he did not get in that college though he went to nearby state college where he got full ride so saved us money which we were able to use for his medical college, which now he sees as blessing that he don't have any college loans to pay, so his parents are afterall good hardworking immigrant parents who raised their child well. he has now forgiven all my micromanaging his school years
    Asha

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    1. You did well and you're not the first parent to micro-manage their kid and you won't be the last. The proof is in the pudding, as they say meaning he turned out well.

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  10. Just back from a week in the UP for my mom’s 94th (!) BD and catching up on my reading. Your idea of a manual for people taking care of you is smart!
    Also, I have apparently reached the point of cutesy names. I was called sweetie and my dear this week for the first time I can remember. So irritating. Haha!

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    1. Waitresses and health care workers do it the most to older people. It shouldn't annoy me but it does. Most health care workers work with so many people that it's a fill in when they don't know your name.

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    2. The woman in the toll booth at the Mackinac Bridge called me sweetie! I wrote it off as her enthusiasm for the sunny day...they haven't seen many of them lately. lol.

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    3. A random person at a toll booth wouldn't bother me either. It's mostly those in health care. When a person's name is on their door and in their charts.

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