'Dear Friends' September 2009
			  
			
				
					
						| 
						 Week of September 7, 
						2009 
    
						
						In the Loop 
						Dear Friends: 
						      
						If you're of a certain age, you probably played two 
						forms of "telephone" when you were a child. The first 
						was using two cans and
						 a 
						string. Fun . . . but not all that effective. The second 
						was getting all the children into a circle and 
						whispering something to the person closest to you. He or 
						she would pass it on -- in a whisper -- to the next in 
						line. And so on. Needless to say, by the time the final 
						child announced what had been said, it bore little or no 
						resemblance to the initial message. 
       We were thinking about both of those this 
						week when we learned of some ways multiple 
						"co-caregivers" are helping a single loved one . . . and 
						trying to keep each other in the loop with accurate 
						information. Here are four of their suggestions: 
       --An online calendar (such as
						
						Google) that can be made available to others by 
						invitation. It can be set up so that any of the invited 
						can also edit what's on there. It's a handy way to keep 
						track of who's doing what when and the care-receiver's 
						appointments. It's easily updated . . . and can't be 
						misplaced. It's also possible to set up the calendar to 
						send you (by text or email) reminders about a specific 
						appointment. 
       --A
						
						shared document online. Again, unlike a public blog, 
						this can be set up so that the it's private but there's 
						access for specific people. It's a way of reporting 
						what's going and of checking in to see, for example, 
						what happened at the latest doctor's appointment. 
       Obviously, some details wouldn't be 
						included because, even though it's "private," there's 
						the argument that nothing is 100 percent certain to be 
						private if it's on the Web. It would be advisable to use 
						initials instead of names, for instance, or 
						abbreviations or "code words" the family would know but 
						others wouldn't. 
       --E-mail can be more reliable than making 
						phone calls to others, especially if you have to repeat 
						the same information over and over. (Then, too, when 
						that information is passed on down the line . . . it can 
						be like that children's game.) Another advantage of 
						e-mail reports is that, message by message, you (and 
						others) have a pretty reliable log and timeline of 
						what's been going on. 
       Keep in mind you can also have family 
						e-mail messages and then send more general messages to 
						your loved one's friends and fellow parishioners who 
						want to know how your care-receiver is doing but it 
						would be inappropriate to send them all the details that 
						the family has access to. 
       --Stuck without a paper and pen and 
						really need to remember what the doctor said or to 
						pick up that prescription or to change that appointment 
						or . . . ? Phone yourself and leave yourself a message. 
       There's a lot to be said for "low-tech," 
						too. Keeping a running journal/log -- using a 
						spiral-bound theme book, for example -- at the 
						care-receiver's home is a great way for each 
						co-caregiver to report what happened when he or she was 
						there on duty and catch up on what's been going on while 
						he or she was away. 
						- - - 
						       
						It's always a treat when someone from a "new" country 
						becomes a member of the Friends of St. John the 
						Caregiver. ("New" to FSJC, that is.) This week we're so 
						very pleased to welcome Apolonia Valeria R. from Fiji. 
						Please keep her and her intentions in your prayers. She 
						has promised to pray for you and yours. 
       We cordially invite you to join the Friends 
						of St. John the Caregiver, too. You can find out more about 
						becoming a member here. 
       No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that 
						you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include 
						caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both 
						(including quite a few former caregivers). 
       You can: 
						
							       
							sign up on-line here 
         
        or call us toll-free at 
						1-800-392-JOHN (5646) 
        
        or
							
							print and mail an application form. 
						 
						       God 
						bless you! 
						                                                          
						Monica and Bill 
						To contact us 
						To join 
						FSJC 
						To make a 
						donation 
						To view or make prayer 
						requests 
						Materials order form 
						Past "Dear Friends" notes 
						"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter 
   | 
					 
				 
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				   
			
				
					
						| 
						 Week of September 14, 
						2009 
    
						
						Doing Good . . . and Well 
						Dear Friends: 
						      
						Do the readings at Sunday Mass ever seem to come through 
						your "caregiver filter"? What we mean is, sometimes do 
						the 
						 selections really seem to focus on some aspect of 
						taking care of a family member or friend? Two passages 
						hit us that way last
						Sunday, September 13. 
						
							
							
							If a brother or sister has nothing to wear 
							and has no food for the day, 
							and one of you says to them, 
							“Go in peace, keep warm, and eat well, ” 
							but you do not give them the necessities of the 
							body, 
							what good is it?  
							So also faith of itself, 
							if it does not have works, is dead. 
							 
							Indeed someone might say, 
							“You have faith and I have works.”  
							Demonstrate your faith to me without works, 
							and I will demonstrate my faith to you from my 
							works. 
                                           
							--James 2:15-18 
						 
						  
						
							
							
							He summoned the crowd with his disciples and said to 
							them, “Whoever wishes to come after me must deny 
							himself, take up his cross, and follow me.  For 
							whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but 
							whoever loses his life for my sake and that of the 
							gospel will save it.” 
                                           
							--Mark 8:34-35 
						 
						     
						Caregivers don't just advise loved ones 
						to keep warm and eat well. They give them "the 
						necessities of the body." By their works, caregivers 
						demonstrate their faith. 
       And, day by day and night by night, they 
						"lose their life" by making countless sacrifices for 
						that other person. (We hear from some who have even 
						given up jobs and homes and friends to move to where a 
						loved one is located.) They do that out of love, and (as 
						St. John taught! (1 
						John 4:8)) God -- Christ -- is love. By that 
						"dying," they gain grace, the very life of God within 
						them. 
       Caregivers do good: They serve others who 
						needs help. 
       And caregivers do well: Though far from 
						perfect, they're living as Christ asks all his followers 
						to live. 
						- - - 
						       
						This week we're pleased to welcome two new members to 
						the Friends of St. John the Caregiver. "Hello" to Father 
						Arul I. in California and to Rosemary DM. in Florida. 
						Please keep them and their intentions in your prayers. 
						They have promised to pray for you and yours. 
       We cordially invite you to join the Friends 
						of St. John the Caregiver, too. You can find out more about 
						becoming a member here. 
       No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that 
						you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include 
						caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both 
						(including quite a few former caregivers). 
       You can: 
						
							       
							sign up on-line here 
         
        or call us toll-free at 
						1-800-392-JOHN (5646) 
        
        or
							
							print and mail an application form. 
						 
						       God 
						bless you! 
						                                                          
						Monica and Bill 
						To contact us 
						To join 
						FSJC 
						To make a 
						donation 
						To view or make prayer 
						requests 
						Materials order form 
						Past "Dear Friends" notes 
						"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter 
   | 
					 
				 
				 
        	  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
				
					
						| 
						 Week of September 21, 
						2009 
    
						Free 
						Gifts for . . . and from . . . You 
						Dear Friends: 
						      
						As usual, we received a couple of requests this week 
						from folks who were asking for copies of
						
						St. John the Caregiver and Our Lady in 
				
				 Need 
						holy cards and "The Little Book of Caregiver 
						Prayers." Asking for multiple 
						copies. We've noticed that some people hesitate to 
						ask for more than one copy of each but we assure them -- 
						and you -- that we're truly pleased when someone asks 
						for more than one. And we love it when someone asks for 
						a lot! 
       We'd love it if you asked for a lot. For . 
						. .   
       Your family and friends. Your fellow 
						members of the Legion of Mary or the people you visit as 
						a Legion of Mary member. Your Knights of Columbus 
						council, Catholic Daughters of the Americas court, or 
						St. Vincent de Paul council. The extraordinary ministers 
						of the Eucharist in your parish who visit the sick and 
						the homebound. Your guild members or fellow Serrans. And 
						on and on. 
       Hosting a Church-related luncheon or dinner 
						and looking for small gifts the guests? Want to 
						acknowledge and thank the family caregivers in your 
						parish? Holy cards and prayers books! 
       As always, that material -- and all that we 
						offer -- is free. No cost for items, no shipping, no 
						handling. No limit. No strings. Free means free. 
       We encourage you to check out our
						order form and
						send us an e-mail, give us a 
						call (toll-free), or send us a letter and let us 
						know what we can send you. 
						- - - 
						       
						We had hoped to see some of you at the National Council 
						of Catholic Women's convention this week in Florida. 
						Unfortunately, a change in the agenda meant no "round 
						table discussions" (brown-bag luncheon presentations) 
						this year. We had been schedule to speak at one of 
						those. 
						- - - 
						       
						This week we're pleased to welcome Michael A. in 
						Illinois as the newest member of the Friends of St. John 
						the Caregiver. Please keep him and his intentions in your prayers. 
						He has promised to pray for you and yours. 
       We cordially invite you to join the Friends 
						of St. John the Caregiver, too. You can find out more about 
						becoming a member here. 
       No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that 
						you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include 
						caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both 
						(including quite a few former caregivers). 
       You can: 
						
							       
							sign up on-line here 
         
        or call us toll-free at 
						1-800-392-JOHN (5646) 
        
        or
							
							print and mail an application form. 
						 
						       God 
						bless you! 
						                                                          
						Monica and Bill 
						To contact us 
						To join 
						FSJC 
						To make a 
						donation 
						To view or make prayer 
						requests 
						Materials order form 
						Past "Dear Friends" notes 
						"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter 
   | 
					 
				 
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				   
			
				
					
						| 
						 Week of September 28, 
						2009 
    
						A 
						Vocation Before a Vocation 
						Dear Friends: 
						      
						Imagine having a saint for a sibling. It would have to 
						be wonderful . . . and tough. St. Therese of Lisieux 
						(whose feast day is 
						 this Thursday, October 1) had four 
						sisters. All five of the girls entered the convent. 
						Eventually. Even the baby, Therese, got in before the 
						fourth daughter, Celine (pictured left). It seems it wasn't that Celine 
						wanted to wait. It was God who gave her a vocation 
						before that vocation. What delayed her? Being a 
						caregiver. 
       Their father, Louis Martin, had been a 
						widower for many years when he developed dementia 
						(which, at times, caused the family great embarrassment 
						as well as concern) and he was confined to a wheelchair. One would assume that, with five adult or 
						teenaged daughters, the caregiving duties would be 
						divided among the siblings without one or two bearing 
						the brunt of the load but 
 . . . . Three of the four 
						(including Therese) were in the same cloistered convent. 
						The fourth had joined a different religious order but 
						even if she had been available, odds are she could have 
						offered little support because she had emotional 
						problems throughout her life. 
       That left it all up to Celine Martin, who 
						helped her father -- day after day and night after 
						night, as so many caregivers do -- until the time of his 
						death. It was only then that she was able to take the 
						next step, the one she had put on hold, and entered the 
						convent. 
       Last October the Church beatified the 
						parents of those five girls. That's the final step before 
						canonization. Therese, canonized in 1925, is 
						also a Doctor of the Church and the patroness of the 
						missions. 
       Still . . . 
       Sometimes it helps to remember that 
						although God calls all of us to become saints, we aren't 
						necessarily saints when he asks us to become caregivers. 
						And even within a family that has a saint, it isn't 
						necessarily that person he invites to the challenging, 
						and very personal, apostolate of caregiving. 
       You may not be a saint . . . yet. Or ever. 
						But God has asked you. And he's with you now. And 
						always. 
						- - - 
						       
						New material for October has been posted at
						
						CatholicCaregivers.com. 
						- - - 
						       
						This week we're pleased to welcome Jon T. of Washington 
						state as the newest member of the Friends of St. John 
						the Caregiver. Please keep him and his intentions in your prayers. 
						He has promised to pray for you and yours. 
       We cordially invite you to join the Friends 
						of St. John the Caregiver, too. You can find out more about 
						becoming a member here. 
       No meetings, no dues. All we ask is that 
						you pray for caregivers and those receiving care. Our members include 
						caregivers, care-receivers, and those who support both 
						(including quite a few former caregivers). 
       You can: 
						
							       
							sign up on-line here 
         
        or call us toll-free at 
						1-800-392-JOHN (5646) 
        
        or
							
							print and mail an application form. 
						 
						       God 
						bless you! 
						                                                          
						Monica and Bill 
						To contact us 
						To join 
						FSJC 
						To make a 
						donation 
						To view or make prayer 
						requests 
						Materials order form 
						Past "Dear Friends" notes 
						"Among Friends" quarterly newsletter 
   | 
					 
				 
				 
        	  
        
        
               | 
     
    
 |