How Caregivers of Seniors Can Reclaim Time, Energy, and Self

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How Caregivers of Seniors Can Reclaim Time, Energy, and Self
by Lydia Chan –Alzheimer’s Caregiver

There’s a quiet rebellion happening in the lives of caregivers — a push to protect their time, identity, and sanity while holding up the sky for aging parents or loved ones. When your calendar fills with doctor’s visits, prescription runs, missed lunch breaks, and guilt-slicked Zoom calls, it’s easy to forget that you, too, are a person with limits. This isn’t about self-care as a luxury. It’s about survival. Balancing work, caregiving, and personal life doesn’t happen because you’re stronger than burnout. It happens when you build structure that defends your clarity — and rituals that anchor your dignity.

Audit Where Your Time Is Actually Going

Start by figuring out exactly where your time is leaking. Most caregivers are operating on instinct and memory, not systems. Before you can plan better, you need to observe better. Take a week and conduct a time audit — not just for caregiving tasks, but everything. Meals. Commutes. Slack replies you shouldn’t be sending at 10:30 p.m. When you see the full map of your days, it’s easier to sort what’s essential, what’s negotiable, and what’s been hijacking your evenings. Triage isn’t heartless. It’s how you stay whole.

Use Digital Tools That Save Minutes, Not Hours
 
Caregiving involves paperwork, and it piles up. Permission slips. Home care instructions. Prescriptions. Advance directives. If you’re working full-time and toggling between care duties, you need tools that reduce friction. For digitizing and organizing paperwork, this is a good option — especially when you’re managing documents on behalf of someone else. It won’t remove the task, but it can cut the time and confusion in half, which is often the difference between reacting and responding.

Don’t Wait to Ask for Help

None of this works, though, if you keep holding the full weight by yourself. The idea that asking for help means you’re not doing enough? That’s the myth that breaks people. So here’s your reminder: ask for help early. Don’t wait until you’re exhausted and angry. Whether it’s a neighbor picking up groceries, a sibling stepping in twice a month, or a coworker covering a meeting, earlier asks are softer and more likely to land. People want to help more than you think — but they need clear, direct invitations. Give them a doorway, not a riddle.

Use Gratitude as a Grounding Ritual

In between the demands and decisions, consider creating space for mindset repair. One quiet way to do that is by keeping a gratitude journal, especially when it feels forced. Gratitude isn’t always about feeling good. It’s about reminding yourself what hasn’t been taken. Caregiving can flatten your emotional range, and rituals like this can put breath back into the shape of your days. Don’t wait for clarity to show up. Train it to return.

Build Weekly Rhythms, Not Hourly Perfection

When you’ve got that data, build your week like a scaffolding, not a to-do list. Don’t aim for perfect coverage — aim for rhythm. One of the most protective things you can do is schedule regular breaks, even if they’re short. Not “someday when it calms down,” but scheduled into your phone like a meeting. Block time for meals, rest, movement, and yes, moments where you let yourself sit and stare at nothing. Without a wall around those minutes, they will evaporate — and your patience will go with them. Rhythm gives you permission to pause without feeling like you’re falling behind.

Reset the Voice Inside Your Head

You can do everything right and still feel wrecked. That doesn’t mean you’re failing. It means this is hard. What often helps more than spa days or bubble baths is internal permission. Slow down enough to notice your own effort. Learn togive yourself credit — audibly, repeatedly, without apology. “I made that appointment happen.” “I got Mom to laugh today.” “I held it together during that call.” These aren’t small wins. They’re evidence you’re still showing up. And if no one sees it but you, that’s enough.

There’s no one formula for balance. No app will fully solve what it means to love someone through decline while working a double shift at the office and at home. But structure helps. Rhythm protects. And small permissions — to rest, to release, to ask — can sometimes do more than grand strategies. Caregivers don’t need more discipline. They need more oxygen. Give yourself room to breathe.

Discover invaluable resources and expert advice to help older drivers stay safe on the road by visiting the Older Drivers Forum today!

Article written for Older Drivers Forum by Lydia Chan from Alzheimer’s Caregiver

Keeping Everyone Safe on Our Roads – Together

Keeping Everyone Safe on Our Roads – Together

You may have seen recent headlines about proposals (Click here to read) that could require motorists over the age of 70 to take compulsory eyesight tests to keep their driving licence. These changes are expected to be part of a new government road safety strategy due this autumn.

At the Older Drivers Forum, our focus has always been on helping people drive safely for as long as possible. We know how important driving is for independence, connection, and daily life. We also know that safety must come first – for drivers, passengers, and everyone else on the road. That’s why we support measures that make our roads safer for all.

We have worked closely with families who have lost loved ones due to collisions involving drivers whose vision was no longer safe for driving. These heartbreaking stories remind us that change is needed.

Why vision matters so much for driving
Nearly 90% of the information we use when driving comes through our eyes. If we can’t see hazards clearly, we can’t react in time. The challenge is that eyesight can deteriorate gradually, often without us realising. We simply adapt without noticing the loss.

The law requires all drivers to meet the ‘Standards of Vision’, which include:

  • Reading a number plate from 20 metres
  • Having a visual acuity of at least 6/12 on the Snellen scale
  • Maintaining an adequate field of vision

Currently, most drivers only have their eyesight checked once – at their driving test. The simple number plate check does not measure visual acuity or field of vision. This means that many people may be driving without realising they no longer meet the legal standard.

Compared with other European countries, the UK is among the most relaxed when it comes to vision and driving rules. That’s why we’ve long called for mandatory optometrist eye tests for all drivers – when applying for a licence, every 10 years when renewing it, and again from age 70 onwards.

This isn’t about taking away licences – it’s about keeping people driving safely for longer
If someone’s vision doesn’t meet the standard, they can often get it corrected with new glasses, contact lenses, or treatment. Just like we MOT our cars, we need to make sure we also “MOT” ourselves for safety.

Research shows that after age 70, people are more likely to fall below the legal vision standard. Most mature drivers already get regular tests – but a small number either skip them or continue driving despite unsafe vision. Mandatory testing is the fairest and safest way to ensure everyone on the road meets the same standards.

It’s also worth remembering: from age 60, you’re entitled to a free NHS eye test every two years (and if you have certain medical conditions or receive certain benefits).

Looking at the bigger picture
We have an ageing population, with over 200,000 more drivers aged 70+ on the roads than a few years ago. While older drivers are generally among the safest, statistics show an increase in fatalities for this age group. We’ve published a detailed analysis comparing younger and older driver safety – you can read it here: Click here

Our Chair, Rob Heard MBE, along with many of our volunteers and researchers, have been sharing these messages in TV and radio interviews, including BBC Breakfast today (11/08/25) – watch from 8.30am here: Click here to view.

Our commitment to you
We want every driver to keep the freedom and independence that comes from driving – for as long as it’s safe. That’s why we’re working hard to make sure changes to the law are fair, practical, and supportive. Driving safely isn’t just about believing we’re safe – it’s about taking action to make sure we truly are.

Is Your Vision Roadworthy?

ODN Is Your Vision Roadworthy? Rectangle

As we age our sight can deteriorate, often without us being aware of it. We are therefore working with Eye Health UK and the National Police Chiefs Council over the next two weeks to help raise awareness of the importance of having good vision for driving. More than 90% of information a driver uses is visual so ensuring your eyesight is up to scratch is crucial.

Please therefore get your eyes tested every 2 years & wear eyewear prescribed for driving EVERY time you get behind the wheel.

With the clocks having gone back means fewer daylight hours over the coming months. so Please make sure your eyesight meets the minimum standards for driving.

https://www.gov.uk/driving-eyesight-rules

The below video really empathies why this is so important. You MOT your car every year, so why not MOT your sight regularly for driving.