HINTS FROM HELOISE: Use your hearing aids all the time
DEAR HELOISE: For our experienced citizens who have acquired hearing aids, they shouldn’t just employ them intermittently. They should use them all the time. Hearing aids reroute neural paths in your brain, which upgrades your auditory abilities.
• Jim R., in Houston
DEAR HELOISE: I was the only one sitting at a red light. When it turned green, I fumbled with the gear shift and was way slow even while beginning to move. (Thank God.) Much after the green light, a car came through from the left at about 45 mph. If I’d started normally, he couldn’t have stopped. I’d be dead now.
Two takeaways: First, it seems reasonable to honk because grotesquely endangering others’ lives is not OK. Second, always look both ways before leading into an intersection when the light turns green, no matter how long it’s been since the light changed.
• B.W., in Montana
DEAR HELOISE: Having spent the past 15 years as a professional caregiver, staying round-the-clock with one elderly client at a time, I have some do’s and don’ts for visiting an older friend or family member:
● Do not “pop in.” Instead, schedule your visit ahead of time for midmorning or late afternoon. Many older folks take a long time to get ready in the morning, then nap after lunch.
● Do plan to stay 30-40 minutes maximum. Although your loved one may appear to enjoy your visit, many older folks tire easily, especially if they feel like they have to be “at their best” for a visit.
● Do not plan to share a meal, even if you bring the food. Setting the table and cleaning up after causes stress (even if you do both) and uses energy your loved one may not have.
● Do not bring food, unless you have checked with your loved one in advance and are sure that it is something they like, can have (no sweets for a diabetic), and can easily prepare themselves. Otherwise, the food ends up in the trash, causing more stress.
● Do bring a child’s drawing and / or flowers (unless your loved one is allergic) and plan to share photos of children, relatives, pets and beautiful landscapes (unless your loved one is visually challenged).
● Do keep the conversation light and positive. Talk about how their grandchild is enjoying kindergarten, not your upcoming health concern or a nephew’s divorce.
• Sarah Irwin,
in Millboro, Virginia



