Friday, December 23, 2011

Nursing home's daily visitor assists his wife and everyone else

During lunchtime at Mayfair Manor, Jack Sanders makes his way around the nursing home's dining hall, placing bibs on tables or around people's necks as well as giving each diner the squirt of hand sanitizer.It's the daily routine for him."I think washing hands has helped keep down communicable diseases," Sanders said.If the proprietor in the wheelchair needs to be pushed back to his or her room after lunch, Sanders does which too."He's one of the ones we go to for help with activities," pronounced Suzy Rupp, Mayfair Manor's quality of life/activities director. "He never says no."But Sanders' main reason for being at Mayfair Manor from about 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. seven days the week is Esther, his wife of 63 years, who has been the proprietor of the nursing home for the past two years.At lunchtime, he cuts up her food as he sits next to her wheelchair in the dining room as well as occasionally leans over to contend something like, "Baby, are you all right?" whilst taking bites from his own lunch, brought from home. He goes with her to various activities at the nursing home, such as exercise as well as art classes. He plays music for her as well as reads the Bible to her in her room. He doesn't leave Mayfair Manor until he's certain her teeth have gotten their bedtime brushing."If you've ever been in the nursing home, aides are worked to death," Jack Sanders pronounced progressing this month. "I'm here to take care of my wife."A minor stroke, difficulty with walking as well as dementia led Esther Sanders, now 92, to Mayfair Manor. The physical aspect of caring for her at home got to be too much, her husband said."You try picking up 130 pounds of Jello. It's not easy," pronounced Sanders, who is 88.His eyes incited from weeping to twinkling as the conversation incited from Esther Sanders' health to progressing years in the couple's life together, his wife's younger days in particular. She was sitting beside him in silence. Perhaps she was taking in some of the conversation.Both are World War II Navy veterans. Esther DuBose Sanders was the helper with the rank of lieutenant who spent most of her time in the military on the West Coast. Jack Sanders was the radio operator who served aboard the USS Leonis in the Pacific Theater. The two, both Georgia natives, met after the war in the chemistry category at the University of Georgia, he said.Before that, Esther, only after graduating from tall school at age 16, was an aide who waited on President Franklin D. Roosevelt during his getaway trips to Warm Springs, Ga. During the 1970s, whilst Jack worked as the Seagram distillery plant physical education instructor in Baltimore, she worked at the White House, opening as well as celebration of the mass President Richard M. Nixon's mail."She would take him letters which she thought he would be interested in," Jack Sanders said. "He was very good as well as very courteous to her."Sanders pronounced his wife's job netted the couple invitations to White House functions as well as box seats at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts."We've got some letters from Nixon," Sanders said.Esther Sanders hold other jobs, in nursing as well as in teaching, whilst her husband worked for Seagram in Louisville as well as Bardstown."She was an consultant overpass player," Sanders said. "We played the lot of tennis together as well as bowled together."The Sanders have two daughters as well as the son. They additionally have 12 grandchildren as well as 12 great-grandchildren, with another on the way.Jack Sanders laughed when the subject of the difference in his as well as his wife's ages came up in the conversation."I was 24 when we got married. we thought she was 26," he said. He didn't find out until she applied for Social Security benefits which she was even older than he thought, he said."I kidded her all the time which she lied to me. She said, 'I wanted the young man,'" he said.Rupp, the activities director, pronounced of Jack Sanders, "He's the very gracious, friendly, pleasant as well as involved family member.""Without God's help, we couldn't do it," Sanders said.


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