NABBW Columnist - Eldercare

Name: Barbara Friesner
Title: Generational Coach
Expertise: Eldercare
Web Site: http://www.agewiseliving.com
Email: Barbara@agewiseliving.com
Bio: Barbara Friesner is the country's leading Generational Coach and an expert on issues affecting Seniors and their families. She has been interviewed for Advising Boomers magazine, featured on NY1 TV's Focus on Seniors and Coping with Caregiving on wsRadio. She has also been quoted in newspapers and magazines across the country and her articles have been published in the CAPSule, the Children of Aging Parent's newsletter.

Barbara's company is AgeWiseLiving? which she started as a result of being the care manager for her grandmother for many years and now for her mother (who has dementia). As a Generational Coach, Barbara helps her clients ? primarily Baby Boomer women ? resolve their eldercare issues by choice rather than crisis.

Barbara is an Adjunct Professor at Cornell University where she created and teaches ?Seniors Housing Management? for Cornell's School of Hotel Administration and holds an MBA from Boston University. She is also a speaker & seminar leader. In addition to presenting her own seminars to hundreds of groups across the country, she has been a presenter at the Alzheimer's Foundation of America Annual Conference, the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute Annual Conference, the Assisted Living Federation of America's (ALFA) National Convention, the National Council on the Aging (NCOA), to name a few. For more information about Barbara, please go to www.AgeWiseLiving.com.

6 Tips To Emptying Your Aging Loved One's House
By Barbara Friesner

One of the most difficult jobs family members face when emptying out their aging loved one(s) house is how to get rid of all the “stuff”. This is especially difficult for family members who live at a distance and have to sort through a life time of belongings in a week or two of vacation time. If this is an issue you’re facing, here are some suggestions to make it easier.

Get An Appraisal: If you’re afraid of getting rid of anything because it could be worth a million dollars, you may have the “Antiques Roadshow™ syndrome! Therefore, the first action you’ll want to take is to get an appraisal. For appraisers in your area, check out the American Society of Appraisers (http://www.appraisers.org) and the Appraisers Association of America (http://www.appraisersassoc.org).

Tag Sale: You may want to try selling the stuff and a tag sale is one way to do it. Unfortunately, that’s not always an option – especially in a city. You might also see if a consignment shop will take anything or you may want to try selling on-line. If you decide to give any of these options a try, while researching this article, I found a great website called “EHow” (http://www.ehow.com) that has all kinds of useful information to get you started. For example, for how to get rid of what you don’t want, go to  http://www.ehow.com/how_134227_rid-you-dont.html; how to sell stuff on-line
 (http://www.ehow.com/how_136987_sell-stuff-online.html); and how to plan a garage sale
 (http://www.ehow.com/how_137461_yard-garage-sale.html).

Sell The Whole Lot: Some companies will buy whole “lots” of specific items such as books and silver and an appraiser may be able to make a referral. There’s also a company called 1-(800) GOT-JUNK that will buy everything – the whole lot. For more information, you can call them at 1-(800) GOT-JUNK or go to http://www.1800gotjunk.com

Donate it: When we were moving my mother, we were more than willing to give the stuff away to a religious or civic organization, library, senior center, school etc, as long as they would come and get it right away. Unfortunately, many organizations don’t pick up, don’t have the space to store things until they have a rummage sale, and most charities are very specific about what items they want. There are literally millions of charity websites but for a list of charities and what they will take, whether they will pick up, etc., go to JustGive (http://www.justgive.org/html/ways/ways7.html).

Get Professional Help: If you can’t be there to help with the sort, or you don’t have the time to arrange the distribution, many professional organizers can handle it for you. For a list of professional organizers in your area, go to the National Association of Professional Organizers (http://www.NAPO.net).

Start Now: Remember. . . the more you can do now, the less pressure there is – and the less there is to do later!

Visit Barbara at http://www.agewiseliving.com

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