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Notes from a nursing home: ‘We don't speak of sadness here'

Notes from a nursing home: ‘We don't speak of sadness here'

The Guardian29-06-2025
I sit in my room in this nursing home near Sydney, a box of four walls that holds all I now call my own. Two suitcases could carry it: a few clothes, some worn books, a scattering of trinkets. The thought strikes me as both stark and oddly freeing. Not long ago my world was vast, a house with rooms I rarely entered, a garden that sprawled beyond need, two cars idling in the driveway, one barely driven. Now it's gone. The house, the cars, the cartons overflowing in the garage, all sold, given away or abandoned. A heart attack and dwindling funds brought me here two and a half years ago. Family ties, thin as they are, keep me from moving anywhere away from here.
I don't resent it. I've seen the world, jungles, deserts, cities that glittered under foreign skies. That hunger is sated. This is a different journey, one of stillness, of finding meaning in what remains.
The nursing home is no idyll, no glossy promise of golden years. It's a place of routine, of quiet necessity. Mornings begin with carers, gentle, hurried women who tidy my bed, adjust pillows, offer a smile before moving on. Tea and toast settle as I sit by the window. The air carries the clean sting of antiseptic, mingling with the chatter of birds outside. There's peace in these moments, before the home stirs fully awake.
The staff do their work well, though they're stretched thin. They check on us, ask after our aches, offer kind words that linger like a faint warmth. Activities fill the day, card games, a singalong. I join when I feel like it, which is less often than I might. The choice is mine, and that's enough. The front doors creak as relatives arrive, their faces a mix of cheer and strain. Some hide tears, we all pretend not to see. We don't speak of sadness here. It's a silent agreement, a way to keep the days bearable.
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The residents are a varied lot. Some are old, their bodies bent by years. Others are younger, broken by minds that betray them. A woman down the hall clutches a photograph, her son a rare visitor, his life too crowded for her. She speaks of him with no anger, only a flat resignation. A man, his eyes dim with addiction's toll, mutters of a sister who never calls. I listen, nod, share a story of my own.
We understand each other here, bound by the shared weight of being left behind.
This place is a mirror, reflecting a truth we'd rather not face. Families, once close, find it easier to place their own in these clean, quiet rooms. It's not cruelty, not always. Caring for the old, the broken, the lost-it, demands time, patience, a surrender most cannot afford. So they sign papers, appoint guardians and let the system take over. The nursing home becomes a vault, sealing away what disrupts the orderly march of life. Out of sight, out of mind. Yet I wonder if, in the quiet of their nights, those families feel the shadow of what they've set aside.
I walk the corridors, dim and smelling of antiseptic and something less tangible – forgotten promises perhaps. Residents sit, staring at walls or televisions that drone with voices no one heeds. Many wrestle with dementia, their thoughts scattering like ash. Others bear scars of choices or chance, their lives eroded to this point. A few, changed by illness or time, became strangers to those who loved them. To care for such people is hard, unglamorous work. Easier to let them fade into these walls.
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Yet there's life here too. I find it in small things: a book that holds my attention, sunlight warming my room, a laugh shared over a memory. The community binds us. We talk of old days, of children grown distant, of the world beyond these walls. There's comfort in that, a kind of strength. The local shops are my horizon now, but I don't mind. I've seen enough of the world to know its pleasures are fleeting.
Here I have my memories, these people, this quiet. The day stretches before me, simple and unhurried, the sun climbing higher, the air still fresh. There's no need to rush, no call to chase what's gone. This is my life now, pared to its bones, and it's enough. The light shifts on the wall, and I breathe it in. It's a good day. Better than most.
Andrew McKean is a writer and a resident of an aged care facility in New South Wales, Australia.
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California's hidden homeless children: living in garages, doubled-up and unseen
California's hidden homeless children: living in garages, doubled-up and unseen

The Guardian

time6 hours ago

  • The Guardian

California's hidden homeless children: living in garages, doubled-up and unseen

For the past year, nine-year-old Brigitte has lived with her parents in a converted garage, behind a house, in Salinas, California. Her bedroom is just about big enough to bust out some K-pop dance moves, though not spacious enough for her parents to agree to get her the cat she dreams of. There's no outdoor space, or a living room, but the family no longer has to share a kitchen, bathroom or fridge with two other families, like they did when they first moved here from Oaxaca, Mexico, three years ago. 'It was difficult,' said Brigitte, of being the only kid in the three-bedroom house packed with three families. She did her homework on a small table in the bedroom she shared with her parents. Families had to compete for space in the kitchen; the bathroom was always occupied, so they often couldn't shower until 10pm; and the residents were constantly battling over the car parking space. 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Seeing kids from migrant families doing their homework on boxes on the floor, as their families struggled to rent informal living species, like hallways, is what inspired Alexa Johnson, executive director of Monterey county's housing resource center, to switch her focus from migrant education to housing. 'The cost of rent is increasing, but the amount of money that folks get paid is remaining the same,' said Johnson, pulling up a graph on her computer screen of the rate at which people are using the section 8 rental-subsidy vouchers the government provides to help low-income Americans. 'Right now, in our county it's back up to 74% – where it was during the pandemic.' The housing crisis in Monterey county is getting worse for everyone, not just migrant families, but there are challenges unique to families working in seasonal agricultural work, many of whom are undocumented. Non-US citizens aren't eligible for many federal and state housing subsidies, so families work selling tamales or doing childcare on the side in between harvests, said Johnson. But this kind of precarious cash-based work doesn't come with pay stubs to show a prospective landlord. 'When a season ends, where are you getting the money for your rent? A lot of them will get unemployment during that time, but it doesn't cover what they need for all of their expenses and rent,' said Johnson. And for children studying 'housing is the crucial piece of the puzzle that's missing,' said Johnson remembering the pandemic when kids without wifi couldn't log in to Zoom for remote learning. 'So you start just seeing how important housing was to the overall wellbeing of not only that child, but the family.' All pandemic-era federal funding that helped school districts identify and support homeless children expired this school year leaving uncertainty about not only the future of resources, but school districts' ability to accurately track how many students are in need of them. 'I suspect that the numbers [of homeless students] will probably go down as we lose our ability to identify these students,' said PPIC's Brett Guinan. 'If they don't have funding for separate staff to track them down or for additional hours for their current staff, the ability to capture the complete picture is limited, even if the schools are trying their best.' In Monterey county, the worry for homeless students who are undocumented isn't just food, clothes or accurate headcounts – it's whether Immigrations and Customs Enforcement raids will drive them out of school entirely. 'Our kids are fearful. 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‘It's stitched with everyone's stories,' school staple has been worn by 18 Scots kids for 30 years
‘It's stitched with everyone's stories,' school staple has been worn by 18 Scots kids for 30 years

The Sun

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My kids go to bed at 2am even on school days - here is their nighttime routine "We're such a close-knit family, and for us, that adds that extra special element to it - seeing our wee ones now starting school and a new wee chapter, and it's like our special wee symbol for us. "I'm a local teacher, and when the time was coming for my wee boy to wear it, I was so emotional. "My auntie Jane keeps it safe every year, and she takes the badge off from the previous wearers and the new badge gets sewn or ironed on, so over the summer, we had our little blazer swap. "But it felt extra special because it started with me, and now it's my wee boy's turn. When he was about one, I actually realised he was going to wear the blazer when it's 30 years! "It's been a long time coming, and he's been really excited about it and looking forward to it, too. It's such a special legacy, and it's brought so much joy and happiness to us... 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"It's also been really special for my auntie Jane because we're very close and she helps with Ellis and pick-ups and drop-offs offs so it's kind of come full circle for her too to see him wearing the blazer she bought me over 30 years ago. "It's been an emotional week, I've been trying to keep it together but as soon as I put the blazer on him on Wednesday, I couldn't keep the tears in. "But Ellis was like, 'Why are you crying, mummy?'. He just took it in his stride and was hilariously blasé about it! "As much as it's just a blazer, it's something that will be in our family for a long time to come. "It's in brilliant condition - it's like it was bought just two-three years ago. But it also has a little bit of wear and tear that you can tell it's been in a family, and it's stitched with everyone's stories through it." 'Positive spin on an emotional week' KATIE has been overwhelmed by the incredibly warm response she has had since sharing the story of the legendary blazer. She said: "It's not really a story we put out there all the time. We've never openly been like 'this person wore this blazer on their first day'. "But now everyone understands the story behind it. "It's just so nice, it's always been a special thing in our family, and it's been taken in so well by everyone else. It's just been so lovely. "Everyone who has worn it, has been sending me pictures of them wearing it, and it's so lovely to think that's the same blazer." Katie said her story put a smile on the faces of many nervous mums and dads last week, who were all put through the emotional wringer watching their little ones take on this latest milestone. She added: "It's put such a positive spin on things for us mummies and daddies, who have had an emotional week. "But he's loved his first week at school. We've had a lovely six weeks off together, and the thought of going back can be hard going but this has helped." Katie explained that while little Ellis is too young to fully comprehend how special the blazer is, she said she can't wait for him to understand the gravity in years to come. And the family are already thinking about his kids wearing it in another 30 years. The mum said: "Ellis has just turned five. His speech is fantastic, but his understanding is a little delayed. He's still as sharp as a tack, though, and keeps us laughing! "We tried to tell him about the significance of the blazer in the morning, but he couldn't be less interested. "Then at bedtime we talked to him about how special the blazer was and was like 'look, you're in the news!'. "But he was more shocked at seeing me as a child because he's never seen that before, and he was showing everyone in the house and some family friends that are over from Australia. "Later, he'll understand the gravity of it and, in years to come, it will be a lovely thing for him to look back on. "And we've been like, 'Imagine his children wear it in years to come', and my sister's kids as well, who aren't born yet." 3

Warning over common garden decoration that's costing you thousands & causing ‘serious structural damage' this summer
Warning over common garden decoration that's costing you thousands & causing ‘serious structural damage' this summer

The Sun

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  • The Sun

Warning over common garden decoration that's costing you thousands & causing ‘serious structural damage' this summer

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