From the CBC:
“This couple 'adopted' their
elder friend, and now they live as a family”
When Marike Finlay and her
partner, Karin Cope, decided to leave Quebec and move to the Nova Scotia coast,
they asked their older friend, Elisabeth Bigras: "Why don't you
come?" "We asked Elisabeth to think about it, and Karin and I thought
about it very seriously," said Finlay, who was mindful of the 20-year age
gap between them and their friend. "We knew that if we were inviting Elisabeth
to come and retire here with us, that meant that we were committing to be with
her throughout her old age," she told The Current.
The couple worked as professors
at McGill University, where Finlay met Bigras through the older woman's late
husband, Julien. When he died, the women became closer friends, going on
sailing trips that took them along Canada's East Coast. Those trips prompted Finlay and Cope to move
to the coast and invite Bigras along. She said yes, and 20 years later, she's
never regretted the decision. "It was wonderful," said Bigras, now
86. "It was exactly what I would have wished." The women share a
household in West Quoddy, N.S., and though they initially split their finances
50/50, they've adjusted over the years in line with who has more money
available. The house has been arranged to provide privacy when it's needed, but
the women cook together, eat together and spend their time together much the
way any family would. Bigras, who had a
career as a psychiatrist in Quebec, never had children of her own. As Bigras
has gotten older, Finlay thinks their choice to "adopt" her has given
her the support she needs and kept their friendship strong. "If Elisabeth
weren't with us now, she would have to be in assisted living," Finlay
said.
Getting older sometimes 'about
loss' As the years have passed, Bigras says she's realized that "old
age is a lot about loss." "First friends because they died,
beloved ones … and then I lost my hearing; I lost music. And that was a
terrible thing," she said. Bigras gave up her driver's licence and
cooks at home less often — aside from some of her specialities, such as
"canard à l'orange." But she's found other hobbies to fill the time,
including photography. "If you can work to find inside yourself
what fascinates you, what you can have a passion for, it helps a lot," she
said. Her photography has led to some frights when the three go for
hikes. Sometimes, Cope says she and Finlay will go ahead while leaving Bigras
to rest along the trail. When they return, they'll often find her sprawled on
the ground. "We're
completely freaked out, 'Oh, my God, what's happened to her? She's dying! She's
dead!' " Cope said. Invariably, Bigras is just taking a close-up
picture of something she's found on the ground.
'It takes a village to keep an
elder' Finlay and Cope think their own blood relatives don't quite
understand the life they've built with Bigras, but the local community has come
to "an understanding very quickly that we are a family." Cope's
own parents live outside Canada. As a result, she says Elisabeth is the elder
she turns to for wisdom and as a model for how to age. "This is the elder that I love, who
is first in my heart, who I will commit myself to seeing to the end of her days."
Finlay thinks their story shows an alternative to elder care, and said it
"beats putting them in the old age home." "Maybe it takes a
village also to keep an elder, not just to raise a child," she said. The
pandemic has exposed devastating shortcomings in how Canada provides care for
its elderly population, with harrowing stories of neglect and soaring death
tolls in long term-care homes as the virus burned through those facilities. In Quebec, a coroner's inquest into
long-term care deaths is underway, while Ontario's auditor general released a
report Wednesday saying the sector was not "prepared or equipped" for
the pandemic. Long-term care residents account for almost half of the
nearly 8,000 Ontarians who have died of COVID-19. Finlay wants to see more help from all
levels of government to make it feasible for other Canadians to care for elders
in their own homes, and said that could include monetary incentives. "I think it costs thousands of dollars to
keep somebody in an old-age home, whereas it would be hundreds of dollars of
incentives to try to say, 'Let's try and keep the elderly in households, in
families,' " she said. "It sure might be an incentive for a lot of
other families to entertain this possibility."
^ This is such a heart-warming
story. I have always believed in helping others (friends, family and strangers)
and have often invited my Grandmother and Great-Aunt to come live with me –
they didn’t want to leave New York so I call and check-in on them every week. ^
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