Active adults, active adult transitions, Elder Move,Aging Parents,Senior Relocation Specialist Downsizes and Relocates Seniors in Transition, Greater Kansas City, Johnson County, Kansas, Boomers Move Mom and Dad, caregivers, adult children of aging parents, quality of life, moving solutions, senior move managers, senior moving
Senior Move Services
Gerre Ann Davis,
Certified Relocation and Transition Specialist
8115 West 144th Place
Senior Move Services, Kansas City, MO, Overland Park, KS
Overland Park, Kansas 66223

www.seniormoveservices.com

Office: 913-897-6309
Mobile: 913-302-5214

Planning and coordinating stress-free moves for
active adults and their families


Call for in-home consultation. (Free if you decide to use our services)

Photo (below right). Gerre Davis and her dad, Henry Dloogoff, whose transition to independent living
dramatically improved his quality of life and gave her the inspiration to offer the same outcome to
 other adults in similar circumstances.

Senior Move Services, Kansas City, MO, Overland Park, KS


The most important attribute of any active adult move
manager is that we have, in some capacity, lived
the active adult experience. Only by working with
active adults and their families can we understand the
emotional and physical dynamics that accompany
a move like this.

Senior Move Services Helps Boomer Children Move Aging Parents Into Smaller, Safer Homes

We Handle All the Details,
Even the Heating Pad!



Senior Move Managers Understand Your Concerns and Help Eliminate Them


Reduces stress.
This emotional time in your life may overwhelm you, especially if you're already frail. We'll help you decide what to keep, what to donate, what to sell, what to ship and we'll unpack everything in your new home. Save your energy for your new life!

Provides support. The senior relocation specialist understands that you don't want to leave your home but your situation demands it. Rest assured, we treat you with dignity, respect and compassion.

Engenders confidence. Membership in the National Association of Senior Move Managers assures you that your senior relocation specialist

Offers your choice of services. We coordinate your move to your particular needs and budget. We'll work with you and your family to achieve a stress-free move so you can resume living, not unpacking. Your senior move manager has been trained and certified to uphold the highest standards of the senior move industry.


Children of Aging Parents
Support Group

Do you need to voice your frustration? Do you need help convincing your parents that they're no longer safe in their present environment? If you answered yes, you may want to participate in a support group we're forming through Adult Children of Aged Parents. Please let us know of your interest by e-mailing Gerre Davis at www.seniormoveservices.com




Downsizing quiz: What would you do with these possessions? Give them to one of your children? Sell them at auction? Sell them in an estate sale? Give them away? Take them with you? Why?

Practical Advice to Adult Children When Moving Mom  and Dad

Try to recreate the old environment as much as possible.

Your parents will be experiencing a lot of change; it will be comforting to have some things stay the same. Photograph each shelf in the china closet, the arrangement of pictures on walls and items on bureaus. The photographs will help you recreate the feel of the former residence with amazing accuracy and speed.

Let your parents’ emotional and physical comfort guide the process. Your parents’ priorities may be different from yours. If books were very special to them, they may need to determine what will happen to the volumes not going with them before they are willing to focus on other issues. Attempting to force your parents to proceed in a sequence that doesn’t address their priorities may result in your winning the battle but losing the war.

Your parents’ perspective may differ from yours as well. They may prefer old and worn objects to newer items that are in much better condition. Seemingly insignificant items may be loaded with personal meaning and memories, while objects of great material value may be less important. Allow them to make the decisions.

Accept their gifts.

Your parents may want to give you items, including some you may not be happy to receive. Take them anyway. Store the items in your basement if you must, but accept them graciously. Knowing that cherished objects are with family can bring comfort and peace of mind to your parents.

Be tactful.

Often poor health and failing eyesight result in housekeeping practices that are less stringent than they once were. Tactfully offer to clean things as you sort through or pack. Avoid making your parents feel bad about the home they are leaving.

Focus on sorting, not packing.

Preparing for a senior move is a major organizational challenge. It’s not uncommon to have items going to your parents’ new home, to an adult son in Maine, a daughter in Illinois, a granddaughter in Arizona, a niece in Texas, the church bazaar, the Salvation Army, the neighborhood consignment shop, and the township dump. Attics, basements, garages, closets and cupboards....there may be forty years of belongings to sort through. Many people feel overwhelmed.

It’s here more than anywhere else that you are needed. Helping your parents sort and organize their belongings is the single most important thing you can do to reduce the stress of moving, ensure a smooth move, and save money in the long run.

Let your parents grieve.

When you work with your parents, keep sorting sessions brief (two–three hours at most). Constant decision making drains energy. Accept that some days you will accomplish less than you had hoped.

The sorting process brings up lots of memories. Stories and reminiscing are natural. It’s all right to be directed in your goal, but let your parents enjoy their recollections. It’s part of saying good-bye.

Be realistic about how much time you can devote to the moving process.

Allow 40-60 hours for the packing and unpacking (once you have acquired all the packing materials), and at least that much time for the sorting process, spread out over several months if possible. If your time is limited, use it to help your parents prepare for their move, and obtain professional help for the pack and unpack.

Concentrate on the big picture.

Senior moves are stressful for the entire family, as adult children assume new responsibilities in addition to their own homes, jobs and families. Conflicts sometimes develop between siblings over who bears which portion of the burden, or over the disposition of material items. As you work with your parents and siblings, keep three objectives equally in mind—caring for your parents, taking care of yourself, and keeping the family intact.


        
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