Caregiving Roles: The Personal Chef

Caregiving Roles: The Personal Chef


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Making sure her mother Ruth eats right is one of Sheri Yarbrough's highest priorities. Alyssa Schukar Facebook Twitter LinkedIn


Sheri Yarbrough, 56, of Chicago, has a Ph.D. in education policy studies and now cares full time for her mother Ruth, 90, who has dementia, diabetes, high  cholesterol  and osteoporosis. Her


mother is also a five-year breast cancer survivor. 


"I have to watch the food she eats so her blood sugar doesn’t spike..."

— Sheri Yarbrough Sheri prepares healthful meals for her mother to help manage her diabetes. Alyssa Schukar


I always knew I would be the one to take care of our parents, but I thought I’d be able to see it coming a long way off. Instead, it arrived without warning. In 2010, I took my mother to a


general doctor’s appointment and was informed that she could no longer live alone. So I sold my home and moved into hers. The first 18 months were rocky because she and I had our


differences. Her breast cancer diagnosis challenged me to change the way I acted toward her and that helped our relationship get better. 


Members only Sheri takes care of most of mother's daily activities, including bathing and monitoring her medications. Alyssa Schukar


I handle the majority of daily activities for her — bathing her and making sure she’s taking all her medicines, as well as cleaning our home and cooking. I realize I can’t do this all by


myself so I have people who come to help me from time to time.


Cooking and making sure she’s well fed is one of my biggest responsibilities. I enjoy cooking and think about food a lot. That’s a good thing because my mother eats five or six times per


day. I love food and every day is like [the TV show] Chopped for me. I’m also a little bit of a control freak about cooking because I want to know what we’re eating, and I have to watch the


food she eats so her blood sugar doesn’t spike too much.


We usually have oatmeal for breakfast, then we stick with mostly proteins and vegetables after that. My mother was never a picky eater but recently she suddenly stopped eating meat at night


— she’ll eat it only during the day. I learned from her doctor that one of her medications could make her mouth dry at night. So I started making eggs or tofu in the evenings, and I use


herbs and spices from around the world to keep her food appealing. Lately, I’ve been playing around with soups because my mother has always liked them. I have to keep her full enough because


if she’s hungry she’ll get up during the night, and she needs to be well rested to have a good day.


Seven years in, it feels good to have assumed this role in my mother’s life. I’m glad that I was in a place where I could make her last years as good as they can be and keep her happy. That


brings me joy. 


— As told to Stacey Colino


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