Dominik Mikulaschek: Caring Alone, Gebunden
Caring Alone
- Surviving, building structure, activating help
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
- Verlag:
- tredition, 04/2026
- Einband:
- Gebunden
- Sprache:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9783384885111
- Artikelnummer:
- 12688417
- Umfang:
- 88 Seiten
- Altersempfehlung:
- 15 Jahre
- Gewicht:
- 330 g
- Maße:
- 226 x 175 mm
- Stärke:
- 11 mm
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 10.4.2026
- Hinweis
-
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Weitere Ausgaben von Caring Alone |
Preis |
|---|---|
| Buch, Kartoniert / Broschiert, Englisch | EUR 24,90* |
Klappentext
In **"Caring Alone: Surviving, Building Structure, Activating Help"**, the book is about one of the most overwhelming and life-changing realities many people never feel prepared for: suddenly becoming the primary caregiver for a loved one. What often begins with small acts of support can quietly grow into full-time responsibility, emotional overload, chronic stress, and a daily life shaped by caregiving, exhaustion, and constant decision-making. This book explores exactly what happens when caregiving takes over your life and you are left trying to keep everything together on your own.
At its core, this book is about the hidden burden of **family caregiving**, especially for people providing **home care for elderly parents, spouses, partners, or other loved ones** without enough support. It focuses not only on the practical side of caregiving, but also on the emotional, mental, and psychological weight that comes with it. Readers will recognize the pressure of always being alert, always planning ahead, always managing medication, appointments, routines, emergencies, and emotional tension. The book speaks directly to the reality of **caregiver stress**, **caregiver burnout**, **emotional exhaustion**, and the invisible "mental load" that so many caregivers carry every day.
This is not just a general caregiving book. It is a practical and emotionally honest guide for people who feel trapped between love, duty, guilt, and fatigue. **"Caring Alone"** explains why so many caregivers believe they must handle everything by themselves and why thoughts like *"I can manage"* or *"I should not burden anyone else"* can become dangerous patterns. The book helps readers understand that feeling overwhelmed in caregiving is not a personal failure. It is often the natural result of long-term overload, isolation, lack of structure, and a care system that relies too heavily on private sacrifice.
The book also shows a way forward. It is about how to move from pure survival into a more stable and sustainable caregiving structure. Readers learn how to reduce pressure, identify what truly matters, set realistic standards, and accept help without feeling ashamed. A major theme of the book is building **stability without self-sacrifice**. That means creating a caregiving system in which the loved one is supported with dignity, while the caregiver's own health, energy, and mental stability are protected as well.
For anyone searching for books about **caregiving for aging parents**, **caregiver burnout recovery**, **home caregiving support**, **help for family caregivers**, **coping with caregiving stress**, or **self-care for caregivers**, this book offers both recognition and direction. It is especially relevant for adult children, spouses, and relatives who feel alone in their caregiving role and need clear words for what they are experiencing.
**"Caring Alone"** is about survival, emotional resilience, practical caregiving support, and the courage to create structure before collapse happens. It helps readers see that good caregiving does not mean doing everything alone. It means building a support system that protects both the person receiving care and the person providing it. This book offers clarity, relief, and a realistic path toward a more manageable, humane, and sustainable caregiving life.
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