1800 ELDERHelp (1800 353 374)In an emergency call 000
Online Safety
Language Support
Increase Font Size
Decrease Font Size
  • About
  • Elder Abuse
    • Understand
    • Defining Elder Abuse
    • Recognising Elder Abuse
    • Prevent
    • Steps I can take for me
    • Steps I can take for others
    • Respond
    • Helping me respond
    • Helping others to respond
  • Topics
    • Popular topics
    • Ageism
    • Enduring Powers of Attorney
      • Get started here
      • Powers of attorney introduction
      • or go directly to your State or Territory
      • Australian Capital Territory
      • New South Wales
      • Northern Territory
      • Queensland
      • South Australia
      • Tasmania
      • Victoria
      • Western Australia
    • Family Relationships
    • Future Planning
    • Grandparent Alienation
    • Guardianships
    • Health & Wellbeing
    • View all topics
  • Find Help
    • For you
    • Older individuals
    • Family & Friends
    • All individuals
    • Support services
    • Service Providers
    • Resources
  • News & Resources
    • Stay up to date
    • Latest News
    • Community Events
    • Book Reviews
    • Learn and Discover
    • Resources
    • Featured articles
    • Real Stories
    • Helpful Terms
Older womans hearing aid
  • Home/
  • Featured Topics/
  • World Elder Abuse Awareness Day/

Challenging assumptions makes a lot of sense

This World Elder Abuse Awareness Day we invited several people to write a short piece on the theme of Equality at Every Age. Andrew James recounts a story of his Nan and her right to hear.

  • Challenging assumptions makes a lot of sense
Last updated: 19 December 2023
Share via…
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppEmail
  • Challenging assumptions makes a lot of sense
Downloads
  • Challenging assumptions makes a lot of sense

Challenging assumptions makes a lot of sense

I was very close to my maternal grandmother, even though she lived six hours away from my city, in a small country town. We spoke by phone most weeks, and I visited regularly. I was very lucky to have her in my life until I was 45 years old. I can’t believe she has been gone for 10 years. I still miss her.

Nan lived at home, alone but content, until her early nineties. She loved lawn bowls, reading, the occasional shandy and her dogs. She was involved with her community, in fact I would often find her in her front yard talking with a neighbour or a friend who was walking by and she loved listening to the radio and watching the evening news on TV.

I remember a period when Nan’s hearing aids were playing up and causing her grief. It was getting harder to speak with her on the phone, so I had a conversation with my aunt about what needed to be done to improve Nan’s hearing. 

Essentially, I learned, it would involve several trips to a much bigger town 100 kilometres away to see specialists who could fix the problem and then monitor the results. The prognosis was good, but it was going to take some time and effort to make it happen.

My aunt, concerned about being able to make all these trips with Nan, said that she hadn’t been able to hear well for a while.

All the more reason to act, I thought.

Then my aunt said, ‘She’s 90 years old. She doesn’t need to hear anymore, and I do everything for her, anyway.’

I was taken aback. A decision had been made in the moment, like we were deciding to dispose of some old clothes. It was as if Nan’s needs, her rights, were irrelevant. The ramifications of what my aunt had said hit me: the inconvenience of fixing the problem outweighed Nan’s basic human rights. We hadn’t even asked Nan what she wanted.

Stunned, I replied, ‘I don’t think we have the right to decide that. Nan deserves to hear as much you and I do. If you can’t take her to the appointments, I will.’

It was a tough—and, at times, sensitive—conversation. My aunt had always taken the lead in making decisions about Nan’s welfare; she lived close by and did much of Nan’s day-to-day support. I lived 500 kilometres away, so at a practical level I was unlikely to be the one making the trips to the specialists.

Still, I firmly believed it was our responsibility to fix the problem, not to pretend it wasn’t there or—more accurately—to assume that being able to hear at 90 years of age was less valuable.

My aunt realised the import of what she had said. We discussed the options with Nan. And in the end, we all agreed to make the trips.

With Nan’s hearing aids soon fixed, she was again able to join in on conversations, watch the evening TV news, chat with her neighbours and enjoy the sounds of everyday life. And, delightfully for me, she could once again talk for longer on the phone. Her hearing wasn’t ever great again, but it was better, enough that she could be more connected and engaged with the world around her.

The experience of safeguarding Nan’s hearing highlighted to me just how readily we can exert power and influence over older, more isolated members of our families—people we love and care greatly about. I saw how easily an older person’s rights can be ignored, dismissed or eroded, how simple and expedient decisions can dramatically affect another person’s quality of life.

It also reminded me how vulnerable any of us can be as we get older and how important it is to have multiple, close connections who know our lives and how we want to live. These are the people who will be able to challenge potentially disastrous decisions made by other people who think they are doing the right thing—or who aren’t really thinking clearly at all.

My aunt made a quick call that her 90-year-old mother didn’t really need to hear anymore; all the trips back and forth to the specialists with her would be a huge bother, and for what?

For what is exactly the point. In Nan’s case, the ability to hear properly. But more than that: the ability to converse, interact with others, stay informed, take part in her local community—in short, continue to live life the way she wanted to and enjoy the things she enjoyed.

It got me thinking. What other assumptions do we regularly make about older people that are simply dismissive, plainly wrong or downright dangerous?

Author: Andrew James

If you or someone you know needs help tackling elder abuse, start at compass.info or call 1800 ELDERHelp (1800 353 374).

Downloads
  • Challenging assumptions makes a lot of sense
Share via…
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppEmail

All comments are moderated. Please visit our terms of use for guidance on how to engage with our community.

WEAAD Articles

AllMore from this section
Keys on a table
Dementia

You are not alone

We hope you appreciate this thought provoking article by Australian journalist Philippa McDonald.

Still here, still queer sign
Aged care

Diversity in aged care into the future?

David Menadue offers a unique insight into the queer experience in aged care. This is the second piece in our series on Equality at Every Age, part of our recognition of World Elder Abuse Awareness Day, which is on 15 June.

Gardening equipment
World elder abuse awareness day

Reasons to be cheerful part 4

Sandra Yates takes us on a journey of reflection as she lists the reasons she has been cheerful lately. This is the third piece in our series on Equality at Every Age, part of our recognition of World Elder Abuse Awareness Day, which is on 15 June.

World Elder Abuse Awareness Day mobile banner
World Elder Abuse Awareness Day banner
Non-English speaker

Find a Service Provider

Need information or advice on elder abuse now?
Need information or advice on elder abuse now?
CALL 1800 ELDERHelp (1800 353 374)
In an emergency call 000

This free number will redirect you to an existing phone service near you. This is not a 24-hour line. Call operating times will vary. A collaboration between the Australian, state and territory governments.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Sign up to our eNewsletter to receive updates on content, resources, news and events from Compass – guiding action on elder abuse.

Sign up now!
  • Discover
  • Understanding Elder Abuse
  • Preventing Elder Abuse
  • Responding to Elder Abuse
  • Resources
  • Service Providers
  • Stay up to date
  • News
  • Events
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Using this Website
  • Accessibility
  • Online Safety
  • Language Support
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • More Information
  • About Compass
  • Contact Us
  • Media Enquiries
Australian Aboriginal FlagTorres Strait Islander Flag

We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of country throughout Australia and recognise their continuing connection to land, waters and culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.

Compass is committed to ensuring equitable and inclusive responses to end elder abuse for people with diverse characteristics and life experiences

Elder Abuse Action Australia
Made for all Australians regardless of nationality, culture or language, Compass is an inclusive website navigating elder abuse.
Compass is an initiative of EAAA and funded by the Attorney-General's Department Ⓒ Copyright EAAA Compass 2024. Made by Grade
Menu
Topics
Find Help
Search