Carolyn King Dennis and Helen West-Rodriguez, longtime friends, do a lot together. They even recently vacationed together – with husbands in tow – in Santa Fe.

They first met more than two decades ago, when Dennis was completing advanced clinical pastoral education training at SMU’s Perkins School of Theology and West-Rodriguez was a professor of gerontology.

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β€œIt’s just been one of those relationships that’s meant to be,” Dennis says. β€œWe enjoy the same kind of sense of humor. Our paths crossed sometimes often and sometimes seldom for the next 20 years or so.”

Through their careers and their work with the Greater Lakewood Shepherd’s Center (Dennis was the executive director and West-Rodriguez was on the board), they’ve always been interested in issues and challenges facing senior citizens.

But it wasn’t until both of their parents began a precipitous decline into old age that they decided they had something more to offer: Together, they’ve written a book, called When Mom and Dad Grow Old: Step-by-Step Planning For Families and Caregivers.

β€œOne day, one of us – I can’t remember which one – said: We ought to write a book. It was kind of like saying: We ought to climb a mountain. We’d never done it before, but we thought we’d give it a try,” says Dennis, 65.

Both had different situations with their own parents.

West-Rodriguez’ mother, who was 97 when she died, stayed reasonably problem free until she neared the end of her life. Though she relied on a lot of help from West-Rodriguez and her husband, there wasn’t reason to intervene until she β€œbegan to have some pains and arthritis,” and couldn’t nail down the schedule for taking her pills.

β€œWe finally had to get serious about her living where she could get some monitoring,” West-Rodriguez says.

Her husband, she says, suggested her mother move in with them.

β€œHe’s such a sweetheart,” she says. β€œBut I said: Well, if you never want to go anyplace again…

β€œShe really wasn’t that much of a pain, but it’s just very confining. It’s like having a baby, only you can’t get a baby sitter.”

She doesn’t mean it to sound harsh, only realistic. Not facing facts about taking care of an aging parent can turn into huge problems later on, she says.

β€œOne of the biggest mistakes is for somebody, say a grown daughter, to say, ‘You don’t have to worry mom. You’re moving in with us.’ Sure, there’s good feeling there, but you don’t really know all the things that’s going to entail.”

Dennis said she learned her lessons the hard way: through experience.

β€œMy father was adamant not to discuss these things,” she says. β€œI’d start to talk about eventualities, and he’d get up and go out of the room.”

Though both women say it’s never too early to start talking about such things, they stress that while β€œyou can have a goal, you don’t have to announce that goal right from the beginning.”

β€œAsk your parents where they go to church, who has a key to the house, who you can call if you can’t reach them,” Dennis says. β€œIdeally, you’ll have enough time to go from those conversations to other conversations about how you’re going to help if something happens.”

To order a copy of When Mom and Dad Grow Old, visit www.brownbooks.com/authors/dennis or www.amazon.com. Your local bookstore can also order it direct from the wholesale distributor, Ingram. The book is $22.95.