Mags Hutchings, personal care and assistance

Mags Hutchings, personal care and assistance Mags Hutchings: Self-employed carer (2019) providing compassionate, qualified home care. Testimonials available. Dedicated to dignity & independence at home.

NVQ L3 H&SC, L3 Med Admin, L2 Palliative/Dementia/Diabetes, First Aid/CPR.

šŸ“š BOOK APPEAL šŸ“šOur Book Sale at James Street Surgery has been a wonderful success so far, and we'd like to thank everyon...
10/06/2026

šŸ“š BOOK APPEAL šŸ“š

Our Book Sale at James Street Surgery has been a wonderful success so far, and we'd like to thank everyone who has donated books or made a purchase.

The new bookshelf is looking fantastic and is being well used by patients.

To keep it going, we are now looking for more book donations. If you have any good quality books at home that you no longer need, we would be very grateful if you could consider donating them.

Every book sold helps raise funds towards our new automatic entrance door and brings us one step closer to making the surgery more accessible for everyone.

Thank you for your continued support. šŸ‘£šŸšŖšŸ’™

https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/margret-hutchings-3?utm_medium=CF&utm_source=CL

It’s Carers Week - and this week is rightly about unpaid carers.The family members, partners, sons, daughters, neighbour...
08/06/2026

It’s Carers Week - and this week is rightly about unpaid carers.
The family members, partners, sons, daughters, neighbours and friends who quietly do so much behind the scenes.

A lot of caring doesn’t look dramatic from the outside.
It can look like:
ā¤ checking medication has been taken
ā¤ waking up in the night because you’re worried
ā¤ making sure someone has eaten
ā¤ organising appointments (and my gosh, attending appointments can feel like a full time job for some they have that many!)
ā¤ changing bedding or helping with personal care
ā¤ doing the shopping
ā¤ popping in ā€œjust to checkā€
ā¤ managing falls worries
ā¤ trying to work, sleep and live around someone else’s needs

And often, unpaid carers carry all of this while saying:
ā€œIt’s fine, I’m managing.ā€

And the work load creeps up. Often what starts out as 'just doing a little shopping' or 'nipping them to the doctors' soon turns into cooking meals, making sure they have eaten that day, making sure tablets have been taken correctly. For some, it soon turns into 24/7 care. Without you ever really thinking 'well I'm a full time carer then'. It just happens.

But caring for someone you love doesn’t mean you have to do everything alone.
At Professional Carers Network, our model of care is about working alongside families. We can help with the practical daily things that often become too much, such as:
⭐ medication prompts
⭐ morning and evening calls
⭐ personal care
⭐ meal preparation
⭐ companionship visits
⭐ respite visits so family carers can rest
⭐ hospital-to-home support
⭐ regular check-ins for reassurance

This Carers Week, we want to say to unpaid carers:
You are doing something incredibly important.
But you deserve support too.
Professional care doesn’t replace family care.
It supports it.

You are not alone. We have your back too. 🄰

Today I had one of those moments where I realised that good care sometimes means recommending something that may not ben...
03/06/2026

Today I had one of those moments where I realised that good care sometimes means recommending something that may not benefit me financially.
I suggested 24-hour care, knowing it could mean fewer hours for me, but it was absolutely the right and safest thing for the person involved.
From a business point of view, I suppose I slightly shot myself in the foot.
From a caring point of view, I know I did the right thing.
Care is not just about being available. It is about being honest, responsible, and putting the person’s needs first.

Today I had one of those moments where I realised that good care sometimes means recommending something that may not ben...
03/06/2026

Today I had one of those moments where I realised that good care sometimes means recommending something that may not benefit me financially.

I suggested 24-hour care, knowing it could mean fewer hours for me, but it was absolutely the right and safest thing for the person involved.

From a business point of view, I suppose I slightly shot myself in the foot.

From a caring point of view, I know I did the right thing.

Care is not just about being available. It is about being honest, responsible, and putting the person’s needs first.

Done āœ”ļøJust had my routine mammogram at the Lincolnshire Breast Screening Unit.As a carer, I spend a lot of time encoura...
02/06/2026

Done āœ”ļø

Just had my routine mammogram at the Lincolnshire Breast Screening Unit.
As a carer, I spend a lot of time encouraging others to look after their health. Today it was my turn.
If your appointment letter arrives, please go. It only takes a short time and could make a huge difference.
Looking after ourselves is just as important as looking after everyone else. šŸ’—

ā¤ļø Caring for people has taught me that love is often found in the small everyday things — showing up, supporting each o...
20/05/2026

ā¤ļø Caring for people has taught me that love is often found in the small everyday things — showing up, supporting each other, staying kind through difficult times and still being there at the end of the day. One of my favourite things is hearing my clients talk about their very first kiss and being taken with them down memory lane for a little while.
Celebrating my own milestone today, triggered lovely conversation and a few giggles. šŸ’‹

A week off in Scotland, fully recharged, and now I’m genuinely looking forward to getting back to work.That’s the lovely...
04/05/2026

A week off in Scotland, fully recharged, and now I’m genuinely looking forward to getting back to work.

That’s the lovely thing about being self-employed — when going back feels good, you know you’re in the right job.

Scotland was ace, but I’ve missed my lovely clients too.

I currently have some availability, so if you’re looking for extra support for yourself or a loved one, just drop me a message. xx

21/04/2026

If I ever get dementia I’d like my family to hang this wish list up on the wall where I live. I want them to remember these things.

1a. Every time you enter the room announce yourself. ā€œHi mum/dad- it’s ………...ā€
NEVER ask- Do you know who I am??? That causes anxiety.

1. If I get dementia, I want my friends and family to embrace my reality.

2. If I think my spouse is still alive, or if I think we’re visiting my parents for dinner, let me believe those things. I’ll be much happier for it.

3. If I get dementia, don’t argue with me about what is true for me versus what is true for you.

4. If I get dementia, and I am not sure who you are, do not take it personally. My timeline is confusing to me.

5. If I get dementia, and can no longer use utensils, do not start feeding me. Instead, switch me to a finger-food diet, and see if I can still feed myself.

6. If I get dementia, and I am sad or anxious, hold my hand and listen. Do not tell me that my feelings are unfounded.

7. If I get dementia, I don’t want to be treated like a child. Talk to me like the adult that I am.

8. If I get dementia, I still want to enjoy the things that I’ve always enjoyed. Help me find a way to exercise, read, and visit with friends.

9. If I get dementia, ask me to tell you a story from my past.

10. If I get dementia, and I become agitated, take the time to figure out what is bothering me.

11. If I get dementia, treat me the way that you would want to be treated.

12. If I get dementia, make sure that there are plenty of snacks for me in the house. Even now if I don’t eat I get angry, and if I have dementia, I may have trouble explaining what I need.

13. If I get dementia, don’t talk about me as if I’m not in the room.

14. If I get dementia, don’t feel guilty if you cannot care for me 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It’s not your fault, and you’ve done your best. Find someone who can help you, or choose a great new place for me to live.

15. If I get dementia, and I live in a dementia care community, please visit me often.

16. If I get dementia, don’t act frustrated if I mix up names, events, or places. Take a deep breath. It’s not my fault.

17. If I get dementia, make sure I always have my favorite music playing within earshot.

18. If I get dementia, and I like to pick up items and carry them around, help me return those items to their original place.

19. If I get dementia, don’t exclude me from parties and family gatherings.

20. If I get dementia, know that I still like receiving hugs or handshakes.

21. If I get dementia, remember that I am still the person you know and love.ā€

in Honor of someone you know or knew who has dementia. In Honor of all those I know and love and lost who are fighting Dementia/Alzheimer’s.

Someone once said if you take care of someone with dementia you lose them more and more everyday. When they get the diagnosis, when they go through different stages, when they need treatment and when they pass away.

This is called "the longest goodbye ". As the brain slowly dies, they change physically and eventually forget who their loved ones are. They could end up lying in bed, not moving and not eating or drinking.

There will be people who will scroll past this post because Dementia has not touched them. They may not know what it's like to have a loved one who has battled or is still battling dementia.

To raise awareness of this cruel disease, I would like my friends to put this on their page today.
Hold your finger on the post to copy and paste to your timeline.

A special thank you to anyone willing to put this on their timeline for Dementia & Alzheimer’s Awareness Week.

09/04/2026

How I love being a carer ā¤ļø

It’s not the big things… it’s the quiet, fragile moments that stay with you.

Earning someone’s trust so gently that, one day, they let you help change their bedding — something so simple, yet so deeply personal.

Another asking to go shopping with me, not just have it done for them… because connection matters just as much as care.

And this morning…
Caught in her dementia, frightened, struggling to catch her breath — and all I could do was hold her hand and stay with her until it passed.
And somehow, that was enough.

Being the calm in someone’s confusion.
Being the hand they hold when the world doesn’t make sense anymore.

This job is hard. But it’s full of love in the most human, powerful way. šŸ’›

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