April 28th, 2026
Adam Lack
You’ve done the research. You know there are services that will check in on your parent each day and alert you if something seems off. Now you’re trying to figure out which one actually fits — not the one with the best marketing, but the one your parent will actually use. This post compares three […]
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April 27th, 2026
Adam Lack
The call went to voicemail. You tried twice more. By the third time, you weren’t thinking about the cost of anything — you were thinking about whether to call the police. This happens. Most of the time, everything is fine. Your parent was gardening, or napping, or on the phone with a neighbor. But the […]
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April 24th, 2026
Adam Lack
The fall has already happened. Maybe it was last week, maybe yesterday. Maybe your parent called you themselves, and you felt a cold wave of relief and dread at the same time — relief they were okay, dread at what it means. Or maybe a neighbour called, or you found out when you stopped by. […]
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April 23rd, 2026
Adam Lack
Most people who want to stay independent as they age aren’t in denial. They know things change. They’ve noticed it themselves — a little more caution on the stairs, a moment of mental calculation before getting on a ladder. The awareness is there. What they’re resisting isn’t reality. It’s the version of “safety” that seems […]
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April 22nd, 2026
Adam Lack
Living in a different state from an aging parent means carrying a low-grade worry that most people around you don’t quite see. It’s not that you don’t call. It’s not that you don’t think about it. It’s that you’re three states away, and when your mom doesn’t pick up on a Tuesday afternoon, you don’t […]
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April 21st, 2026
Adam Lack
You call on a Tuesday evening and your mother mentions she hasn’t spoken to anyone that day. Not the postman. Not a neighbour. Not the friend she used to have coffee with on Wednesdays, who moved to be closer to her own grandchildren last spring. She says it lightly, the way people mention the weather. […]
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April 20th, 2026
Adam Lack
Most people who live alone and plan to keep doing so have already thought about this. There’s a version of “staying safe” that sounds fine in theory — the alerts, the wearables, the sensors on the stove — and another version that sounds like being watched. If you’ve rejected the second version, you’re not being […]
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April 17th, 2026
Adam Lack
Most people who live alone don’t think about safety until something happens. A missed step on the stairs. A day spent feeling off. A moment when you realized — quietly, and maybe a little uncomfortably — that if something went wrong, no one would know right away. That thought doesn’t have to be alarming. But […]
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April 16th, 2026
Adam Lack
Your parent is fine. Nothing has happened. But something has shifted — a missed call here, a longer gap between texts there — and you’ve started thinking about putting something in place. You’ve looked at medical alert systems. Maybe you’ve mentioned one to your parent and it didn’t go well. Or maybe it just doesn’t […]
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March 30th, 2026
Adam Lack
There’s a particular kind of worry that doesn’t announce itself — it just settles in quietly. Your parent is fine, as far as you know. They’re independent. They manage. But somewhere in the back of your mind, there’s a question that runs on a loop: What if today is the day something goes wrong and […]
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