A quiet, present kind of care for the home — for the parent who'd rather do without than ask, and the family who only wants her safe.
She doesn't tell you about the missed appointment. The keys she finally found behind the couch. The phone she didn't answer because she forgot to charge it. The TV remote that's confusing now.
She doesn't tell you because she doesn't want to be a burden — because asking for help feels like the first step toward losing her home.
So she does without. And you sit miles away, wondering how she's really doing, and learning the answer only when something has already gone wrong.
An iPad on a stand, always there. She doesn't have to find it, charge it, or unlock it. The day's reminders are right where she can see them. Family is one tap away. The TV listens when she asks.
Keys, glasses, the remote, her purse — all tagged, all findable. A few small sensors learn her routines and notice when something's off. She keeps her independence; nothing watches her.
A gentle daily note in your phone — she got up at her usual time, took her medicine, watched her shows. Not surveillance. Just the answer to the question you carry every day, without her having to be asked.
One careful afternoon to set everything up — in her kitchen, with her there. We keep it running so you don't have to. If something needs adjusting, we come back. No remote tinkering, no help desk, no menus to navigate.
My mom would rather struggle than ask me for help. I needed a way to be there for her that didn't ask her to give anything up. So we're building it.
We're starting in Oklahoma City and Norman in late 2026. If this sounds like your family, leave your email and we'll let you know when we can come to her home.
No marketing emails. Just one note when we're ready for you.