I used to call my mom every day after work. Most nights, we’d talk about the same things: what she made for dinner, what show she was watching, whether the neighbor’s dog was still barking at squirrels. It was a ritual that brought us both comfort. It also gave me a sense that everything was fine.
Until one day, she didn’t answer.
At first, I wasn’t worried. Maybe she was out back. Maybe the phone wasn’t charged. Maybe she fell asleep. Hours passed. I called again. Still nothing.
By morning, panic had settled in.
My mom had fallen. She was alone for over 12 hours on the cold tile floor of her kitchen.
She didn’t want an ambulance. She didn’t want to go to the hospital. And she definitely didn’t want me making a “big deal” out of it. But as I helped her up and saw the bruises on her arm and the look in her eyes, I knew. This was a big deal.
Everything changed that day. Because when aging parents fall, it’s more than just a stumble. It’s a turning point.

Looking back, the signs had been there:
I didn’t want to admit what it might mean. I told myself she was just aging normally. That everyone forgets things. That a little clutter wasn’t a crisis.
But when someone you love is slipping, it’s easier to ignore the slow fade than confront what it could lead to.
That fall ripped the blinders off.
I beat myself up for weeks afterward.
Why didn’t I check on her more? Why didn’t I notice the decline sooner? Why did it take an emergency for me to act?
The truth is, most adult children feel this way when the reality of caregiving smacks them in the face. We love our parents, but we’re not trained to see the slow unraveling of independence until something dramatic forces us to. And when that day comes, we scramble to figure it all out.
If you’re reading this and thinking, “That could be me,” please don’t wait for a crisis. Aging parents fall more often than we realize, and one fall can start a dangerous chain reaction.
Start with these steps:
You don’t have to wait for a hospital visit to start helping. You can reduce fall risk for aging parents now, with small, compassionate steps.
No one wants to imagine their parent alone on the floor for hours. But imagining it, and preparing for it- might mean you never have to live it.
When aging parents fall, it’s a wake-up call. But it can also be a beginning: of clearer conversations, of safer living, of care that’s given with courage instead of panic.
If you haven’t had the talk yet, now’s the time.


Susan Myers is a Mom, Caregiver Strategist, and founder of The Aging Society. She helps family caregivers get the clarity they need to navigate aging parent care without losing themselves in the process. Her courses, resources, and Caregivers: Talk With Purpose podcast offer grounded, practical support for the moments that feel overwhelming, confusing, or heavier than expected.
The Aging Society helps caregivers navigate conversations and decisions about senior care with clarity, confidence, and ease.

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