Meet Jean
I first met Jean soon after she’d been moved to assisted living, which is how I meet many of my clients. She’d had what I call a “mystery fall” at the supermarket near her apartment in Queens. One moment she was shopping, the next she was staring up into a bright light with an EMT asking if she was okay. She had no memory of what happened.
In the hospital, all the usual tests were done. Nothing alarming showed up, no stroke, no major medical event. Jean was in her mid-90s (“nine-five,” as she liked to say), walked miles regularly, lived alone, and was mentally sharp. Still, because no one could explain the fall, she was sent to rehab rather than home. From there, as often happens, the path led straight to assisted living.
By the time I met her, Jean was in a one-bedroom apartment in an assisted living facility with almost nothing in it. No TV, phone, radio, or books. Just a bed, a nightstand, a small bureau, and a lamp. This was during the early days of the pandemic, and she was quarantined to her room until she received her second vaccine dose. She had two outfits, the clothes she’d fallen in and one donated set from the facility. No family nearby, no visitors, and no stimulation.
The facility called me because Jean needed someone to assist with all the things they don’t do such as shopping, arranging, and transporting to medical appointments, dealing with her second vaccine, sorting out her finances, and getting personal items from her apartment. She had assumed, as many elders do, that the facility would “take over” and manage her money, bills, and practical needs. That is almost never the case. Assisted living provides room, board, very basic personal services and expects family to do the rest. Jean had no one.
I took her to get that second vaccine dose, neither of us realizing she’d gotten very sick after the first one, a detail she only remembered later. That omission led to a serious reaction and another hospital stay. It’s one of the reasons I insist advocates handle discharges and transitions because we make sure vital pieces of medical history travel with the person.
When we went to her Queens apartment for the first time in three months, it was neat and tidy but buried under piles of unpaid bills and past-due notices. No one knew she’d been gone and no one had stepped in. Together, we chose some clothes, a few pieces of furniture, and then I sat down with her to look at her finances. What I saw is tragically common: she had enough money to live in that private assisted living facility for less than a year, and that’s without paying movers or closing out her apartment. No one at the facility had checked whether her funds were sustainable. They were happy to sign a lease and hand her a key.
I became her Power of Attorney so I could help her navigate all of this while she kept full control over her decisions. She was sharp, opinionated, and very capable. We arranged a prepaid funeral so she could choose her final wishes. We applied for community Medicaid and prepared a move to a state-funded facility that offered small studio rooms rather than the crowded, substandard conditions I’ve seen elsewhere.
The Medicaid facility was “better than most,” but still a dramatic shift for a woman who used to walk to the supermarket whenever she pleased and eat what she wanted. Now her life was regulated: assigned meal times, assigned tables, limited food choices, and no ability to keep a fridge in her room. She couldn’t get something as simple as a ham sandwich because the facility was kosher. She was lonely, surrounded by residents with dementia, and grieving the independence she’d lost along with her friends and old routines.
Jean missed simple, familiar things like a properly mixed glass of Citrucel three times a day, a ham and cheese sandwich, cherry pie, a particular kind of toothpaste (“Arm and Hammer wash,” as she called it). I spent an absurd amount of time advocating over how thick her Citrucel should be mixed and whether she could keep it in her room. It took multiple conversations with administrators and nursing staff before we finally got permission for her to store and mix it herself.
These details might sound small, but they’re not. When someone has had almost all of their freedom taken away like where they live, when they eat, what they can eat, where they can go, being able to control a glass of Citrucel or a tube of toothpaste becomes emotionally enormous. I saw over and over how these tiny wins restored some dignity.
As my travel schedule got busier, I brought in my colleague Jackee, a board-certified patient advocate. She and Jean clicked right away. Jackee helped unpack Jean’s things, played Christmas music on a found CD player, listened to stories about church and old friends, walked her to meals, and guided her into social activities when she felt she didn’t “belong.” Over time, Jackee became the person who brought her ham sandwiches, sweets, new slippers, nail polish, and companionship.
Together, Jackee and I dealt with a maze of insurance problems like railroad pension rules that complicated her coverage, supplemental plans that didn’t include drug benefits, and medical bills that would ultimately be written off. We protected Jean from financial chaos as best we could, while making sure she still had some joy such as outings to the diner, haircuts, clothes bought online on the “little phone,” a small cactus for her windowsill, and a steady supply of journals and pens for her daily writing.
Today, Jean is 97. She still writes in her journal every day, keeps a meticulous “Jackee list” of things she wants to discuss, and remains mentally sharp. She is, undeniably, living with far fewer choices than she once had, but she is not invisible. She has advocates who see her, fight for her, and help her preserve as much autonomy and dignity as possible.
What I want you to take from Jean’s story
If you have an older loved one, or you’re planning for your own future, Jean’s journey offers important lessons:
- Don’t assume the facility will “handle everything.”
Assisted living typically covers room, board, basic housekeeping, laundry, and sometimes a clinic visit. Bills, banking, shopping, medical coordination, and personal items are not automatically managed. - Know the true costs and how long the money will last.
Before signing a lease, sit down and calculate: monthly cost, existing assets, and how many months or years are truly affordable, including moving costs, closing an apartment, and small extras that matter to quality of life. - Get legal and financial documents in place early.
Power of Attorney, healthcare proxy, and a prepaid funeral plan can prevent crises later and ensure the older adult’s wishes are followed while they still have a voice. - Be present at hospital discharges and transitions.
Make sure medical records, vaccine reactions, and key history are clearly documented and transferred. Advocates catch details that get missed. - Ask very specific questions about food and daily routines.
Meal times, flexibility, ability to keep snacks or a small fridge, religious dietary rules—all of this profoundly affects day-to-day happiness. - Respect the “small” preferences.
Whether it’s Citrucel thickness, a favorite candy, or a ham sandwich, these things can be lifelines. They’re about identity and control, not just taste. - Consider an independent advocate.
Someone who understands the system and does not work for the facility can make all the difference in how an elder is treated, heard, and cared for.
Above all remember that advanced age does not erase a person’s ability to think, feel, and decide. People like Jean have lived full, independent lives for decades. Our job is not to turn them into obedient patients, it’s to protect their safety while fiercely preserving their dignity and voice.
Meet Denise
In Aging Icon, I share the stories of extraordinary individuals who have not only navigated aging with grace but have transformed their challenges into catalysts for change. Denise’s story is one of those remarkable chapters and is a testament to resilience, advocacy, and the enduring human spirit.
A Childhood Challenge That Sparked a Lifelong Fight
Denise contracted polio as a child in 1948, long before a vaccine existed. Her legs were paralyzed, but her determination was not. Her parents refused to let her disability define her, insisting she live up to the same expectations as her sisters. She went on to earn a college degree and work in social services, helping others while navigating a world that wasn’t built for people like her.
Turning Adversity into Advocacy
One ordinary morning, waiting for a bus to get to work, Denise refused to be told “wait for the next one” when a driver admitted he didn’t know how to operate the wheelchair lift. Her insistence on fairness drew police, press, and public attention and ultimately led to policy changes. That pivotal moment launched Denise’s life’s work making certain that public spaces were accessible for all. From sidewalk cutouts to elevators in train stations and accessible transportation services, Denise’s determination shaped the infrastructure we rely on today.
Love, Loss, and Legacy
Later in life, Denise married her longtime friend and partner, who became her caregiver as they aged together. Their partnership embodied devotion and independence until his sudden passing left Denise facing new realities, financial, legal, and emotional.
I stepped in to help Denise rebuild stability, from navigating Medicaid and pooled income trusts to ensuring she could remain in her beloved waterfront condo. With a compassionate, strategic approach, I guided Denise toward independence and dignity, even in grief.
Lessons from Denise’s Journey
- Advocacy starts with one voice. Denise’s stand at that bus stop changed accessibility laws nationwide.
- Love and partnership evolve. True companionship adapts through life’s physical and emotional shifts.
- Planning matters. Estate and financial preparedness are crucial at any age or ability level.
- Community sustains us. When family falters or distance grows, compassionate professionals and friends can become chosen family.
Denise’s story reminds us that aging isn’t about surrender, it’s about continuing to shape the world around us with courage and grace.
Want to read more stories like Denise’s?
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Herman’s Story: Why Seniors Need Advocates
When I first began volunteering in Florida as a SHINE Representative and helping older adults understand Medicare and health insurance, I met countless people navigating the maze of aging alone. One story in particular still stays with me: Herman’s.
A Sister’s Worry
Herman’s sister, Trudy, came regularly to my Medicare classes. Active and engaged, she was deeply concerned about her brother, who had stopped leaving his apartment. He wasn’t sick in the traditional sense, but he had given up on daily life.
When I finally met Herman, it became clear that what he lacked wasn’t the ability to get up, it was the motivation. His words were simple: “If I had someplace to go, I would get up.”
A System That Missed the Signs
Soon after, Herman ended up in the hospital following a fall. What should have been a chance to recover turned into a nightmare. Nurses misinterpreted his dry humor as confusion, missed the fact that he had a broken leg, and restrained him unnecessarily.
This is where advocacy becomes essential. Without someone to explain his personality, history, and “baseline,” Herman was seen as another disoriented patient rather than the vibrant man he truly was.
Seeing the Whole Person
As I learned more about Herman, I discovered a full life. He was a German immigrant who served in the U.S. Army, rose to leadership in his union, and lived with energy and joy. Knowing this helped me push for care that matched who he really was, not just what was convenient for the system.
It also reminded me how easily older adults can be taken advantage of, whether through medical neglect or even predatory sales practices, like the cousin who unknowingly signed up for multiple phone contracts. Advocacy is often about fighting battles on multiple fronts.
Finding Dignity at the End
Ultimately, Herman could not return to his apartment. But because of his military service, he qualified for a nearby Veterans’ nursing home. It was the right place, compassionate, social, and respectful. There, he built friendships and received extraordinary hospice care when his health declined. He passed peacefully, honored for his service, and surrounded by dignity.
The Lessons Herman Leaves Behind
Herman’s story is not just about one man. It reveals what so many older adults face:
- Purpose matters. Often, seniors don’t lose the will to live—they lose reasons to get out of bed.
- Systems fail. Without an advocate, oversights and misunderstandings can strip away dignity.
- The whole person counts. Understanding someone’s history and baseline changes how we interpret their needs.
- Advocacy protects. From healthcare to financial exploitation, seniors need someone to stand beside them.
Herman’s journey affirmed why Aging Icons exists. Advocacy ensures that people are seen, heard, and respected in every stage of aging. Seniors are more than patients or statistics, they are veterans, immigrants, parents, workers, dreamers.
And like Herman, they deserve to age with dignity, community, and compassion.
Sunrise Senior Living Families Get Information
Judith Grimaldi, Esq ran down the changes in Medicare and Medicaid. Henni Fisher,LCSW, BCD, Alzheimer`s and Aging Resource Center of Brooklyn filled in the blanks and fielded questions. Caryn Isaacs, Patient Advocate discussed how a Patient Advocate can help with decisions when faced with hospitalization, rehabilitation and home care. She introduced special guests Eilish and Ken Natton, who went through the process of getting their home ready for Eilish, who lives with Parkinson’s Disease. Several people from the neighborhood came in to see what Sunrise had to offer. They were treated to live entertainment and wonderful food. The family day health fair which included Sea Crest Health Center and Shore View Center for Rehabilitation and Health Care, Ramps/Lifts for Better Living, Mickey Green, Mutual of Omaha, Visiting Nurses and more was arranged by Anvernette Hanna, Director of Community Relations at Sunrise Senior Living of Sheepshead Bay and Bonnie Nogin, Quality Recreation Solutions.
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