Insights
The caregiver sitting next to you in the meeting
Between 10% and 20% of workers are providing unpaid elder care right now. Most are senior managers. Almost none are talking about it at work. For the caregivers carrying this quietly, and the leaders who work alongside them.
Everyone notices. Most of it stays in the room.
Millions of first-generation immigrants are the invisible caregivers of aging parents living thousands of miles away. The observations are there, in the room, after every visit. What's missing is a way for them to travel home.
Their life. Your fear.
When an aging parent insists on doing things their way, and you're not sure it's safe, who decides? Two families. Two impossible situations. And the hardest question in caregiving: how much protection may be too much?
Loving Someone Who Is Slowly Becoming Someone Else
Your parent is still here. But something is shifting. 63 million Americans are navigating the slow, unpredictable loss of the person they've always known. Here's what helps.
The Sibling Problem: Why Caregiving Splits Families (And How to Stop It Before It Starts)
Caregiving inequality rarely starts with bad intentions. It starts with proximity, assumptions, and roles nobody consciously chose. Here's why it splits families, and how to stop it before it does.
To Every Caregiver Who Didn't Know They Already Were One
You didn't call yourself a caregiver. You were just a daughter. A son. Doing what needed doing. This one is for everyone who's been in it without knowing they already were.
The Shift I Didn't See Coming
In your late 40s or early 50s and feeling restless? That's not a midlife crisis. It's a signal. On the shift from ME to MINE to OUR, and why it changes everything.
Fall: The Beginning Disguised as an Ending
I'm standing at my kitchen window, watching the maple tree in our backyard shed its leaves like confetti at the world's slowest parade. My daughter walks in, backpack heavy with the weight of middle school, and asks me if I'm sad that summer's over...
How One Walk Sparked a Circle of Care
A year ago, my neighbor Rachel spotted me walking down our street. What she didn’t realize at first was that it was me — I looked so different after my surgery and long recovery from Cushing’s disease. We chatted for just a moment, and later she reached out and invited me for a walk. She had an idea she wanted to share…
Eighty & Extraordinary: A Family Travel Story
At CuroNow, we celebrate the everyday ways families stay connected — through shared experiences, laughter, and the small moments that remind us what matters most. This summer gave me one of those moments…
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