My mother moved into our house for home care. A few days later, my daughter grabbed my sleeve and whispered, “mom… something’s wrong with grandma.” The next day, we secretly looked into her room. And what we saw made us freeze in fear. We couldn’t even speak.

My mother moved into our house for home care. A few days later, my daughter grabbed my sleeve and whispered, “mom… something’s wrong with grandma.” The next day, we secretly looked into her room. And what we saw made us freeze in fear. We couldn’t even speak.

When my mother, Patricia Nolan, moved into our house for home care, I told myself it would be hard but manageable. She was recovering from a mild stroke, her left side still weak, her speech occasionally slow. The doctor said she needed supervision, medication reminders, and help bathing—nothing we couldn’t handle with a nurse coming in a few hours a day.

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