The anxiety, the sleepless nights, the feeling that she's hiding something.
We give you clarity — so you can finally rest.
Someone writes to her every week — warm, personal letters. She writes back.
Every month, someone tells you she's okay. And when she's not — you'll know before it becomes a crisis.
This is not a clinical assessment — it's a reflection tool designed to help you understand how worry affects your daily life.
Research shows that social isolation in older adults significantly increases risk of hospitalization and cognitive decline — and that early detection of behavioral changes reduces crisis events. If you're looking for a way to check on aging parents from a distance without invasive cameras or daily checklists, FamilyRapport offers a different approach: regular human contact + structured observation = fewer surprises, and finally knowing for sure. Journal of Aging Research, 2024 & JAMA Internal Medicine, 2023.
Their name, age, where they live. A 45-second form. We handle everything from there.
Personal letters about their stories, their week, their memories. They write back. No apps, no learning curve — just letters. She feels heard. You stop worrying.
Every month, someone tells you she's okay. If something shifts — her mood, her routines, her stories — you'll know early. No more guessing. No more 3 AM phone checks. Just quiet, steady reassurance that someone is there.
“Your letters have stirred something in me — and changed something too. I find myself pausing throughout the day, paying attention to my thoughts and what moves me in that moment.”
— Dorothy, 74, a FamilyRapport parent
Think of your Heritage Curator as your parent's new pen pal — someone who asks about their first car, remembers the grandchildren's names, shares photos from their own life, and writes back like someone who genuinely cares. Not a form to fill out. A real person who shows up in their inbox every week.
Every curator completes a 40-hour training in narrative interviewing and American cultural history. AI helps us analyze emotional patterns in the background — but your parent always speaks with a person.
Curators like Molly (former journalist, loves old jazz), James (ex-librarian, knows every World Series winner since 1975), and Sarah (has a rescue labrador named Charlie, bakes sourdough on Sundays).
“Your daughter was thinking about you and asked me to ask about that summer on the lake...”
Every letter weaves in a thread from you. Your parent feels your love — even when you're 2,000 miles away. The curator becomes a bridge between you, not a replacement for you.
Most families choose Advanced. The deeper monthly report includes emotional tone tracking, social isolation markers, and a curator's personal note — the kind of detail that catches what a regular check-in call would miss.
That's okay — the fact that you're here means you already care deeply.
Start with our free guide: "5 questions that actually get a real answer (not 'I'm fine')"
Used by 136 families to finally have the conversation they'd been avoiding.