KSH Journal
Articles & Resources
Practical guidance, honest conversations, dementia education, and real-life support for families, caregivers, professionals, and communities navigating aging.
Caregiving does not come with a roadmap.
But support, clarity, and practical tools should never feel out of reach.
The KSH Journal brings together education, lived experience, caregiver tools, family conversation starters, and dementia-informed guidance to help people feel more prepared and less alone.
Caregiving & Family Support
Honest, practical articles for families trying to make care decisions, support aging loved ones, and navigate emotional seasons of change.
Read ArticlesDementia Education
Clear explanations, communication tips, behavior insights, and dementia-friendly guidance for caregivers, families, and professionals.
Read ArticlesKSH Toolbox
Downloadable resources, practical checklists, conversation guides, and simple tools to help families move from overwhelmed to organized.
Explore ToolsKids & Aging Conversations
Resources for helping children understand dementia, aging, grief, caregiving, and changes within the family with honesty and compassion.
Read ArticlesT.E.L.L.S.™ Method
Articles about behavior as communication, early signs of escalation, caregiver confidence, and responding with purpose instead of frustration.
View White PaperAging with Dignity
Thoughtful reflections on planning, advocacy, healthcare systems, family dynamics, and what it means to support people well as they age.
Read ArticlesReal talk for the people who show up.
Whether you are caring for a parent, supporting a spouse, working in senior care, teaching children about dementia, or simply trying to understand what comes next — this space was built for you.
Come here for clarity, encouragement, practical tools, and the kind of honest conversation caregiving families actually need.
Latest Articles & Resources
Browse the newest posts below.
The Hidden Cost of Waiting Until There’s a Crisis
“We’ll deal with it when we have to.”
I hear this all the time from families. And I get it. Aging planning is uncomfortable.
But waiting does not make the problem smaller. It usually makes the options smaller, the costs higher, the emotions louder, and the decisions messier.
A crisis does not create the planning problem. It exposes the one that was already there.
This blog is for the families who keep saying “not yet,” “things are fine for now,” or “we’ll figure it out later.”
Because planning does not mean making every decision today. It means asking the right questions while you still have options.