THE LIVING-ALONE FEAR & VISIBILITY CHECK

The fear is not only that something might happen. It is that no one will know.

Assess how much visibility your family really has between calls and visits—and whether your current plan still depends on Mum being able to respond when she may need help most.

No medical diagnosisNo judgementPrivate in your browser
Take the Fear & Visibility Check →7 questions · personalised result
THE HOURS NO ONE CAN SEESilence can mean “all normal.” Or it can mean nobody knows yet.A fear loop grows when the plan has no passive signal.
LAST SIGNALRoutine normal
PHONENo answer
RESPONSE GAPUnknown

The fall nobody finds

The image is not just a fall—it is Mum waiting alone because the usual check came too late.

The unanswered phone

One missed call can turn an ordinary day into a full emergency search in your mind.

The “all good until it is not” moment

Nothing happening yet can feel reassuring, but it is not the same as having a working plan.

Start with clarity

Take the Fear & Visibility Check.

Answer seven focused questions. Your result will show the current level of visibility gap your family may be carrying and the most useful next step.

Question 1 of 7Fear load
A different category of support

You cannot prevent every incident. You can reduce the time spent not knowing.

StillHome is designed to learn normal movement and household routines through discreet sensors, then surface unusual patterns or concerns without indoor cameras and without asking Mum to wear or press a device. It adds visibility where calls and visits naturally stop.

01

Nothing Mum has to remember

No button required in the moment. No daily charging ritual. No protection that disappears because a device stayed in a drawer.

02

No indoor cameras

Discreet sensors can understand household activity without turning her private home into a surveillance feed.

03

Calm-by-default awareness

Normal should feel quiet. Attention is reserved for unusual changes and the response plan agreed by the family.