Join us as we welcome Tasha Beckman, a trusted advocate helping families navigate the complexities of aging before a crisis occurs. Through her work supporting older adults and their loved ones, she helps families recognize early changes, prepare for future care needs, and make informed decisions with confidence.
In this episode, Tasha explores why aging conversations often begin too late and shares practical insights on recognizing early warning signs, strengthening family decision-making, and creating a more proactive approach to care planning. She also discusses how home care agencies can better engage families earlier in the aging journey and how technology can support timely intervention while preserving trust.
Trusted by 1,000+ Leading Home Care Agencies
Listen to the episodes on loop for a premium CareSmartz360 on Air experience
00:00:09 – 00:01:07
Welcome to CareSmartz360 On Air, a Home Care Podcast. I’m Erin Cahill, Sales Account Executive at CareSmartz360. Why does home care so often begin as a response to crisis instead of planned aging? Tasha Beckman works directly in the space before the crisis. Through her work guiding families through aging transitions, she helps uncover the early signs, conversations, and decisions that shape how aging unfolds. Her perspective sits at the intersection of family readiness, transition planning, and long-term decision-making. In this episode, she
00:00:38 – 00:01:37
explores how home care providers can better understand the pre-crisis journey of aging and how early awareness can fundamentally change outcomes for caregivers, families, and agencies. Welcome to the podcast, Tasha. >> Thank you very much. I appreciate the invitation. >> Absolutely. So, I’ll jump right into this. Um, our first question, most families only engage with home care during a moment of urgency. From your perspective, what does the pre-crisis stage of aging actually look like?
00:01:07 – 00:02:06
>> Honestly, it’s invisible because nothing looks wrong yet. Mom’s still living on her own. Dad’s still driving. Everyone assumes there’s plenty of time for any conversation. But to me, the quiet stretch is exactly when the real work should be happening. Organizing information, having the conversations, getting clear before anyone has to. It’s all about knowing your options before you’re in crisis mode and it’s no longer optional. Um, I actually wrote a book to support that
00:01:37 – 00:02:43
because I’ve watched too many families forced to make decisions with no information to go on. a hospitalization or a death hits and suddenly everyone needs to know things they never thought to ask. Where are the documents? What accounts exist? Who is the attorney? What insurance policies are there? Where do they live? What medication does mom take? Which bills autodraft every month? Who’s going to take care of the family pet? You know, the precrisis stage is your chance to gather all of that with
00:02:10 – 00:03:11
the person who actually knows it. and while they’re still here and able to tell you, right? We don’t want to wait until it’s too late for that. When families wait for an emergency, they’re not just managing a care need. They’re solving a puzzle at the worst possible moment. The goal was never to prepare for the crisis. It’s to create peace before everyone shows up. >> Absolutely. And you’re right. People just don’t think about that early on, >> right? What are the early signals that
00:02:41 – 00:03:50
families often overlook when aging is changing, but no one yet is needing it as a care need? >> Yeah, the signs are really quiet and they’re easy to wave off. So, mail starts piling up, statements go unopened, the little household repairs don’t get done, a parent asks the same question about a bill or an appointment two or three times. Like my dad showed early onset and he started asking what time we leave for church? Now my parents have gone to the same church for over 20 years. This is the same service
00:03:15 – 00:04:29
but he kept asking that again and again and it added to the confusion of what’s really going on? Do you not want to go? Um, but when that starts happening again and again, it’s an early sign and slowly adult kids become the keepers of more and more. What worries me usually isn’t the physical change because that’s really apparent. It’s the information gap that starts to open up underneath that. >> I typically ask families one simple question. If something happened tomorrow, would you know where
00:03:51 – 00:04:58
everything is? Almost no one does. They don’t know where the documents are, how the accounts are titled, who needs to be called, or what would suddenly land on their shoulders while they’re still trying to live their own lives at the same time. These aren’t filing problems. They’re early signs that it’s time to talk. While everyone can still do it calmly instead of in a hospital hallway or even worse, waiting until after you can’t get the answers because your loved one is no longer here,
00:04:25 – 00:05:28
>> right? Yeah. And how do family dynamics influence whether decisions are made early and calmly or later under pressure? >> Yeah, dynamics matter more than anything else really. And it’s usually not about love. Most families have plenty of that. What they’re missing is structure. Everyone assumes someone else has it handled. The kids figure a sibling knows. The parents figure they’ll get around to sharing it someday. And nobody wants to bring it up because raising it feels pessimistic, like you’re rushing
00:04:57 – 00:06:04
your parents towards the end, and there’s this whole morbid conversation that you want to avoid. Then something happens and everyone’s scrambling at once. Part of what I built my book around was to take the emotion out of the logistics, to give families a neutral place to have conversations they keep avoiding. Instead of what happens when you die, you can ask, “Where would you want us to look if we ever needed to find things?” >> That small shift changes the whole tone and improves the family dynamics because
00:05:30 – 00:06:37
then there is peace around the whole story. Families who talk early aren’t dodging the hard moments. They’re just making sure that when those moments come. There’s less confusion, less conflict, and a lot less stress piled on top of the grief. All family members will be on their own roller coaster at different times. And the more you can pre-plan to have those conversations, the less the roller coasters really impact those family dynamics that have always been in play. >> Absolutely. And agencies often talk
00:06:04 – 00:07:09
about care delivery, but not enough about decision readiness. So what does readiness for care actually mean in real terms? >> To me, it’s a lot more than being ready to hire a caregiver. It means ready for life to change. A lot of people avoid change. I’m actually fascinated by change. I have a masters in change management, in fact. But most people really don’t know what change means. So really at the high level, does the family know where the legal documents are? Are the accounts organized? Is
00:06:36 – 00:07:38
their health care directive? Do the kids know who the trusted advisers are? Are the passwords, the insurance info, the medications, the emergency contacts written down somewhere where they can find them? Because one of the hardest things families go through truly isn’t the caregiving itself. It’s hunting for information when they’re already stretched thin trying to manage everything else. >> Readiness to me means there’s a road map. When the information is organized and easy to reach, families get to spend
00:07:07 – 00:08:14
their energy on each other instead of digging through drawers or guessing what their loved one would have wanted. That’s the whole reason the book and other tools exist is to help families move through these transitions with clarity instead of chaos. Absolutely. Uh the road map, I like that um response. Absolutely. It makes a lot of sense. And as technology and AI become part of home care operations, where do you see the biggest opportunity to support earlier intervention and better planning without losing trust?
00:07:40 – 00:08:45
>> I think AI’s real gift is helping families see risks before they turn into emergencies. It can pick up on shifts in routine, missed appointments, medication patterns, changes in how someone communicates, the early signals that more support might be needed. But I’m just as excited about AI’s potential to help families get organized. Picture a system that helps you inventory the important documents, nudges you when a legal update is due, or helps to keep track of accounts and care preferences,
00:08:13 – 00:09:27
and then safely holds the information that loved ones will eventually need. The information has always existed. The problem has been getting to it when it matters. So, one thing that I’d hold on to is trust comes from people, not software. Technology should support human conversation, not stand in replacement of it. The future I want isn’t AI making decisions for families. It’s AI helping families walk in prepared for the decisions they’ll have to make themselves. And looking ahead to 2026, what should
00:08:52 – 00:09:50
home care leaders change in how they engage families during the early stages of aging to reduce those crisis-driven care transitions? >> I’d love to see leaders step into the role of educators and planning partners, not just service providers. >> Families need guidance long before they need care. >> The conversation can start with questions that feel almost unrelated to home care. Do you know where those important documents are? Have you talked about where you’d want to live down the
00:09:21 – 00:10:27
road? Do your kids know your financial and legal advisers, who they are, how to reach them? Would anyone really know how to manage your affairs if something happened tomorrow? These, I know, sound like estate planning questions, but they’re directly tied to how a care transition team can help you go down the path. >> The families who can actually answer them move through change with steadiness. The ones who can’t end up in crisis mode and by then the calm, thoughtful decisions just aren’t on the
00:09:54 – 00:10:56
table anymore. If home care leaders could start the conversation early, they’re not selling a service. They’re giving families the one thing they can’t get back once an emergency hits, and that’s time to prepare. >> Certainly. Absolutely. Well, thank you so much, Tasha. This was so helpful and um and to all of our listeners, thank you so much for tuning in to CareSmartz360 On Air and we will see you again shortly.
Our users reported 95% customer satisfaction in 2025. Schedule a personal walkthrough to see CareSmartz360, home care software in action.
Please wait…
Your request is being processed.