What daily life looks like here
A small home, designed for ease — with the comforts that make a difference when you live somewhere full-time.
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Six Private Bedrooms. Six Private Bathrooms.
Each of our six residents has their own private bedroom with their own private bathroom — no shared toilets, no roommates, no sense of being on top of one another. The shared areas (living room, dining room, kitchen, garden patio) are common ground for the times when the day calls for company.
- Six private bedrooms
- Six private bathrooms
- Wheelchair-accessible doorways
- Wide hallways for walkers
- Grab bars in every bathroom
- Walk-in showers available
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The Home, As It Should Feel.
Books, music, a TV with the cable channels people actually watch, a quiet corner for reading, and Wi-Fi for video calls with distant family. The living room is where afternoon naps happen, where the football game plays on Sundays, where birthdays are celebrated.
- Wi-Fi throughout the home
- Cable TV in common areas
- Comfortable common seating
- Books and reading materials
- Music available daily
- Beauty salon visits arranged
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Fresh Air, And A Place To Sit In It.
The garden patio is one of the most-used spots in the home. Residents read out here, family gathers here in summer, and we eat lunch outside whenever the weather permits. It's wheelchair-accessible from the back of the home.
- Outdoor garden patio
- Comfortable garden seating
- Wheelchair-accessible patio
- Pet-friendly visits welcome
- Visiting any time of day or night
- Family BBQ space in summer
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Meals That Taste Like Someone Made Them.
Three home-cooked meals daily plus snacks — never reheated trays, never industrial portions. Cultural meal options including Ethiopian dishes (injera, doro wat, shiro) for residents who grew up with them. Dietary accommodations for diabetes, low-sodium, and other restrictions. Family is welcome to join at the table any time.
- Three home-cooked meals daily
- Ethiopian / Amharic cultural cuisine
- American comfort food
- Diabetic, low-sodium, soft-textured options
- Family welcome at meals
- Birthdays celebrated with cake
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Greeted In Their Own Language.
Our caregivers speak English and Amharic. For Ethiopian and Eritrean families, that means your loved one can be understood — fully — in the language they think and dream in. We observe coffee ceremonies, religious holidays, and the small daily traditions that make a place feel like home, no matter the resident's background.
- English & Amharic spoken daily
- Cultural / language matching
- Religious traditions respected
- Coffee ceremony / morning ritual
- Holidays observed in-home
- Personalization for any background
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No Visiting Hours. Pets Welcome.
This is a home, not a facility. There are no fixed visiting hours. Want to drop by at 6am for coffee with your father? Come over. Want to bring the grandkids for a Saturday afternoon? Please do. Family pets are welcome to visit too — a familiar bark or purr can do more than any therapy session.
- Family welcome anytime
- Overnight family stays accommodated
- Pet-friendly for visits
- Grandchildren especially welcome
- Holidays celebrated with family present
- No restrictions on phone calls
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Activities That Fit The Person.
We don't run "bingo at 10, crafts at 2." We learn what each resident loves and we do more of it. Music from their era. Gardening if that's their thing. Card games at the kitchen table. Family video calls. Quiet hours for residents who prefer solitude.
- Music from each resident's era
- Gentle exercise & chair yoga
- Garden time
- Card games & puzzles
- Family video calls supported
- Quiet hours respected