Why Predictability Matters For Aging Nervous Systems
There is a man we see on the trail almost every day. He did not want to be greeted at first. Four months later, he cracks jokes when we run late. We did not earn that with the right words. We earned it by showing up the same way, at the same time, until his nervous system decided we were safe. This post explores what predictability actually does to an aging nervous system, and why emotional steadiness should be designed into care environments, not left to chance.
What Agitation In Senior Living Is Really Telling Us
Agitation in senior living is often treated as a behavior to manage. But research increasingly tells a different story. When someone cannot easily communicate what they need, the nervous system finds another way to signal. This post explores what agitation is actually telling us, why emotional steadiness is a design problem, and what emotional infrastructure looks like in senior care environments.
Care Environments Are Always Communicating With The Nervous System
Your body knows something is off before your mind catches up. That’s not a feeling. That’s your nervous system doing exactly what it was designed to do.
Care environments send signals constantly. Tone. Pace. Predictability. Silence. And aging nervous systems feel those signals more, not less.
This is what emotional infrastructure actually means.