How to Talk to Your Elderly Parent About Accepting Help
Few conversations are harder than the first one about needing support. Most parents see accepting help as the first step toward losing independence, even when the right help is exactly what will keep them independent for longer.
Start with the right framing
Don’t lead with “you can’t manage anymore.” Lead with “I’d like to make a few things easier.”
Try:
- “I worry less when I know you’ve got someone with you for the hospital trips.”
- “Would it help if someone joined you for the weekly shop?”
- “What’s the part of the week that feels most tiring?”
Pick the right moment
Don’t have this conversation right after an incident , a fall, a missed appointment, a fender-bender. Emotions are high and it sounds like blame. Choose a calm afternoon over a cup of tea.
Make it their decision
Give your parent control over what they accept and when. “Would you prefer Tuesdays or Thursdays?” feels very different from “I’ve booked someone to come on Tuesday.”
Expect a “no” the first time
Many parents say no, then quietly change their minds within a week. Plant the seed and revisit it. Don’t argue.
Start small
A single outing, one doctor’s visit, one shopping trip , is a far easier “yes” than a recurring weekly commitment. Once your parent has met the companion and seen what the service is actually like, ongoing support feels natural.
Not sure how to start the conversation? WhatsApp us on 082 754 2436 , we’ll talk you through it.
How Serene Assist helps
We always do a free in-home introduction before the first trip. Your parent meets the companion, asks any questions, and decides whether it feels right , no pressure, no commitment. Most families tell us that first meeting is what made their parent finally say yes.

