Writing Your Story · For Retirement & Convalescent Homes

Your story, in your time.

They tell the story, type the story, at their own pace. We are just the companion that wants them to have their story — in their time.

Enter
Two women writing together at a lakeside table — Writing Your Story.

Personal Companion

For the ones who raised us — a friend at the table, for as long as they'd like to stay.

Everyone has a granny or a grandpa — and almost none of their stories were ever written down.

This room was built to change that. A resident sits down — in the common room, in their own chair, on a shared facility computer — and a patient companion is simply there: ready to help them write, ready to write it for them, or ready to just sit awhile. No forms. No learning “AI.” If they can talk to a friend over coffee, they can do this.

Some visit to write a chapter. Some visit to tell one small story from 1962. And some visit just for the company and the music — and in this room, that is a complete visit. When they're ready, the pages will be ready too.

Whatever your words are, they deserve the pages — and we are grateful for all you do and have done over the years.

The Pen — when they’d rather talk than type

They speak; the room writes. Truly their words, never ours — we elevate what they said and read every page back until they say “that’s my story.” Nothing is finished until they say it is. For hands that shake and eyes that tire, the microphone is the pen.

Their story, sealed as theirs

Facility computers are shared; stories are not. Every story saves sealed with a code that is theirs alone — a wrong code and it simply will not open. Private by construction, on any machine in the building.

A full book, or one perfect short story — their choice

Asked once at the door and honored always: a full novel or a short story, up to forty-five thousand words — because some stories like to talk, and we never cut a teller short. It ends as a real book with their name on the cover: keep it, print copies for family, preserve it for the generations coming.

Music while they write — or while they just sit

They can simply say they’d like some music — the stations of their era, a song called out by name — and the room talks the music with them and builds the playlist for the facility to run. Coffee, company, and the songs they courted to.

For the facility

One license, every resident. The activities calendar’s warmest hour, the program families ask about on tours — and the veterans in your building have their own room, free to them always, kept separate on purpose. Two doors, one house.

The Spoken Pen

If they’d rather talk than type — the room already listens.

Hands that shake and eyes that tire still hold whole lifetimes. One big button turns the computer’s microphone into a pen — they speak, their words appear in large print, and the Companion writes it with them.

🎤 PRESS & TALK

One button. You talk, the page writes, The Pen does the rest.

“They tell the story, type the story, at their own pace. We are just the companion that wants them to have their story — in their time.”

The Founder · Loving My Words