Blog

June 23, 2026

A good life does not stop when someone moves into care

Our Warrigal CEO Jenni Hutchins recently wrote an op-ed for the Illawarra Mercury. Read her message on the importance of storytelling for our older people.

Anyone who has moved house knows it can come with emotional stress, worry, and a sense of leaving something behind. A home is not just bricks and mortar. It is stability, connection, belonging, and in many ways, part of our sense of self.

Moving into residential aged care can amplify those feelings, particularly at a time of personal fragility. One of the most common fears is that moving into care means leaving behind the life, interests and identity that made you who you are.

When residential aged care is done well, it should support people to keep being themselves, in a home where care and daily life are wrapped around the person.

At Warrigal, we see every day that older people do not arrive in care as a diagnosis, a room number or a set of care needs. They arrive with full, rich lives behind them, and interests, humour, stories and relationships that continue to matter.

Andrew McKean, a resident at Warrigal Bundanoon, is one example.

Born in Melbourne in 1940, Andrew’s life has taken him across the world. His career in electronics led him to television broadcasting in Australia, the UK and Canada, before he returned home and became part of the Apollo era as a telemetry engineer at the Honeysuckle Creek tracking station near Canberra.

After retiring, Andrew decided to learn English grammar properly. What started with simple questions became an online community where thousands joined him to learn grammar, punctuation and classic short stories. Today, he still writes and shares his love of language.

At Warrigal Mt Warrigal, Joan Lane reminds us of the same truth. Joan is an author who continues to write, including two novels a year, with one already published.

Moving into care has not erased the creativity, pride and purpose that comes from a life spent imagining, creating and sharing stories.

Dennis Talbot, also from Warrigal Mt Warrigal, carries another extraordinary story. A former Australian boxing champion and Olympian, Dennis represented Australia at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games. Boxing remains a part of who he is and still talks about his hope to get back into training again.

These stories matter because they challenge narrow perceptions of residential aged care.

People do not stop being teachers, writers, athletes, partners, parents, friends or storytellers when they move into care.

Residential aged care is a new home, it has an important responsibility to recognise the whole person, not just their care needs, to enable a person to feel known, loved and connected. A right to belong and continue to celebrate self, where the things that matter to them still have a place.

Because a good life does not stop when someone moves into a new home, it should continue, in ways that feel personal, meaningful and deeply human.

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