Donald Hammen, 80, and his longtime next-door neighbor in south Minneapolis, Julie McMahon, have an understanding. Every morning, she checks to see whether he鈥檚 raised the blinds in his dining room window. If not, she鈥檒l call Hammen or let herself into his house to see what鈥檚 going on.
Should McMahon find Hammen in a bad way, she plans to contact his sister-in-law, who lives in a suburb of Des Moines. That鈥檚 his closest relative. Hammen never married or had children, and his younger brother died in 2022.
Although Hammen lives alone, a web of relationships binds him to his city and his community 鈥 neighbors, friends, former co-workers, fellow volunteers with an advocacy group for seniors, and fellow members of a group of solo agers. McMahon is an emergency contact, as is a former co-worker. When Hammen was hit by a car in February 2019, another neighbor did his laundry. A friend came over to keep him company. Other people went on walks with Hammen as he got back on his feet.
Those connections are certainly sustaining. Yet Hammen has no idea who might care for him should he become unable to care for himself.
鈥淚鈥檒l cross that bridge when I come to it,鈥 he told me.
These are fundamental questions for older adults who live alone: Who will be there for them, for matters large and small? Who will help them navigate the ever more complex health care system and advocate on their behalf? Who will take out the garbage if it becomes too difficult to carry? Who will shovel the snow if a winter storm blows through?
American society rests on an assumption that families take care of their own. But 15 million Americans 50 and older didn鈥檛 have any close family 鈥 spouses, partners, or children 鈥 in 2015, the latest year for which reliable estimates are available. Most lived alone. By 2060, that number is expected to swell to 21 million.
Beyond that, millions of seniors living on their own aren鈥檛 geographically close to adult children or other family members. Or they have difficult, strained relationships that keep them from asking for support.
These older adults must seek assistance from other quarters when they need it. Often they turn to neighbors, friends, church members, or community groups 鈥 or paid help, if they can afford it.
And often, they simply go without, leaving them vulnerable to isolation, depression, and deteriorating health.
When seniors living alone have no close family, can nonfamily helpers be an adequate substitute? This hasn鈥檛 been well studied.
鈥淲e鈥檙e just beginning to do a better job of understanding that people have a multiplicity of connections outside their families that are essential to their well-being,鈥 said Sarah Patterson, a demographer and sociologist at the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan.
The takeaway from a noteworthy by researchers at Emory University, Johns Hopkins University, and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai was this: Many seniors adapt to living solo by weaving together local social networks of friends, neighbors, nieces and nephews, and siblings (if they鈥檙e available) to support their independence.
Still, finding reliable local connections isn鈥檛 always easy. And nonfamily helpers may not be willing or able to provide consistent, intense hands-on care if that becomes necessary.
When AARP surveyed in 2022, only 25% said they could count on someone to help them cook, clean, get groceries, or perform other household tasks if needed. Just 38% said they knew someone who could help manage ongoing care needs. (AARP defined solo agers as people 50 and older who aren鈥檛 married, don鈥檛 have living children, and live alone.)
Linda Camp, 73, a former administrator with the city of St. Paul, Minnesota, who never married or had children, has for the Citizens League in St. Paul about growing old alone. Yet she was still surprised by how much help she required this summer when she had cataract surgery on both eyes.
A former co-worker accompanied Camp to the surgery center twice and waited there until the procedures were finished. A relatively new friend took her to a follow-up appointment. An 81-year-old downstairs neighbor agreed to come up if Camp needed something. Other friends and neighbors also chipped in.
Camp was fortunate 鈥 she has a sizable network of former co-workers, neighbors, and friends. 鈥淲hat I tell people when I talk about solos is all kinds of connections have value,鈥 she said.
Michelle Wallace, 75, a former technology project manager, lives alone in a single-family home in Broomfield, Colorado. She has worked hard to assemble a local network of support. Wallace has been divorced for nearly three decades and doesn鈥檛 have children. Though she has two sisters and a brother, they live far away.
Wallace describes herself as happily unpartnered. 鈥淐oupling isn鈥檛 for me,鈥 she told me when we first talked. 鈥淚 need my space and my privacy too much.鈥
Instead, she鈥檚 cultivated relationships with several people she met through local groups for solo agers. Many have become her close friends. Two of them, both in their 70s, are 鈥渓ike sisters,鈥 Wallace said. Another, who lives just a few blocks away, has agreed to become a 鈥渨e鈥檒l help each other out when needed鈥 partner.
鈥淚n our 70s, solo agers are looking for support systems. And the scariest thing is not having friends close by,鈥 Wallace told me. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the local network that鈥檚 really important.鈥
Gardner Stern, 96, who lives alone on the 24th floor of the Carl Sandburg Village condominium complex just north of downtown Chicago, has been far less deliberate. He never planned for his care needs in older age. He just figured things would work out.
They have, but not as Stern predicted.
The person who helps him the most is his third wife, Jobie Stern, 75. The couple went through an acrimonious divorce in 1985, but now she goes to all his doctor appointments, takes him grocery shopping, drives him to physical therapy twice a week and stops in every afternoon to chat for about an hour.
She鈥檚 also Gardner鈥檚 neighbor 鈥 she lives 10 floors above him in the same building.
Why does she do it? 鈥淚 guess because I moved into the building and he鈥檚 very old and he鈥檚 a really good guy and we have a child together,鈥 she told me. 鈥淚 get happiness knowing he鈥檚 doing as well as possible.鈥
Over many years, she said, she and Gardner have put their differences aside.
鈥淣ever would I have expected this of Jobie,鈥 Gardner told me. 鈥淚 guess time heals all wounds.鈥
Gardner鈥檚 other main local connections are Joy Loverde, 72, an author of elder-care books, and her 79-year-old husband, who live on the 28th floor. Gardner calls Loverde his 鈥渢ell it like it is鈥 friend 鈥 the one who helped him decide it was time to stop driving, the one who persuaded him to have a walk-in shower with a bench installed in his bathroom, the one who plays Scrabble with him every week and offers practical advice whenever he has a problem.
鈥淚 think I would be in an assisted living facility without her,鈥 Gardner said.
There鈥檚 also family: four children, all based in Los Angeles, eight grandchildren, mostly in L.A., and nine great-grandchildren. Gardner sees most of this extended clan about once a year and speaks to them often, but he can鈥檛 depend on them for his day-to-day needs.
For that, Loverde and Jobie are an elevator ride away. 鈥淚鈥檝e got these wonderful people who are monitoring my existence, and a big-screen TV, and a freezer full of good frozen dinners,鈥 Gardner said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all that I need.鈥
As I explore the lives of older adults living alone in the next several months, I鈥檓 eager to hear from people who are in this situation. If you鈥檇 like to share your stories, please send them to khn.navigatingaging@gmail.com.