Unlocking Senior Resources Presented By: Leave the Key

Everything You Need To Know About Funeral Planning To Avoid Crises

1 h 3 min · 16. Apr. 2026
Episode Everything You Need To Know About Funeral Planning To Avoid Crises Cover

Beschreibung

In today’s episode, Isit down with Andrea Resnick of Legacy Concierge, a licensed funeral director,fourth generation funeral director, and funeral consultant. Andrea helpsfamilies navigate one of the most emotional and avoided subjects they’ll everface  death, funerals, and preplanning.From burial timing to casket selection, cemetery plots to celebration-of-lifeservices, Andrea’s role is to educate, coordinate every moving piece, and guidefamilies so they can focus on grieving, not logistics.   They also discuss why people avoid talkingabout death, how preplanning reduces stress, what makes Jewish funerals unique,the difference between a plot and a grave, what perpetual care really covers,veterans’ benefits families miss, and why the biggest takeaway is simple:having the conversation now helps you live better.     Timeline Summary 00:00 – Introduction of Andrea Resnick ofLegacy Concierge and her background as a fourth generation licensed funeraldirector who never planned to enter the business.  00:54 – Welcome to Unlocking SeniorResources podcast with host Larry Wagner.  05:31 – Jewish funeral timing pressures andhow that impacts families and funeral homes.  07:28 – Larry shares his experience losingboth parents, not preplanning, and arranging a 24-hour burial duringCovid.  12:00 – Who Andrea helps: seniors planningfor themselves and adult children planning for parents.  13:25 – Andrea’s process: 15-minuteconsults, asking the right questions, and warm introductions to vendors.  14:49 – What is a plot vs. a grave? Familyplots, single spaces, and what you’re actually buying.  16:06 – Coordinating funeral homes,cemeteries, florists, and more “the mayor of this village.”  19:28 – Do shade plots cost more? Cemeterypricing and why funeral homes can’t own cemeteries.  21:39 – Perpetual care explained: what itcovers, blue stickers, and why some plots look uncared for.  29:25 – Larry’s story about his father’stallis and why preplanning avoids regrets.  35:07 – Bagpipes, celebrants, and the riseof celebration-of-life services vs. traditional funerals.  44:09 – Mourning is for the living.Preplanning lets families grieve instead of scramble.  52:23 – Vertical burial, society plots, andhow cemetery space is changing.  54:09 – Preplanning vs. prepaying: youdon’t have to pay today, but get your ducks in a row.  01:00:44 – Andrea’s takeaway: talk aboutdeath and funerals. It helps you live.      5 Key Takeaways 1.     Talk About It Now  Having the conversation before a crisis letsyou grieve instead of scrambling for details.  2.     Time Is Critical  In Jewish funerals especially, timing drivesevery decision. Preplanning buys breathing room.  3.     You Don’t Know What YouDon’t Know  A plot isn’t a grave, perpetual care haslimits, and benefits go unclaimed. An advisor fills those gaps.  4.     It’s the People, Not thePlace The staff andcare at a funeral home or cemetery matter more than the building.  5.     Celebrate the Life Services areshifting toward personalized celebrations that honor the person, from bagpipesto eulogies while alive.      Links and Resources: Learn about Legacy Concierge  Website: http://legacyconciergellc.com [http://legacyconciergellc.com] Email: andrea@legacyconciergellc.com [andrea@legacyconciergellc.com] Phone: (516) 987-8639  Location: 205 E 95 Street New York, NY 10128   Learn about Leave The Key HomebuyersSenior Transition Service:  Website:https://leavethekey.com/seniors  Phone: (631) 380-4262      Final Thoughts The best time to plan a funeral is beforeyou need one. Having the conversation now removes stress later and lets youhonor your loved one the way they deserve. If this episode resonated with you,please subscribe, share, and leave a review. These conversations help familiesmake informed decisions before a crisis forces the conversation.

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Episode Leading With Kindness: Skilled Nursing Explained Cover

Leading With Kindness: Skilled Nursing Explained

In this episode of I sat down with SandraLozano, Director of Admissions and Marketing at Huntington Hills Center forHealth and Rehabilitation. Sandra shares her 20-year journey in skillednursing, from Nassau to Suffolk. The episode covers National Health CareAssociates’ backing, staff culture, dietary accommodations, and why “leadingwith kindness” + innovation creates better outcomes. Contact, tours, andavailability included.   Timeline summary    00:00– Sandra’s background: 20 years in industry, corporate America toadmissions/finance, worked Nassau, Bronx, Queens  01:42– Current role: Director of Admissions and Marketing at Huntington Hills  05:12– Daily role: Guiding families in crisis, referrals even if not to HuntingtonHills  09:10– Music therapy story: docile resident lit up, family emotional “she’s still inthere”  15:40– National Health Care Associates: 46 buildings, mostly CT/New England, only 2on Long Island  20:06– Respite as feeder for long-term: residents get used to environment, realizeneed level  25:43– Discharge planning starts at admission: stairs, bathroom, home equipment,goals  32:10– Respite logistics: admit 1–2 days before family leaves, paperwork done,emergency contacts set  39:25– Tours critical: QR code virtual tour for residents who can’t visit, butin-person better  44:26– Adjustment: 2–3 weeks, harder for family. Routine + socialization for mom  48:01– Community grief, daughter wants to volunteer for life  52:00– 3 differentiators: 1) Lead with kindness 2) Built to be SNF 3) LIE Exit 49location  54:29– Staff culture: family environment, inter-building retreats, Zooms acrossroles  57:50– Close: Compassionate team + unique offerings = key reason to chooseHuntington Hills   5 Key Takeaways    1.Purpose-built design changes outcomes Built in 1999 as a SNF with identicalfloors, wide hallways, and home-like décor. Dementia residents transitioneasier, families feel welcome vs. Institutional settings.    2.Technology prevents hospitalizations Circadian radar detects illness 3–5 daysbefore symptoms. OB projector, Robin robot, music + pet therapy driveengagement. Tech is standard, not extra.    3.Respite care reduces family crisis 10-day to 3-week stays let families travelwith 24/7 nursing coverage. Often serves as low-pressure intro to long-termcare when home is no longer safe.    4.Couples stay connected across care levels 4 couples currently on different units.Staff facilitates daily visits. Shared building beats 5–10 miles apart,reducing stress and guilt.    5.Guilt is normal, adjustment takes 2–3 weeks Families feel they broke promises.Residents gain routine, friends, activities. Story proves mom who “didn’t wantto go” became facility social butterfly.   Links and Resources    HuntingtonHills Center for Health and Rehabilitation Website: http://huntingtonhillscenter.com [http://huntingtonhillscenter.com] Admissions: (631) 439-3010, ext. 3059 forSandra Lozano  LeaveThe Key Homebuyers Website: https://leavethekey.com/seniors [https://leavethekey.com/seniors] Phone: (631) 388-7771   Final Thoughts The through-line of both parts is dignitythrough design, tech, and kindness. Families arrive with guilt and outdatedideas of “nursing homes.” Huntington Hills counters with purpose-built space,predictive health tech, and staff who bring snow inside for residents whohaven’t felt it in a decade. Respite care, couples support, and early educationremove emergency pressure. When environment, innovation, and compassion align,families move from “I broke a promise” to “best decision we made.”

4. Juni 20261 h 1 min
Episode Skip The ER Wait: Hospital-Level Care At Home For Seniors Cover

Skip The ER Wait: Hospital-Level Care At Home For Seniors

In this episode I talk with Dr. KevinMunjal, Chief Medical Officer of Care To You, about bringing ER andhospital-level care into the home. The conversation covers real patientexamples, how shared decision-making works in the home, and why this modelcould become the new standard for urgent and acute care.   Timeline    00:00– Opening: The idea of hospital-at-home as the future standard of care  02:15– Kevin’s background: ER physician, EMS medicine, Mount Sinai  05:05– Why home care matters: avoiding delirium, infection, and hospital cascade forseniors  10:02– Cost comparison: hospital-at-home is 1/2 to 1/3 the cost to payers  13:38– When to still go to the ER: chest pain, stroke symptoms, life-threateningemergencies  18:20– Concurrent telehealth with attending physicians on every visit  22:05– Care team structure: field clinicians, nurses, care coordinators, dispatch  27:05– Who is a good fit for hospital-at-home vs. urgent care vs. ER  30:06– How Care To You differs from other home health services  36:07– In-home imaging and results follow-up process  48:32– Post-acute follow-up: remote monitoring, daily calls, transition to primarycare  52:16– How primary care doctors can use Care To You for patients 57:22 – Kevin’s motivation: building amodel from the ground up  59:01– Final takeaway: know this option exists before a crisis hits  01:00:08– Contact info: website, phone, registration process   5 Key Takeaways    1.You’re in control in your home Care is delivered on your turf. Cliniciansexplain tests, medications, and options, then let you and your family drive thedecision. No surprises, no rushing.    2.Shared decision-making matters For many older adults, comfort and stayinghome matter more than aggressive intervention. Care To You presentsrisks/benefits and aligns care with patient goals, including DNH/DNRpreferences.    3.Follow-through sets them apart High Net Promoter Scores of 80-90+ comefrom more than home visits. They follow up on labs, make sure prescriptions arefilled, and confirm referrals and home care are set up.    4.Real cases show it works Example: A 100-year-old with a UTI wastreated at home with IV antibiotics, fluids, and remote monitoring. She avoideda 3-day hospital stay and recovered at home.    5.It’s a middle option between urgent care and the ER If it’s not life-threatening but you can’twait for primary care, Care To You can run labs, imaging, and start treatmentin 2-4 hours at home.   Links and Resources   Care 2 You Website: http://www.care2u.com Phone: (833)433-2273   Leave The Key Homebuyers Website:https://leavethekey.com/seniors Phone: (631)380 – 4262   Final Thoughts Hospital-at-home isn’t just convenient.it’s safer, cheaper, and more personal for the right patients. If you care foraging parents or work with seniors, knowing about Care To You ahead of time cansave you hours in the ER, reduce stress, and keep loved ones comfortable athome. The goal isn’t to replace hospitals, but to use them only when trulyneeded.

21. Mai 20261 h 2 min
Episode Adult ADHD And Late Diagnosis Rewire Your Brain Cover

Adult ADHD And Late Diagnosis Rewire Your Brain

In today’s episode, I sit down with Dr.Lisa Zaretsky of Zaretsky Wellness, a licensed mental health professional,doctor of cognitive sciences, and hypnotherapist who helps adults, kids, andfamilies break through patterns that keep them stuck. She specializes in ADHD,twice exceptionality, neurodiversity, addiction, and rapid transformationalhypnotherapy coaching. We also discuss late-diagnosed ADHD,co-occurring conditions, and systems.   Timeline Summary 00:00 – Intro to Dr. Lisa Zaretsky andZaretsky Wellness  06:25 – Systems approach: you’re not in avacuum  09:36 – Co-occurring conditions: ocularmotor, auditory processing, dyslexia  14:01 – ADHD missed and mismanaged in the70s-90s  22:15 – Other issues: addiction, trauma,stuck careers, family systems  26:32 – Deep dive hypnotherapy sessionexplained  34:08 – Neuroplasticity: intensity,frequency, duration  43:34 – Awareness of root causes forstopping numbing behaviors  45:00 – Couples and family work;ADHD-impacted marriages  51:05 – Long-term vs short-term therapystructures  54:18 – Discipline as freedom for ADHDbrains  58:48 – Building her team and trainingothers  01:15:48 – How to contact her   5 Key Takeaways 1. Diagnosis Brings Relief Late diagnosis for ADHD and co-occurringconditions stops self-blame and opens doors to targeted support.   2. Treat the Root, Not Just Symptoms Addiction, ADHD, and stuck patterns stemfrom beliefs and neural pathways. Hypnotherapy and targeted work rewire them.   3. Expertise and Fit Matter ADHD-impacted marriages and neurodiversityneed specialized approaches. Generic therapy often fails. Vet for expertise.   4. Discipline Creates Freedom Structure feels restrictive but empowersADHD brains. It builds willpower, execution, and cognitive flexibility.   5. Change is Possible at Any Age With breath work, awareness, andwillingness to sit with discomfort, you can rewire patterns and find purpose.   Links and Resources Dr. Lisa Zaretsky – Zaretsky Wellness Website: http://www.zaretsky-wellness.com [http://www.zaretsky-wellness.com]  Instagram/TikTok/YouTube: @zaretskywellness  Facebook/LinkedIn: Lisa Zaretsky    Leave The Key Homebuyers SeniorTransition Service Website: https://leavethekey.com/seniors [https://leavethekey.com/seniors]  Phone: (631)380-4262   Final Thoughts You’re not stuck because you’re broken.With the right expertise, tools, and commitment, you can get back in thedriver’s seat. If this helped, subscribe, share, and leave a review.

14. Mai 20261 h 18 min
Episode Estate Planning Mistakes That Cost Families $1M And How To Avoid Them Cover

Estate Planning Mistakes That Cost Families $1M And How To Avoid Them

In today’s episode, I sit down with RonFatoullah of Meltzer Lippe, an elder law and estate planning attorney helpingfamilies protect assets and plan for senior transitions since the 1980s. Ronshares his path from social work to law, how he became known as the “povertylawyer” for teaching legal asset protection for Medicaid, and why his firm’smotto is “doing well by doing good.”   We discussed why beneficiary designationsoverride your will, the difference between wills, living wills, and trusts, howmiddle-class families can plan for Medicaid, and why probate in NY takes atleast a year. The big takeaway: Plan early. You can’t protect what you don’tplan for.   Timeline Summary 00:00 – Beneficiary designations comebefore the will  02:22– Ron’s journey: social work → law → elder law  05:02– Starting in elder law in the 80s; “poverty lawyer” nickname  11:35– When to see an estate planning attorney  14:46– The caregiver child Medicaid exemption for the home  17:10– Special needs, addiction, and creditor protection trusts  18:00– The $10M life insurance trust story  22:08– How one client lost $1M to nursing home costs  23:49– Why long-term care insurance is getting unaffordable  29:05– Wills vs. trusts vs. living wills explained  31:01– How wrong beneficiaries ruin your plan  38:32– What a trust actually does  43:01– Probate delays and why people avoid it 47:02 – Staggered distributions for minors  52:15– Medicaid planning for middle-class families; IRAs are exempt  54:20– Using payout status to protect Roth IRAs  58:44– Intent to return home and Medicaid liens  01:00:22– Case study: removing a Medicaid lien so a client could die at home   5 Key Takeaways  1.Beneficiary Designations Trump Your Will IRA, life insurance, and bank accountbeneficiaries override what’s in your will. If they don’t match, your planfails.    2.Probate Takes Time and Money In NY it takes 12+ months. A living trustand proper beneficiary setup let families access funds immediately.    3.Medicaid Planning Isn’t Just for the Wealthy With the right structure, you can protectyour home and retirement accounts. In NY, IRAs in payout status are exempt.    4.Use Trusts for Control and Protection Trusts avoid probate, protect minors andspecial needs beneficiaries, and shield assets from creditors and divorce.    5.Never Procrastinate Planning while you’re well gives youoptions. Even if you didn’t plan early, strategies exist to protect assetslater.   Links and Resources  RonFatoullah, Meltzer Lippe LLP Phone: 516-466-4422 Toll-Free: 877-353-3752 / 877-ELDERLAW Email: info@fatoullahlaw.com    LeaveThe Key Homebuyers Senior Transition Service Website: https://leavethekey.com/seniors Phone: (631) 380-4262   Final Thoughts Don’t wait for a crisis to think aboutestate and Medicaid planning. The right documents now give you control, protectyour family, and avoid probate delays. As Ron says, it’s never too early toplan. If this helped, subscribe, share, and leave a review.

7. Mai 20261 h 6 min
Episode Senior Living Planning: When To Move And How To Start Before Crisis Hits Cover

Senior Living Planning: When To Move And How To Start Before Crisis Hits

In today’s episode, I sit down with Bruce Schneiderof Next Chapter Home Transitions*, a senior transition educator who helpsfamilies navigate the complex, emotional move from home to long-term care.After personally going through five family transitions in five years, Bruce andhis wife built a service to educate families, vet resources, and create clearplans because good information is hard to find and misinformation can send youdown the wrong path.     Timeline Summary   00:00 – Welcome Bruce Schneider of NextChapter Home Transitions; what the company does  02:13 – Five family transitions in fiveyears; struggling with bad information and why education is key  05:43 – Nobody wants Hummels or cherrywoodanymore; donation challenges post-COVID  08:18 – Communication skills with seniors:be clear, present, not flowery or obtuse 11:44 – Long-term care policies, 24-hourcare costs, and why aides need to be paid fairly 14:02 – Big signs living alone isn’tworking: not eating, safety risks, isolation 16:50 – Tech for aging in place: stairlifts, vacuum elevators, motion-activated lights, fall-detecting radar  21:00 – Why “go while you’re well”: makefriends before decline; Larry’s mom’s Lewy body story 26:32 – Don’t tour for chandeliers; tourfor people, activities, food quality, and ownership  32:27 – Medicare/Medicaid don’t cover homemods; VA has options but with restrictions  39:18 – Family dynamics: out-of-townsiblings, inheritance fears, and getting everyone aligned  48:15 – Independent living vs. Assistedliving vs. Memory care; integrated communities  54:20 – Planning is critical: power ofattorney, healthcare proxy, wills, and telling people where docs are   5 Key Takeaways   1. Move While You’re Well Transitioning before crisis hits meansbetter friendships, less stress, and more control. Waiting until decline makesmoves harder physically and emotionally.   2. Plan Before You Need To Power of attorney, healthcare proxy, andliving wills must be current. Without them, families lose legal ability to helpwhen capacity fades.   3. Loneliness Accelerates Decline Staying home alone often leads to poornutrition, inactivity, and isolation. Community and purpose keep seniorshealthier longer.   4. It’s the People, Not the Building Chandeliers don’t matter. Ask who owns thefacility, tour during activities, talk to residents, and check if dietary needsare actually met.   5. Communication Must Be Clear Seniors deserve respect, not jargon. Speakdirectly, avoid “flowery” language, and treat them as adults making informeddecisions.     Links and Resources:     Learn about Next Chapter HomeTransitions: Website: http://nextchapterhometransitions.com [http://nextchapterhometransitions.com] Phone: (631) 489-3348   Learn about Leave The Key HomebuyersSenior Transition Service:  Website: https://leavethekey.com/seniors [https://leavethekey.com/seniors]  Phone Number: (631) 380-4262   Final Thought   The best transitions happen before crisisforces your hand. Whether it’s home mods or moving to community, planning earlygives you control, options, and peace of mind. If this episode helped you,please subscribe, share, and leave a review. These conversations help familiesmake informed decisions before tomorrow becomes today.

23. Apr. 20261 h 10 min