The Complete Library
All Twelve Papers, Organized by Cluster
Each paper follows the same nine-section structure and includes a downloadable PDF. Browse by cluster below, or start from Part 1 and read the series in order.
Neurological & Cognitive
Conditions of the brain and nervous system that erode cognition, movement, and self-direction.
Organic Brain Syndrome
The umbrella term for Alzheimer's and related dementias — together the single largest cause of long-term care dependency in the U.S.
Stroke and CVA
The leading cause of long-term adult disability in the U.S. — capable of turning a healthy, independent adult into someone needing 24-hour care overnight.
Parkinson's Disease
The second most common neurodegenerative disorder in the U.S. — motor and cognitive decline that erodes independence gradually over 10 to 20 years.
Physical & Mobility
Events and conditions that undo the ability to move safely through daily life.
Falls and Fractures
Not a diagnosis but an event — one in four older adults falls each year, and for many, a single fall ends independent living within weeks.
Arthritis
More than 100 distinct joint conditions that quietly erode the ability to walk, dress, and bathe — not in a single moment, but over years.
Chronic Disease
Long-arc illnesses that compound over decades until several complications converge.
COPD and Chronic Lung Disease
The fifth leading cause of death in the U.S. — a condition that works by degrees, turning stairs, bathing, and eventually breathing itself into daily challenges.
Diabetes
Doesn't disable in one moment — it erodes the eyes, kidneys, nerves, and heart over decades until several complications compound at once.
Cardiovascular Disease
Nearly half of American adults have some form of cardiovascular disease — heart failure most reliably converts independence into daily reliance on others.
Chronic Kidney Disease
Develops silently over decades; by the time symptoms force a diagnosis, the trajectory toward dialysis is often already set.
Cancer
Increasingly a chronic, survivable condition — but one that leaves durable effects on the body and mind long after active treatment ends.
Autoimmune Diseases
Multiple sclerosis, lupus, scleroderma, and related conditions often begin in midlife — meaning families can face a caregiving arc spanning decades.
Sensory
Under-recognized losses that quietly accelerate falls, isolation, and cognitive decline.