Profile · 001
HAL 2nd Stage Quarters
The Retired HAL Engineer Whose Children Work in the Very Tech Parks He Once Built
Domlur is ringed by HAL’s legacy. Many of its oldest residents spent decades building India’s aeronautical backbone. Now their children are software engineers in the glass offices near Domlur’s inner ring road — gone for twelve hours, leaving a parent with a knee replacement and a passion for evening walks along the tree‑lined streets they no longer find safe alone. Our caregiver walks with them, carries the grocery bag, and fills the long afternoon with conversation about the city that was.
We pair Kannada‑speaking caregivers with defence‑quartering familiarity — someone who understands the rhythm of a government service household.
Profile · 002
Indiranagar 100 Feet Road
The Startup Founder Whose Mother Lives in the Family House Next Door While He Works 18‑Hour Days
Indiranagar’s startup scene has spilled into Domlur’s quieter bylanes. Young founders often live in the ancestral home with an elderly parent, but their schedules make consistent care impossible. A full‑day caregiver arrives before the first meeting and stays until the last email — ensuring proper meals, medication, and companionship during the hours when the parent would otherwise be alone with the TV.
Daytime care in Domlur is rarely about absence of love — it’s about absence of time. We protect both.
Profile · 003
Domlur Village Ward
The Original Kannadiga Family Whose Elder Has Watched the Village Disappear
Before the apartments and the cafes, Domlur was a village whose residents grew ragi and remembered the old tank. Today, the surviving matriarchs and patriarchs of those families still live in the original homes, often alone. Their children have moved to other parts of Bangalore or abroad. A live‑in caregiver with a rural Karnataka background understands the rhythms of this household — the early morning kolam, the particular way of cooking saaru, and the deep pride in a life lived entirely in Domlur.
Our Kannada‑speaking caregivers with knowledge of traditional Karnataka cooking are assigned to Domlur’s original resident families on request.
Profile · 004
Jeevan Bhima Nagar
The NRI Couple’s Parents in a Gated Community on Old Airport Road
A familiar sight near Domlur’s edge: a well‑kept apartment in a newer development, occupied by an elderly couple whose children are in the US or UK. The NRI children manage doctor appointments via WhatsApp, but the time difference means emergencies go unnoticed for hours. Our NRI protocol provides a daily structured report with photo‑confirmed medication logs, and an immediate escalation call if anything deviates from normal. The result: children who sleep, parents who are safe.
The evening report reaches London by 4 PM and California by 8 AM — a full status of your parent’s day before yours even begins.
Profile · 005
Murgeshpalya · Wind Tunnel Road
The Post‑Surgery Elder Returning from Manipal Hospital After a Hip Fracture
Proximity to Manipal Hospital is a blessing, but a hip fracture still means eight to twelve weeks of supervised recovery at home. Families take leave for a few days, then reality sets in. Our post‑hospital caregiver arrives on discharge day with a copy of the physiotherapy plan, prepares the home for safe mobility, and builds the daily rehabilitation routine that prevents the falls that lead to readmission. Recovery happens faster when recovery is someone’s only job.
We coordinate directly with the hospital’s discharge team whenever the family gives consent — no second‑hand verbal instructions.
Profile · 006
Kodihalli · ISRO Layout
The Elderly Sister Caring for Her Older Brother Because There Is No One Else
In the quiet ISRO Layout lanes, we meet siblings in their late 70s and 80s living together. Often one, usually a sister, has become the default caregiver for a brother with advanced Parkinson’s or cardiac fragility — while managing her own health silently. Our caregiver steps in not to replace her but to relieve her. The sibling can finally visit her own doctor, sleep through the night, and simply be a sister again.
Relieving the hidden family caregiver is one of our core care outcomes — it saves two lives, not one.