A phone reminder to lock doors at night works when the cue needs to arrive at the same time every evening — a familiar voice on the landline or cell phone, not a sticky note that is easy to overlook after a busy day.

What happened when George kept forgetting to lock up?

George was 80, still very active, and loved his daily walks in the park. He was generally healthy, but he had started to forget small details — including locking the doors before bed. His daughter Lucy noticed the pattern and grew anxious.

A neighbor had recently had a break-in. Lucy did not want the same thing to happen to her dad. She began calling him every night before she went to bed, but with work and family demands she could not always remember to make that call herself.

That situation is common: the older adult is capable and independent, the risk feels real after something nearby, and the family member becomes the nightly reminder system — until life gets in the way.

Why is locking doors at night important for older adults living alone?

Most U.S. burglaries involve unsecured entry; the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program tracks burglary trends nationally, and an unlocked door late in the evening is an easy target when routines slip.

Memory lapses are not the same as carelessness. Busy days, tiredness after an outing, or simply settling in another room before bed can mean the last check never happens. Families often notice the gap only after a scare — a nearby break-in, a news story, or finding a door unlocked during a visit.

Other supports still matter: good locks, outdoor lighting, and phones that are simple to answer if someone needs to call for help. They do not replace a reliable lock doors at night habit at the moment someone is actually heading to bed.

How did Lucy set up a nightly door lock reminder?

Lucy looked for something steadier than her own memory. She set up a personalized reminder with CareCalls, recorded in her own voice. Every night at nine o’clock, CareCalls sends George a reminder to lock the doors.

A fixed evening time anchors the routine to bedtime, not to whenever Lucy finishes her day. Hearing Lucy’s voice on the phone can feel more natural than an anonymous alarm — especially for someone who already talks to family on the landline.

If you are weighing reminders against broader reassurance, compare options on our services page, or read how another family used regular check-ins when a parent was living alone after a health scare. For a different daily habit, see how timed phone medication reminders helped someone manage a strict medicine schedule.

What should families consider before setting up evening reminders?

  • Agree the exact time that fits bedtime — not so early that doors get locked and then opened again, not so late that everyone is already asleep.
  • Use a voice the person trusts; re-record if the message needs to name the front door, back door, or garage explicitly.
  • Decide whether anyone should be alerted if there is no answer, and what that means (missed reminder vs possible emergency).
  • Combine with practical security habits — keys stored safely, spare keys not left in obvious places, neighbors aware if the person is away.

George enjoys the evening reminder and hearing Lucy’s voice each night. Lucy has peace of mind knowing her dad and his home are more likely to be secure before he goes to bed — without her having to be the one who remembers every single night.