From Overwhelmed to Overjoyed: How One Wright County Family Rightsized with Confidence
When Deborah Hanson first called Circle Partners, she was crying. Her mother, Margaret, 85, was living alone in Otsego in a three-bedroom rambler that had not been maintained since her husband passed four years earlier. Deborah lived in Rogers. Her sister lived in Florida. Her brother had not been involved in years. She was managing everything alone, and she felt completely overwhelmed.
What happened over the next four months turned out to be one of the most meaningful experiences of Deborah’s life — and Margaret’s. This is their story.
Where They Started
The Hanson family situation was genuinely complex. Margaret had early-stage dementia — not yet severe enough to require memory care, but enough that she could not manage the details of a move independently. The house had deferred maintenance that needed to be addressed before listing. The belongings were a full three-bedroom home worth of 53 years of accumulated life. And the family relationships were strained.
Deborah felt the pressure of all of it at once. She was trying to evaluate senior living communities, manage her mother, coordinate with her absent siblings, and handle the logistics of the house — with no roadmap and no support system.
Getting Organized
The first thing that changed was having a clear plan. Working with a senior transition advisor, Deborah established a sequence: first the senior living decision, then the house preparation, then the estate sale and belongings, then the move.
This sequencing sounds obvious in retrospect. But when you are in the middle of it, everything feels equally urgent. Having someone help prioritize made the whole project manageable.
Margaret toured two communities with Deborah. She was calmer and more engaged in the process than Deborah had expected — she had an opinion about the dining room at the first community, and she liked the garden view at the second. She chose the second.
The House and the Belongings
The Otsego home was listed after three weekends of family sorting. Deborah flew her sister in for one of those weekends — the first time the siblings had worked together on anything in years. The heirloom conversations were unexpectedly healing. Sorting through their parents’ belongings, they found themselves sharing memories they had not shared in decades.
An estate sale company handled the remaining household items over a weekend. The house sold in 12 days, slightly above asking price, to a young family moving from the Twin Cities.
Margaret at Six Months
Six months after moving in, Margaret has a routine she loves. She attends the community’s morning exercise class three times a week. She eats dinner at a table with the same three women every night. Her dementia has progressed very slowly — her physician attributes the stability, in part, to the increased social engagement and structured daily routine the community provides.
Deborah visits every Sunday. She brings lunch from Margaret’s favorite Mexican restaurant. For the first time in four years, their Sunday visits are not colored by worry. They are just time together.
Deborah described the transformation this way: I went into this feeling like it was a crisis I was barely managing. I came out the other side having done one of the most loving things I have ever done for my mother. The dread was completely disproportionate to the reality.
What the Hanson Family Would Tell Yours
- Start with the senior living decision. Everything else follows from there.
- You do not have to coordinate this alone. Get support — from a senior transition advisor, from family, from professionals who have done this before.
- Include your siblings even if the relationships are complicated. The shared experience of a parent’s rightsizing can be unexpectedly healing.
- The move is hard for a week. The life after the move is better for years.
Explore More Stories of Success
- Rightsizing a Family Farm in Minnesota: One Family Unexpected Journey
- When Aging in Place Stopped Working: How a Big Lake Family Found a Better Answer
- From a 4-Bedroom Home to Independent Living: A Minnesota Senior Story
- The Adult Daughter Perspective: How a Twin Cities Family Navigated Their Mom Move
- We Should Have Done This Sooner: A Minnesota Senior Couple Rightsizing Story
Circle Partners is the Wright County family support system for Minnesota rightsizing. Contact us today — wherever you are in the process, we can help.





