Serengeti Care Foundation

Whole-Person Healing: Redefining Care for Today’s Caregivers

Care isn’t just about tending to physical needs. It’s emotional, spiritual, financial, and deeply personal. At Serengeti Care Foundation, we are on a mission to redefine care by prioritizing whole-person healing and advocating for comprehensive care for caregivers.

Why Redefining Care Matters

Traditional caregiving systems often ignore the needs of the caregiver. They focus on the task, not the person performing it. But caregiving is more than a duty—it’s a relationship, and relationships require support on both sides.

We believe redefining care means:

  • Acknowledging caregivers as individuals with their own emotional and physical needs

  • Providing programs that nurture the whole self—not just caregiving skills

  • Building a culture of empathy around caregiving

Learn how our mission began by visiting Our Story.

What Is Whole-Person Healing?

Whole-person healing addresses the caregiver’s full well-being: body, mind, and soul. Caregivers frequently face stress, grief, fatigue, and social isolation—but few have access to tools that help them heal.

That’s why Serengeti Care Foundation offers:

  • Emotional health tools via our Resources hub

  • Workshops and events for personal growth and self-discovery listed in our Events Calendar

  • Support groups and mindfulness practices

These resources give caregivers room to breathe, reflect, and rebuild—on their terms.

Practical Care for Caregivers

Caring for the caregiver isn’t just emotional—it’s logistical and financial too. We help relieve the pressure through our Caregiver Grant Hardship Application, offering emergency support for caregivers facing sudden financial burdens.

We also:

  • Provide peer support through our Everyone Else volunteer community

  • Offer educational sessions that promote personal health and development

  • Maintain a strong Caregivers section for navigating care challenges

Our goal is to help caregivers thrive—not just survive.

Join the Movement

You don’t have to be a caregiver to care about caregivers. You can:

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