How to talk to parents about scams without shaming them
The goal is not to take over. The goal is to create a rule everyone follows before anyone is scared.
Start with respect
Older adults are not the problem. Criminals target people of every age. A better opening is: "Scammers are changing their tactics, so I want our whole family to update our safety plan."
Make it mutual
Do not create a rule that only applies to your parent. Say that everyone, including you, will use the safe word and call-back rule for urgent money requests.
Ask what support feels acceptable
Some people want help setting bank alerts. Others prefer a trusted-number sheet. Others want a monthly check-in. Let the person choose the first step.
Script to use
"I want us all to have the same rule, including me. This is about supporting your independence, not taking it away. Can we make a plan now so nobody has to decide while scared?"
End with one concrete action
Choose one safe word, write two trusted numbers, or place one phone-side script near the phone. Keep the first conversation small enough to succeed.
The workbook gives you the safe-word agreement, parent conversation starter, phone-side script, and monthly review page so the first talk stays practical.
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