Project 10:27

The Reality of Senior Isolation

Senior isolation is often quiet, hidden, and easy to overlook. Many older adults live alone, have outlived a spouse or close friends, no longer drive, or face health and mobility challenges that make regular community participation difficult. Over time, their world can become smaller—fewer conversations, fewer visitors, fewer opportunities to be known, encouraged, and included.

For many seniors, loneliness is not simply the absence of activity. It is the absence of meaningful connection. Programs and services can meet important needs, but they cannot replace the power of a trusted relationship—someone who knows a senior personally, listens with care, recognizes changes, and faithfully returns.

The effects of isolation can be deeply personal. Seniors who feel disconnected may experience increased sadness, anxiety, loss of purpose, spiritual discouragement, and declining confidence in their place within the community. Many begin to feel unseen—not because they are unimportant, but because the natural support systems around them have weakened or disappeared.

This reality is especially significant in rapidly growing communities across Bexar and Comal Counties, where many older adults are aging in place while family, church, and neighborhood connections are increasingly spread out. Some seniors are physically present in our community but relationally disconnected from it.

Senior isolation rarely happens all at once. For many older adults, it develops gradually as life circumstances change. The loss of a spouse, declining health, transportation barriers, or the death of close friends can quietly reduce a senior’s daily connection to others. Over time, their circle of relationships becomes smaller, and the absence of consistent, meaningful interaction can lead to loneliness, discouragement, and a growing sense of being forgotten.

Loneliness Should Not Be The Final Chapter

Senior isolation is often quiet, hidden, and easy to overlook. Many older adults live alone, have outlived a spouse or close friends, no longer drive, or face health and mobility challenges that make regular community participation difficult. Over time, their world can become smaller—fewer conversations, fewer visitors, fewer opportunities to be known, encouraged, and included.

For many seniors, loneliness is not simply the absence of activity. It is the absence of meaningful connection. Programs and services can meet important needs, but they cannot replace the power of a trusted relationship—someone who knows a senior personally, listens with care, recognizes changes, and faithfully returns.

The effects of isolation can be deeply personal. Seniors who feel disconnected may experience increased sadness, anxiety, loss of purpose, spiritual discouragement, and declining confidence in their place within the community. Many begin to feel unseen—not because they are unimportant, but because the natural support systems around them have weakened or disappeared.

This reality is especially significant in rapidly growing communities across Bexar and Comal Counties, where many older adults are aging in place while family, church, and neighborhood connections are increasingly spread out. Some seniors are physically present in our community but relationally disconnected from it.

Leatine Fasano - Highly Respected and Deeply Connected Community Leader

Leatine Fasano is a highly respected and deeply connected community leader in the Bulverde/Spring Branch area of Comal County. Through decades of professional leadership, nonprofit service, church involvement, and community engagement, she has built strong relationships throughout the region and has consistently demonstrated a servant-hearted commitment to helping others.

Leatine recently retired after an exceptional 27-year career with Joshua Management Corporation where she served as Operations Administrator from November 1997 through April 2025. During her tenure, she earned a reputation for professionalism, organizational leadership, integrity, and strong community relationships.

Even in retirement, Leatine remains actively involved in community outreach and local business engagement. She currently serves as a representative for Noah’s Ark Storage as an Ambassador for the Bulverde Spring Branch Chamber of Commerce, where she continues to foster meaningful connections among businesses, nonprofits, and community leaders throughout the area.

Leatine is also an active member of Hillside Fellowship Church, where her faith and commitment to serving others are evident in her ongoing community involvement.

Her nonprofit leadership experience is especially noteworthy. Leatine has faithfully served on the Board of Directors for The Share Center for the past 11 years, contributing her leadership, wisdom, and compassionate spirit to an organization dedicated to assisting individuals and families in need throughout the community.

Over the past several years, Leatine has also become a valued supporter and advocate for Project 10:27. She has attended numerous events and has consistently served as an outstanding ambassador for the organization by introducing Project 10:27 to key community leaders, businesses, and organizations throughout the region.

In addition, Leatine has served faithfully as one of Project 10:27’s Compassion Card writers for several years, helping encourage and uplift seniors and individuals through personal notes and outreach. She is also actively involved in visiting seniors at The Heights of Bulverde, reflecting her genuine compassion and heart for ministry and community care.

Leatine’s combination of leadership experience, nonprofit governance, community relationships, servant leadership, and unwavering commitment to helping others make her an exceptional candidate for service on the Project 10:27 Board of Directors.

Leatine is married to Anthony Fasano, celebrating their 50th anniversary in June 2026.