About the Founder: From Systems Logic to Senior Safety
Hello, I’m Ronald Yip.
For 40 years, my world was built on IT systems, logic, and architecture. In the world of technology, if a system is prone to “crashing,” you find the root cause, reinforce the infrastructure, and optimize the performance.
In February 2025, I had to apply that exact same logic to my own life.
The “System Crash”
At age 75, I faced a major physical challenge: a hip fracture on 29 October 2024 that kept me hospitalized for four months. I was discharged without surgery until 7 February 2025, but I faced a new reality. I had lost the muscle mass that once powered my stride, and I could no longer walk with the speed and confidence I once took for granted.
The Recovery Protocol
I realized that recovery isn’t just about “getting better”- it’s about engineering a safer environment and rebuilding the hardware (muscle and bone).
I didn’t stop when I “graduated” from standard physiotherapy. When the resistance wasn’t high enough, I increased the difficulty myself using 2kg ankle weights and advanced resistance bands exercises and training. I began integrating modern technologies, like Terahertz and PEMF, to accelerate my recovery.
Why I Created Ruth’s Wellness
I built this site to share the “blueprints” of my recovery. I realized that many seniors are told to “be careful,” but they aren’t told how to be strong.
On this site, you won’t find vague advice. You will find:
- Logical Safety Silos: Step-by-step guides to optimizing your sleeping room, bed safety, living hall, corridors, stairs, kitchen, bathroom, and public transport routines.
- Data-Driven Recovery: Real-time documentation of my own journey back to full walking speed.
- Evidence-Based Wellness: Insights into nutrition, supplements, and technology that support vitality after 70.
I am not just a patient; I am an engineer optimizing my most important system – my health. Whether you are recovering from an injury or looking to “future-proof” your home, I invite you to join me in making our senior years the strongest ones yet.
“50 minutes sitting, 10 minutes walking” rule.