The Birth of Everspring: From Protecting One Family to Building a Home for Many
Ms Jan Chang
All for one purpose — to create a home
Ms. Jan Chang comes from humble beginnings — no privileged background, no financial backing.
A Hakka native of Malaysia, she left home at 17 to study in Canada on her own. To ease her family’s burden, she chose a hotel management program that allowed her to work on campus, juggling studies and labor.
She later moved to Texas, where she held three jobs on rotating shifts. She never complained, and never stopped. As she often says, “The word ‘tired’ simply doesn’t exist in my vocabulary.”
She’s often asked, “Why do you work so hard?”
For Ms. Chang, every dollar she’s earned has gone toward her family — and the causes she believes in. Over the years, she quietly took on the responsibility of supporting her entire extended family: caring for her parents, supporting her younger brother, and helping her uncle and elder brother. She personally covered her father’s end-of-life medical care, and her brother’s two decades in a psychiatric facility — all without complaint. She never wore gold, never drove a luxury car — even when her pickup truck was hit multiple times, she chose not to replace it.
Because to her, every dollar should be spent on people who matter, and on a purpose that’s worth building.
With this belief, Ms. Chang founded the Sunshine Community Center — a daytime care facility that has supported thousands of elderly individuals, helping them live each day with joy and dignity. At the time, she thought it was the greatest contribution she could make — until one day, someone asked her a question that stayed with her: “Could you build a home for people like us who’ve retired? Not just a place to spend the day, but a real home — where we can live out our later years in comfort and peace?”
That question reminded her of her aging parents — and of her own approaching old age. In that moment, she made a decision: to build a place for this generation of Chinese immigrants — a place of dignity, cultural belonging, and true peace of mind.
And that’s how Everspring was born.
To Jan herself, Everspring is not just a senior facility — it is a home built from a lifetime of experience, care, and love. It’s more than a place with nurses, meals, and activities; it’s a continuation of culture, a keeper of stories, and a space where Chinese elders can retire with dignity, rediscover joy, and begin a new chapter of life.
More than anything, she hopes Everspring will be a place of sharing — where every resident’s story is heard and honored. In her heart, this generation of Chinese immigrants are the true pillars of this country — they’ve contributed to America, sacrificed for their families, and deserve to be seen, respected, and remembered.