Cellular senescence is usually framed as a villain in aging — but new mouse research reveals it plays a critical role in wound healing. Scientists compared how younger and older mice recover from wounds and found that younger animals mount a stronger, more coordinated senescent cell response at injury sites, which actually accelerates healing. Older animals show a weaker initial senescence response, impairing tissue repair. This challenges the simple narrative that all senescent cells are harmful and suggests that timing and context matter enormously. The findings have implications for how we approach senolytic therapies — drugs designed to clear senescent cells — and whether blanket removal of these cells could backfire in certain biological contexts.