Living in a Seniors’ facility and not having younger people around because of COVID-19 restrictions can be stagnating. But that doesn’t need to be the case. Stories come from a couple of more famed personalities…
Scientist and broadcaster David Suzuki admitted to one interviewer that he was “in the Death Zone” when referring to his age (83 years). His heart was heavy when he said “my own grandchildren will never live through what I was so fortunate to know as a child who was free to explore nature”. He regrets the chaos that comes with realities such as climate change. When he’s daughter first told him she was pregnant he shuddered to think of how she must feel. To his surprise, however, she talked about her feeling of expectation and joy. “Having a child” she told him “is my commitment to our society”. It was such a statement of hope!
Judi Dench, one of England’s most beloved actresses, artists and authors, reminds us that at age 85 she is still no shrinking violet. Her eye-sight may be severely restricted, but her vision-of-life is exuberant. She and her grandson might be socially separated, for example, but she is able to learn iconic dance moves from him via TikTok. However, she does beat him to the punch-line when he tries to stump her with his riddles. The joy they share with each other (and with us via social media) is absolutely infectious.
In the earliest of Covid times my friends on the outside encouraged me to share thoughts about Annora Brown’s Art Life & Learning Project with my new-found friends at Crestview Lodge. For four weekends we shared pictures of her paintings. In those lock-down times many memories bubbled to the surface and were shared by the residents. Later their stories were told on the Annora Brown website.
Meanwhile, although the injury to my back means I can’t do my own laundry, an across-the-hall friend showed how I could use the grab-bar on my shower as a clothes line. With a spray of laundry detergent and a dose of hot water from the shower hose, I could launder some more delicate summer apparel. The memory came to me from Korea days of friends using a family room in the public bath house to do their laundry as they bathed themselves. Elders not only have much they can learn from the younger ones, they also have wonderful stories (wisdom) to share.
Books abound in Crestview Lodge, and we have time to re-read some forgotten treasures. Take Doris Burton’s book “Babe’s Sunshine: I Made My Own”. Memory comes back of my friendships with Babe when she was writing that book. But it is only with the re-read that I’m reminded of the extreme harshness she faced from an abusive husband and years of isolation. What a gift when we can share our own reminders of Babe’s stories and the wonderful support she received from her family (Dora and Bert Riggall and Kay [Russell]).
Covid may restrict our social interactions, but our spirits are God-given. Alleluia!
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