Vancouver Museum of Anthropology UBC

Vancouver Museum of Anthropology UBC
Another mask...

Saturday 13 November 2010

How to leave a comment...

Some friends have said this has been a problem knowing how to leave a comment so try this...


Creating a comment is very straightforward and I would suggest people use “Google Account”.

If you have a googlemail (also known as gmail) email address then this will also be your Google Account name + password. Otherwise you will need to set up a new Google Account.
To sign in or create an account, click on “Sign In” at the top right corner of the blog.

This will open a new page which can be used to create a new account (by clicking “Get Started”) or signing in with an existing account.

When you have signed in, you can leave a comment on the blog by selecting “Google Account” from the drop down list.

The Myth of Alzheimer's Disease...

Just discovered a new site run by Peter Whitehouse & Danny George (see link below) where I found a lovely little You Tube film about the work of artist Tom Shannon. The other film alongside it here is not the one I wanted you to see and I don't know how to delete it yet, and also whether or not the link I made to You Tube is in fact stable or not. Anyway just hope it works and I can link you to it.

Friday 12 November 2010

Bournemouth Developments...

I took no pictures while there unfortunately and regret that there are no visuals helping elaborate and fill in the words. The conference was incredibly full, every lunch and coffee break had activities taking place. Yesterday I heard Alistair Burns the new National Clinical Director of Dementia for the Dept of Health, describe a Randomised Controlled trial on Aromatherapy with people with dementia, which he has recently completed and which took 5 years to do so. Results were that the intervention showed a little improvement.

I made good contacts at the conference and hopefully some work will happen next year at Worcester Uni in the new dementia group set up this year. I was also approached about writing a book on the subject of Dance & Dementia, however it would take over 12 months and financially there is nothing in it, except the fact that my PhD transforms into book form. Have to think about it. Any ideas much appreciated.

More soon...

Wednesday 10 November 2010

The Myth of Alzheimer's Disease- Peter Whitehouse

Today at the Dementia Congress I heard Peter Whitehouse a pioneering research scientist, medic and neurologist with over 25 years work in the field say that in relation to Alzheimer's it is a complete myth that it should be called a disease; reason being that the big dementia agencies, the medics and the drug companies have all helped create this myth to keep up the fear and stigma in the general population; in order that politically and generally, there remains a consciousness that this is a 'deadly disease' rather than a condition, (a normal part of the ageing process) meaning that the fear and stigma generated help create the climate to draw in the funds. He is not currently a popular man with the big agencies and pharmaceuticals; however as he also said, they are in deep financial trouble. Together they have spent millions of pounds on 'the magic bullet' or pill, people can take and there will never be such a thing, in part because science ( real science) is being skewed to fit the agreed agenda; in part because the latest thinking is that AD is not one disease alone but a number of them acting in concert. It is very Orwellian of course, however in my opinion it makes a lot of sense ..And of course there is a huge place in the dementia care field for the much more cost-effective and embodied practices ( including dance and movement) that we offer. We have to start finding the people, working together, developing the strategies and enabling opportunities for it to happen on a much larger scale andf far less piecemeal than to date. Here comes the 1st National Conference on Dance and Dementia - hooray, please see below for booking ( click on the image to be taken directly to the site).

Tuesday 9 November 2010

5th National Dementia Congress Bournemouth

It's windy and cold here by the sea, however I arrived late tonight for a debate; ' Life-long care for people with dementia is an impossible dream' the proposer was Martin Green, CEO of ECCA (whatever that is) and Barbara Pointon, campaigner and former care of her husband Malcolm. Barbara has written very poignantly in the past about what it was like caring for her husband who had a dementing condition. I was really struck by a number of things she said and showed. The first being a spider diagram full of lines...and I mean many many lines that linked her at the time with the GP: social services: bed support services: Alzheimer's Society: Admiral Nurse: incontinence nurse etc etc. Malcolm and his wife Barbara were at the centre of this web of inter-connecting people and services that was tiring to look at the diagram let alione to have to experience it. Barbara said; 'Just give us the right tools and family-carers will do the rest'. She called for continuity of staff in the caring relationships..she was told that she would have between 2 and 3 staff caring for Malcolm. In the end she had 18 and he just got more and more angry pulling down curtains etc in an embodied response of distress. She spoke about the vital importance of the quality of the staff attending malcolm and how none of them had any dementia care training; that has she said contributed to her becoming a champion of better training and support for care-givers and that they should have access to specialist dementia nursing advice and emotional support. I thought here of the REITMAN CENTRE in Toronto and it's wonderful work. Yes, Joel and team; I am singing your praises over here and beginning the process of writing up a journal article of my Canadian experiences, including details of your wonderful work.

Anyway the debate came out at 157 against the motion and 54 for it. It was overwhelmingly opposed, and yours truly being one of those who opposed it!! Long live the best support that any carer of a person with dementia can possibly receive. That has to be the mantra and it is definitely not an impossible dream.

More tomorrow I hope. That's it for now.

Wednesday 3 November 2010

1st National Dance & Dementia Conference 2010

These are exciting times right now especially for the development of the whole dance and dementia field in the UK. This conference is the first of its kind ( see poster below and click on it to be taken to the site for registration details etc) and aims to bring together dancers, dance therapists, healthcare practitioners, medics and others to listen to, and take part in, a wide ranging programme of talks, presentations, workshops and performances. The aim is to boost the profile of dance and dementia and the contribution it can make to improving the care and quality of life of those with the condition and also those who care for them. It is also an exchange forum where many of us can meet for the first time enabling us all to reflect on current practice while also being able to identify new ways forward. TO ALL MY CANADIAN FRIENDS DO CONSIDER COMING YOU WILL HAVE A GREAT EXPERIENCE

Sunday 17 October 2010

Press Release...

To all my colleagues and new friends in Canada here is the 250 word press release I was telling you about...please comment on how my work may have touched you...or not of course!!


Dancing Doctor Returns from British Columbia!

An exceptionally rewarding Churchill Fellowship 2010 awarded to Dr Richard Coaten of the South West Yorkshire Partnership Foundation Trust, has ended. Having spent a month in Toronto and Vancouver, including attendance at a major international conference on arts and dementia; where he gave a very popular presentation, Richard has returned much inspired. His Fellowship involved studying the use of movement, dance and other ‘embodied’ practices for people with dementia and their care-giver’s. He visited world-leading experts and learnt first-hand about their pioneering efforts researching the importance of ‘going by way of the body in dementia care’. Essentially this seeks to improve quality of life, by better understanding how and why the creative and performing arts give hope and opportunity to all those with a dementing condition.  He visited brain research laboratories meeting leading neuroscientists: worked closely with a specialist care facility providing vital care-giver support: visited a specialist day-centre in Toronto and gave numerous talks and experientially based workshops about his doctoral researches.  He was part of a ‘Round-Table’ discussion in Vancouver seeking to develop dance and health activities throughout British Columbia, bringing together cultural planners, dancers and others including a representative from the British Columbia Arts Council. It was a great success and more are planned. Overall, he learnt much of relevance to the Dance Movement Psychotherapy Service he runs in Calderdale, and would like to take this opportunity to thank both the Churchill Memorial Trust in London and his own employer for this once in a lifetime opportunity.

Sunday 10 October 2010

BUILDING UP STEAM - A NEW 'BLOGGINNING' - PLEASE HELP!

At home in blogosphere
Dear Bloggers,

A personal letter of thanks to you all in the old fashioned way for joining me in the new fashioned way in the blogosphere. I am writing to you, dearly beloved and dedicated bloggers, who appear in the main 'blog-view' page and who no doubt are responsible for increasing my blogger 'hit-rate'scores to a value, greater than, or equal to 1, on several past occasions. Who knows what interests you specifically, or why you are motivated to take a look at mine when no doubt the total 'blogosphere' to which you are also invited is a universe of unsurpassed wealth and much more thrilling stuff. HOWEVER, not to exclude everyone else who may blog in future, the news is as follows.....'when Birnam Wood came to Dunsinane!':

'It's 4 in the morning' as Leonard Cohen once sang so memorably; I cannot sleep anymore: the clock is actually saying it's 01.26 but I don't believe it!; it's 8pm Vancouver where a part of me still resides; I'm loving being at home in my own bed after a month of hotel beds. I'm also loving a mixture of 'Early Grey'!! (what pun for this time of the morning) and real-tea served from a real tea-pot with accompanying toast and real home-made marmalade, (sadly on this occasion not made by me). I/we are back home after nearly 9 hours in the air, coupled with an 8 hour time-difference...not a pleasant combination. If anyone has any suggestions for making this transition space more pleasant please let me know! I have opened a letter from the Director General of the WCMT asking me for a 'short and punchy draft press release, summarising the purpose, salient points and achievements of my Fellowship'. Feet have not yet properly landed and already I have woken up at this wonderfully creative and also quiet time, to forge a new relationship with you all -

HERE FORTHWITH A CHALLENGE TO THE BLOGOSPHERE

NO, THIS IS NOT THE END, THIS IS MERELY A NEW BLOGGINING! (- YO!)

I INVITE YOU ALL, WHO I'VE MET AND WORKED WITH IN THAT STUNNINGLY BEAUTIFUL CANADA TO START LETTING ME AND OTHERS KNOW THROUGH THIS BLOG, THE IMPACT OF MY TRIP ON YOU AND ON YOUR WORK.


So, my press release when done will also be 'blog-released' here in the 'blogosphere' and not solely in a regional and UK based newspaper or journal, (which no-one in Canada may probably read anyway!)  - how about that for a 4am idea?? I am buzzing with it and shall email you all into it as well, so no escaping the reach of this new 'Bloggining' seeking maximum bloggage and 'dia-bloggage' (not dia-blabbable!)  in the blogosphere.


Seriously though, this trip of a lifetime gifted me by the Churchill Memorial Trust in London has been so special that I must take this opportunity to thank Julia, Jamie and all the others involved in granting me this opportunity. I know they would want me to say it is open to all UK citizens and to tell you about it, which a long report and short press release from me will seek to achieve; however, I also know that my work does not stop now that the trip is over. There is much work to be done in improving the lives of all those with a dementing condition, and all those touched directly and indirectly by it, here and in Canada. I have learnt so so much from being with you all;  interested, interesting, committed, skilled and special people in Toronto, Vancouver, Penticton and Kamloops, including First Nation Peoples.

I sincerely trust that I can do you all justice for what you have gifted both me and my family, in getting across the message (through the creative and performing arts) that it will always be a myth that people with dementia can no longer communicate; that there is no hope; that they are no longer worth bothering about, or listening to, or learning from. As 'Bear' (Gerald) from Kamloops said, having drummed and sang us ( as a family) onto their territory in Kamloops in the traditional way (an experience I shall never forget), 'if the person has lost their spirit, then through ceremony and the help of our ancestors we will help them recover it'. There is no helplessness, or hopelessness here; instead a firm belief in (and experience of) the power of rhythm, song, music, dance and ceremony (within tradition) to connect with that which gives life, affirms spirit and recovers 'Personhood' in spite of manifold loss.

There is much work to be done, please help me know and share your Canadian stories and experiences of my work with you, and how it relates with and connects to your own; so that we can better understand and grow this work and approach for the betterment of all with the condition.

Yours in profound gratitude,
Richard
Churchill Fellow 2010


Friday 8 October 2010

Running out of steam...

It's Friday, we leave for UK tomorrow and here's the news from Kamloops where we were on Monday night last. Tuesday early we got back in the hire car and drove for 5 hours back to Vancouver via the Coquihalla Highway I think it's called. A stunningly beautiful drive up high mountain passes, where you go on climbing and climbing. I did pick up rather a lot of speed (on the way down) and it was Amy who spotted the Police Helicopter hovering over the road when I was touching 125 kph instead of the regulation 100kph. Luckily, I put the anchors on and we were not chased by the 'blue light' brigade...thanks to Amy for that. Having got back to Vancouver in time for the car hire deadline we cheked into the Holiday Inn ( and yes another pool!) and more swimming. We have all being doing a lot of that recently, which has been great for keeping fit and keeping A happy. The rest of tuesday was a rest time and wednesday we headed off to Granville Island in the morning which is a cross between Covent Garden outdoor performance space, indoor and outdoor markets abd little ferries that take you across from downtown. It is the no1 tourist attraction in Canada with Niagara No2 and we have done them both.

Wednesday pm and we headed off to University of British Columbia with 55,000 students where we all met Alison, played 'Old Maid' in a cafe with Alison and then she and I went off to talk about her researches in the creative arts with people with dementia. We met again today Friday (this) morning to continue that process viewing more film clips of older people taking part in creative activities from music to painting and reflecting on how beneficial it was for them. Her work is definitely leading edge stuff and I'm looking forward to collaborating with her more on this. Wednesday night and Alison invited us out for a "Thanksgiving Turkey Dinner'....the first time we have been invited out the whole trip. It meant a lot to us, and it was a lovely time with her and family.

So, after the talk this am, it was off to the Dance Centre for our workshop. About 12 people came, which was an excellent turn-out, considering it was thanksgiving weekend, when most folk leave town for the provinces and many more turkey dinners...anyway..never quite found out the significance of this event in the Canadian calendar. The workshop went really well and this time it was almost all experiential with a bit of talking. It was really appreciated come the end of the three hours and the centre director gave us a bottle of wine which was very kind..

Had some cheap Greek food tonight (inc.Baklava for me) as budget almost exhausted...looking forward to meeting one of Mary's relatives tomorrow who is picking us up tomorrow am taking us to her house and then off to the airport.....to catch the plane. This may be my last blog till we're home. Has been really frustarting not being able to download new pics on a regular basis as it takes too long when not easily able to reduce the pixel size so the blog can recognise it or not take ages to download.

Bye for now...and thanks for tuning in to all this...

Monday 4 October 2010

Catching-up....phew!!

So much going on...have a need to put new pics on here...have found a great pc in the lobby of the students residence at Thompson Rivers University here in Kamloops which in 'K'wemleps' means meeting of the rivers and the rivers (Thompson & North Thompson) are pretty big. Have met Wendy Hulko today from here who is doing dementia focused work with First Nation Elders. My workshop today had five people from different peoples + 9 others; it was very special as Mary, Amy and I were welcomed onto the territory in a traditional way with a song going back generations and drumming to accompany the song. Gerald (Bear) welcomed us and later he spoke movingly about bringing ( through cermenony) back the spirit of several elders who had (according to him) lost theirs through the condition. It was a moving afternoon especially when I asked him if he and his brothers and sisters would drum and sing, while I led participants in a dance to ground the talk in the experiential.

Apologies to those who wanted to hear how the conference went in Penticton and before that my meeting with Claudia the 'Music & the Brain' researcher at UBC in Vancouver. I am full to bursting with everything gouing on here and I am pleased to say that Amy played a full and active part in the workshop today.

We depart early am for a 4 hour return drive to Vancouver, where we must deposit the car we've had these past several days. We are staying at the Holiday Inn on Howe Street, Downtown and Mary and I are jointly leading the workshop we are giving at the Scotiabank Dance Centre on Davie Street. Do come if you are reading this from BC! It is is 677, Davie Street from 1.30pm to 4.30pm on October 8th. Bring loose comfortable clothes and we will be dancing....that's it fornow. The conference in Penticton was well worth attending and more of that when next I get access to a machine like this... Byeee.......................

Friday 1 October 2010

Catching-up...

So much going on now....difficult gaining internet access to report about it and therefore doing this quick in a cafe where Amy is quietly tying my shoelaces together under the table. 23 degrees here in Penticton in the Canadian Rockies, the conference going very well. The hotel has a pool so swimming every morning early before the conference starts at 08.30hrs sharp. Lots of really interesting arts/health work going on in the west here, with folk from the Northern Territories, Alberta, BC and New York. It's good to see Bernie Warren again from Windsor Ontario who is doing clown based work and research with folk with memory problems. The meeting in Vancouver the day we left for here was also really brilliant. Met a neuroscientist at the University of BC Brain Research Lab and we talked at length about her pioneering research on music therapy and the brain....more news soon whenever I can get access to a machine.

Amy says; "I'm having great time in Canada. It's just been my birthday on the 24th September and I got lots and lots of presents, then we went to Niagara Falls. I hated getting wet because we went in the Maid of the Mist, but I still loved it; and after, my dad bought me an absolutely delicious CHOCOLATE ice-cream. On that day I went to this waffle place, and we told them it was my birthday, so I had 2 waffles which had those sparkly candles on...and after we went on our plane and when we landed we went to our new hotel and after dinner I had a cake which was just the size for all of us - it was lovely, but I didn't have most of it!!."

Monday 27 September 2010

Vancouver Aquarium...

It's late, I'm in the offices at the Scotiabank Dance Centre here on Davie Street having just typed up a flyer advertising  a practical workshop here at the Dance Centre, to be given when we return from Penticton next week. Mary and I are offering it together - it being M's suggestion when I told her how good the meeting had been today. It's a last minute thing really but great to be able to have more time with folk in the arts/health field here. The round-table discussion with arts and health practitioners, artists, dancers and cultural planners went really well this morning. There was a lot of interest in what I had to say about my work and how it resonated with their own experiences and creative practice here in Vancouver and BC.

As I write this there is a meeting downstairs to decide what artists should do about the planned cuts to arts funding in BC province.  Both here in Vancouver and in Toronto I sense a general political trend going 'rightwards'...bike lanes to be cut, arts-funding cut. I have just read a fascinating report on the state of the arts and health generally across Canada 'Tip of the Iceberg' it's called and full of really insightful work on what's going on. Similar to the situation in the UK I think, with lots of projects springing up all across the country but lack of co-ordination at national and regional/provincial level and also it seems I am picking up a disconnect at federal level of the importance of the arts in helping support, maintain and develop what is a hugely multi-cultural and diverse society. The potential is huge that the arts contribute much more and get the recognition they deserve; especially in relation to the future need at federal and state level to do a lot more about the care of seniors and especially those with memory problems in Canadian socirty...

OOPs I forgot to say the trip to the acquarium in Stanley Park yesterday was wonderful and Amy really loved it..I shall endeavour to get different pics on here as soon as I remember to bring my camera and my body to this computer at the same time. Bye for now...

Sunday 26 September 2010

Toronto Rehab...& Vancouver!!

I am not concerned that I have no posts to my last journalistic attempts to capture the feel of the 'Maid of the Mist' experience and soon I shall need to start downloading some more pics to make it visually interesting. This takes time and internet cafes are not free....anyway the talk at Toronto Rehab went very well. It was an hour long last wednesday and prior to it Pia treated me to lunch at a great veggie cafe near where she works. She has just come back from a major conference on Personhood in Dementia in Sweden and apparently it was a great success. Pia and I have spent some time together talking about our work and what we are both seeking to achieve. I found her comments really helpful in relation to what I may be able to do back in the UK by way of a possible post-doctoral fellowship - if I choose to go down that road.

Now in Vancouver...Amy bashing me over the head with a brolly to get me off this machine right now - so that we can head off to Stanley Park and the world famous aquarium. Sight-seeing today....MUST GO>>>

Saturday 25 September 2010

'Maid of the Mist' and more.....

I was going to tell you about my day at Toronto Rehab on wednesday but this has been eclipsed by yesterday and thursday is very nearly headed for the mists of time! Oh how poetic...READ ON AND DON"T GO AWAY.

It was wednesday last I managed to do a blog and here we are, saturday early morning, before returning the hire car of yesterday and jetting off to Vancouver all being well. I was really really blown away by yesterday at Niagara Falls on A's birthday; that the day before and the one before that I musn't lose track of in this blog - or try not to lose track of - fat chance!!. Imagine being in a boat (Maid of the Mist) that can take several hundred people, the sun is shining one minute, you are dressed ( hundreds of you) in blue plastic sheets, the wind blowing hard and the plastic sheets sound like you're in a factory; and the next you are looking up at a wall of water that towers above you, can't see a thing because the spray from the falls are trying to beat your eyes out. The sound, the mist, the maelstrom of the water seething in whirlpools under the boat which is sedately sailing into, through and out of this maelstrom. The contrast with the Las Vegas cum Scarborough (UK) ( scaled up 100 fold) tatty tourist industry that has grown up around this magnificent and awe-inspiring spectacle - is extraordinary and for me simply awesome. I would not have wanted to miss the experience for anything. I gave up with the ruddy blue plastic and got completely soaked, but did it matter? Like hell it did. It was the best antidote for getting away from it all and experiencing nature in the raw, in its awesome power and making me and Mary feel blown away by it. I remember spontaneously singing 'My Bonny Lies Over the Ocean' followed by 'What shall we do with the Drunken Sailor' at the top of my voice, while leaning out over the prow of the vessel. Bit like the feeling in that old ( not really old!) Titanic film, instead you must replace 'young lovers', in your mind's eye with crazy old sod from England who's out to make a fool of himself.

In contrast, and it was her birthday of course; Amy just hated it - didn't she!  'Dad, this is the worst day of my life!' scenario. This is what is so great about children. I loved it, she hated it, because she worried about getting her hair wet. No point in remonstrating back with, 'but we've come thousands of miles to see and experience this and all your fussed about is your hair!'. This is the reality Richard -  get real and just accept it if you can. I must say thanks here to the calming influence of my beloved.  I am over time gradually getting much better at this. Incidentally both she and I insisted on some big hugs while still on the boat, even if Amy didn't get it at all. She did get the chocolate ice-cream cone later on, and  that made her really happy - till she got 'colly-wobbles' from it later on. I call that Niagara's revenge! Also, to let you knowthat I boarded that boat feeling a bit grotty from the the driving and the 'tackiness' of the town; and both M & I came off feeling like we had just had an ecstatic experience - which of course we had....

Where did Toronto Rehab go?? Oh dear, I forgot that bit.

Wednesday 22 September 2010

Dancing Doctor Strip(s)

Yoooo...that got you interested!! Thanks Kerry and great to meet you in the cafe this morning and again tonight quite by accident at the traffic lights...you saw the pun in my blog title and pointed it out over breakfast.

 This is the second time I am attempting this blog. This am in the library where such things as blogging are free I made a superb attempt at this...all flags flying..going at a rate of knots telling you all that's going on till SOD IT..if the screen didn't go dead before I could click on POST. I had run out of time and didn't notice the tiny window bottom left of screen that told me I was running out of free credit.What a blithering idiot I was!!

(Will not mention Barbie again as it's a killer for getting comments!! except to say that I cycled 4 kilometres tonight to get another B ...! & a 'furr-real' dog for A's birthday this friday..she's 8 on 24th and away from her friends. Have also booked the car-hire to take us out to Niagara Falls on Friday and into a smart hotel that night for a slap-up meal and swim in their indoor pool all being well).

Now to the news...phew. Yesterday ran my second workshop at the Reitman Centre for care professionals. It was very well received indeed, like the first. I did slightly different stuff, managing this time to have folk dancing in the space, completing my powerpoint presentation which I don't always achieve and showing that extraordinary ( and very moving) 10 min piece of film from the memory-bridge foundation about Gladys Wilson and Naomi Feil. At the end of the workshop I was presented with some beautiful yellow trumpet type tropical flowers...v beautiful and brought a tear to 'me' eye..coming rather a lot these days in Toronto. The experience is so rich and fulfilling and energising and creative for all of us, that at times I am quite overcome by it all. The Director of the Centre also made me a gift to thank me for all I had brought tot eh Centre and the team. I was deeply moved by this. The afternoon was really interesting too as I was able to attend a session for people with memory problems attending a support group. We were able to dance together and share memories of what it means to live in Europe, amongst other things.

I am so impressed by the high quality and comprehensive support the Centre is able to give care-givers and it got a mention in the days Globe & Mail which is continuing a daily series of fascinating articles on the subject by Andre Picard. More news tomorrow of all that happened today in meeting up with Pia giving another talk, this time quite formal, in a lecture theatre at Toronto Rehab on University Avenue, also well received.

Mary & Amy went to a women's only ceremenony tonight on our street run by a 'grandmother' of aboriginal descent to coincide with the equinox and blow-me if they didn't sing a song Cordelia had taught Amy at school...'doo wa witchy-a, witchy-a'..or something like that!! Bye for now.....phew....

Monday 20 September 2010

Today...

It went really well and I'm really really chuffed with the response I got from all 14 folk who attended my 3 hour workshop this pm at the Reitman Ctre. I had some very moving comments from participants who said they had been very inspired by what I said and brought. My laptop and USB powered speakers worked very well too as I had to load lots of CDs onto I Tunes before coming over here. I'm really knackered again tonight which is hardly surprising, and very pleasantly so, as a kind Canadian left me most of a jug of his lager (on leaving) at the greek restaurant we went to in Greek Town tonight -  a very atmospheric part of town east of the centre. Mary's sister Eileen has flown up from Denver and Mary very chuffed to have her around and staying in the same guest-house as us for a few nights. Amy chuffed to bits at being taken off by here Aunt to 'Honest Ed's' and/or 'Sears' in town for a serious attempt a getting yet another 'Barbie'....she came away with 'Sweetie', she calls here...a dog that nods its head and tail when you push its back. Gives me the giggles in my current mood.

So folks off to get some sleep after a really great workshop where I tried out some new ideas and managed to create an experience that wove in movt & dance, singing, playing musical instruments, the power-point bit - only four slides...and the playing of a beautiful DVD about dance & dementia. BON NUIT...hope I get a good nights kip before starting again at 9am...too soon for my liking but such is the way...

Yesterday in the park...

Received an invitation from Jenny (Occ. Therapist) who works p/t at the Reitman Centre to come out, visit her home in the Greek Town area, east of downtown and for Amy to meet and have fun with her daughter. The two girls are the same age and they really enjoyed themselves, as we all did in a nearby park. The weather was sunny and warm. Mary & I sat and talked with Jenny about her work and her approaches with people with dementia at the centre and a really interesting current collaboration with a chaplain, in running a group there. I am being invited to join this small group on thursday and I look forward to it very much and permissions have been asked and given for me to attend. I also met Julia and family in the park who also works with Jenny at the Reitman. Julia is a theatre director and researcher into art/health based research and has done some fascinating work on using health-based research, the results of which then get transformed by her and a working group of actors into a play. The play is then shown at differing stages of development to the various focus/interest groups that contributed to the original health research. The play is then performed by way of contributing to getting health researches disseminated in creative ways to people who may have no knowledge at all about the subject. This is of particular relevance to me as I'm hoping to set something similar up when back at work and Julia has agreed to collaborate with me on its development. Exciting stuff!!

Am now off to prepare for my first workshop today at the Reitman Centre at Mt Sinai Hosp ( 2-5pm). It is my first real foray into meeting and working professionally with folk here, presenting and transposing the use of movement, dance, music, song, reminiscence etc with a mixed group of folk including care-givers. I really hope it goes well and am somehat nervous about how it will be received. I know this is what I've come to do (but in confessional mode right now) however there is a big sense of the 'not-yet-known' about it.

It is Dementia Awareness week all week here in Toronto and the paper 'The Globe and Mail' are running major articles on the subject every day this week. It is a brilliant time to be here in fact. I am buying the newspaper and getting myself familiar with its contents. My sense is that in the UK we are ahead of Canada in this respect; as yet they have no 'National Dementia Strategy' and yet from the first article on Saturday the journalist was identifying points 1to 8 I think it was? that would contribute to the development of a canadian dementia strategy. Anyway more of this when I have had time to digest the material. Canada is having similar problems with the extraordinary rise in numbers of people projected to get this condition and from what I can gather, (together with the press interest) have not decided at federal or state level how best to respond.

That's it for now. I'm also needing to do some dancing just for me....will try and find a contact improv class/workshop or jam here if there is one?

Saturday 18 September 2010

Yesterday at Baycrest

Went back there as I realised I hadn't seen the community day services and should have! Met with Faith at 10am having cycled up the long Bathurst Avenue from downtown (having only spoken with her the day before, receiving a warm invitation to come take a look). Faith is the Program Director for 3 facilities all under the same roof at Baycrest but with different names (Parklands, Woodside and Mountain-View I think); am working from memory right now and no notes to help prompt me...anyway, an impressive program of day activities for those with and without cognitive impairment. The more cognitively impaired attend the Mountain-View day centre which is on the ground floor of the main building, and on entering the participants in the program have a small lobby with a big fish tank in it. Faith explained that people like to come and sit by the tank during the day to listen to the sound of water circulating around and to watch the fish. It is smaller in size in comparison to the other day centres, but intimate and cosy and a large group were doing music to movement as I arrived...that was good to see, and they were enjoying the experience I think.

As I write this I'm aware that not many folk may read my blog and am wondering slightly what is the point if few are taking a look at it. I shall proceed but if you do read this drop me a comment as it helps motivate me to keep going or tell me how I can make it more interesting?

So, it was a really interesting time spent with Faith and I have a lot to take away with me. Unfortunately the 2 other day centres I mentioned were not open yesterday so I only saw M-V in action. The single most important learning for me is that Faith is seeking to use more movement and dance work at the centre and I naturally invited her to come to my workshops at Mt Sinai Hosp and Toronto Rehab next week, as that may inform her a little more about what could happen and what my own work is about. I was also very impressed with her work to shift the focus away from activities such as bingo and hair-dressing ( much as people like them) towards ones that may help older people be and feel more fulfilled in the life choices they are making about what to do next or what opportunities still exist for them to participate in. As an example she is aiming to bring body-massage in to the centres and also to support the development of 'Mindfulness' groups. This is great stuff and very relevant for my own work in the Calderdale day centres back home.

Today (saturday) we've been down at the harbour-front at a Colombian Festival watching dancers perform, listening to colombian musicians and soaking up the atmosphere. Am considering going to see a new film tonight at the Film Festival here called 'Black Swan'. Anyone know it???

Friday 17 September 2010

The Reitman Centre at Mt Sinai Hospital

I shall have to be very quick with this as internet cafe shutting in five minutes..you will be relieved no doubt!

So, got there at 9am yesterday on my bike ( in the wet) and went straight into an informal meeting with about eight staff round a table. I was welcomed by the team and the centre director called Joel. I had a quite wonderful morning learning about what they do at the centre which is essentially to provide on-going emotional, psychological and physical help/support for care-givers of people with dementia. I was really impressed with what the team is doing and in a nutshell learnt that the we in the UK can do a lot more by way of supporting care-givers. They also use techniques including role-play to enable care-givers to identify problems they may be having and then help them develop ways of overcoming these obstacles to live a life as full and as rich as possible. The team came across as being very skilled at what they do. I was also very fortunate that morning to meet the Psychiatrist-in-Chief ( Molyn) for the whole of the city and he is coming to my experiential workshop next week. We had a fascinating talk and for 45 mins when I thought it was only going to be for 15! I realised in meeting members of the team that they are very interested in using and developing more creative approaches in their work, including the use of movement and dance and music and song etc. This is what I have come for...to find ways I can spread the use of movement, dance & embodied practices.

The afternoon I spent in a great cafe with Stephen Katz, an inspiring sociologist, gerontologist and ( in my words) a radical thinker. Topics ranged from arts and dementia, to embodiment and the ageing body, to falls and falling and to the nature of dementia not being seen as a disease at all...more a condition and perhaps a natural part of the ageing process. All sorts of folk were mentioned, all sorts of ideas, which I won't bore you with. This was the first of what will be many other opportunities to dialogue. Of that I'm sure....that's is ...time to go.

Thursday 16 September 2010

Magnetoencephalography...

At 22 words long I would be able to beat anyone at scrabble using this word!! I said yesterday I'd write more about the machine pictured above. I shall keep it brief, or try to...thanks Jenny! Cardo, please take notes here. Takako is doing fascinating work in the research labs at Baycrest trying to better understand how the brain works, and in my words, after at least an hour and a half of deep & fascinating discussion I can say this..and Takako if you ever get to read this please correct me ( using a POST below) if I have got it wrong BUT...here goes and deep breath...essentially she is trying to identify the source of, and links between, musical intelligence and sensory-motor or body-based intelligence in the brain, contributing to better understanding the complexities of how musical intelligence is both received and processed by the brain. She posits that the sources of musical and sensory motor processing may be closely linked in terms of how the brain processes them and this knowing is of great importance is relation to people who may have had strokes.

It is not a new experience for me to meet a musician, it is a big new experience for me to meet both a musician and a neuroscientist, investigating musicality in the brain...thanks Takako for all you passed on to me and for your latest research paper you gave me too! Also, as I understand it she has discovered through her researches, that the brain is somehow able to anticipate or project forward the missing beats when the original stimulus of a regular pulse is suddenly interrupted (experimentally); which she says is evidence of very sophisticated brain processing. She also spoke to me about the strong connections she is discovering between the sensory-motor and musical processing areas. As a dance therapist this is fascinating to learn about, and I think is of great importance for the DMP community back in UK, and I look forward to more communications with Takako in the future. Her paper is very dense and detailed and Cardo I will definitely need your help to look at this & interpret when we're back.

The next blog will be about my inspiring meets today with staff at the Reitman Centre at Mt Sinai Hospital. A very special team indeed, involved in the treatment/care and support for people with dementia and their care-givers here in Toronto, who I feel very proud to have had the opportunity to meet today. Also, one of those never to be forgotten occasions when you meet someone who takes you to a great cafe; feeling afterwards ( 3 hours later) that their generosity, their warmth in giving so much of what they know on so many subjects surrounding old age- is inspiring and awesome both. Thank you Stephen.

Now I'm knackered...more when I can...as the pace quickens. Off to the Baycrest Day Care Facility tomorrow am. Bon Nuit!! & phew...................................still too long...........oh dear!!

Wednesday 15 September 2010

Yesterday at Baycrest Care Facility

Health Warning ( this may turn into a ramble or an essay or a tome so watch out!) The work started with an hour and a quarter spent with Amy Clements-Cortes a Music Therapist at Baycrest. I hire a bike and cycled there thinking it was all flat in Toronto ( wrong again, so got there a bit late unfortunately). We had a great morning talk and many points of overlap in practise, with a focus on the qualitative approaches in research interests for example. Amy is a very experienced musician and music therapist ( sorry Amy I forgot to get your picture!) and has been at Baycrest since 1995 when she did a music therapy internship there. Since then she has worked in many of Baycrest's facilities which is one of the leading dementia care facilities in the whole of Ontario ( if not in Canada?) and many older people come to the Baycrest for diagnoses as a result of the wealth of expertise, brain scanning equipment etc etc. Baycrest is a kind of healthcare campus and similar conceptually (in some ways) in the UK to the Extra Care Charitable Trust's work in Birmingham and the West Midlands.

What happens if you are an older person seeking more support than you have in your own home? 1) You buy a condominium ( No 2 Neptune) at Baycrest and live independently, selling your own home in order to do so I think. 2) You become more frail and enter a retirement home (residential home in UK?) ( Wagman Terrace), where you have extra supports e.g on-call nurse & at least 1 hot meal per day. 3) You become frailer & enter Baycrest Nursing Home where there are 575 beds with a Behavioual Neurology Unit ( 4 floors of people with dementia here). 4) If you need hospital care during any of this time you go to their on-site hospital for folk with chronic conditions. If it is an acute condition then go to the Mt Sinai Hospital temporarily before returning to Baycrest. Amy explained that Baycrest keep/treat chronic & acute conditions separately, only specialising in the chronic side of care. At the Baycrest Hospital you have access to Rehabilitation, Psychiatry, Behavioural Neurology, Complex Continuing Care and Palliative care. Amy's own specialism at the moment is palliative care and she is currently developing a music related research project. Arts therapists in Canada are not state-funded yet and therefore her post is funded by donations from Baycrest benefactors.

Baycrest also have a world leading Brain Research Centre (Rotman Centre)...see pic with me and musician / research scientist Dr Takako Fujioka. I will be blogging about a fascinating meeting with her another time as otherwise you may be very bored indeed if I carry on with this story which followed my time with Amy - Amy it was who told me about Takako and so I called to see if we could meet as she works in the same building at Baycrest. Takako couldn't believe it because in the morning she was reading a paper about dance therapy and then I call soon after asking if we can meet. Oh!! & not forgetting Baycrest also have Day Care facilities which people attend on a daily basis while still remaining in the community. I plan to visit this if I possibly can.

Feeling very excited and stimulated by what I'm learning and the people I'm meeting. Everyone is very friendly here and I keep toasting Sir Winston as without him we wouldn't be here...must do that too for brother David who made it possible for Amy & Mary to come of course. Thanks David if you're still in sweltering Bermuda that is!!

Well done you too for getting this far...AND...Cardo if you get to read this don't forget to clock in for my next blog about the amazing Magnetoencephalography machine...(can hardly spell it!!) which will blow you away. Bye for now folks...AND do leave comments if you can be bothered otherwise I think I'm writing all this to myself.

Monday 13 September 2010

A lesson in the dharma...

Wonderfully sunny & bright day - had a better night with those squidgy orange ear-plugs - no we can't change rooms because all the others are booked out solid! I did think of sorting that out; anyway the traffic noise I'm getting used to. Just beginning to think I ought to start thinking about what I'm doing here. While Mary & Amy went charging off up the road with instructions to wait for me at the subway I called the Bay Crest Care Facility and spoke with Amy the Music Therapist there. We have never met or communicated before and she was very warm and friendly - so meeting fixed for noon tomorrow to meet up with her and get a feel for what they do. Good...starting to feel better, jet-lag going and much less tired. Off to find breakfast at the 'Over Easy' on Bloor right next to the Inter-Continental. The best ever tucker it was, and on queue Amy delights in telling me my pancakes are crap, (or words to that effect) and these chocolate-chip pancakes are the best ever. Dad feels great -again!!

Seriously though, after the humungous feast that lasted me all day, we just had to visit the Royal Ontario Museum ( just across the road) where the Terracotta Army Exhibition is currently on. If Sonny, the Asst Director in the gift shop, ever casts his eyes on this blog then great, he deserves all the praise. As a spontaneous gesture of kindness (that he put down to what his dad taught him I later discovered !) he offered, as a member of the museum, to gift us all free-entry which would otherwise have been a considerable sum for us. So, this is a plug and a thank you for Sonny (I hope I'm spelling his name right). Not only that, and to add to this co-incidence, or act of synchronicity (if like me you have an interest in Jungian thought) I later that morning wandered into a room with a challenging photographic exhibition about older people, which without Sonny's gift I would not have seen.

The exhibition was called: 'House Calls - my experience with my camera' by Dr Mark Nowaczynski PhD & MD. This medically trained doctor runs an organisation called 'House-calls' and treats people as well as photographs them.  I quote from his blurb: 'In 1998 I began to photograph my house-bound patients in order to document this profound social issue, Increasing awareness is a critical step on the road to solutions and photography provides a powerful tool for advocacy'. The pictures/prints were done using large-scale format of older people in Toronto with a wide variety of social, economic and mental-health problems including dementia. The overwhelming effect on me was one of shock. Here were the faces of people I might see on a hospital ward at home, there was no pretence, no ego, no need to tell it any other way than it is. The images were shocking and there was something moving about them too. The danger in my mind is that these images may turn people away because of the pain expressed in and through them about growing older; there was no comments book to look in to see what visitors had written about the exhibiton. This link (http://www.rom.on.ca/) may take you to the site to see for yourself if the pics can be viewed on-line - I don't know for sure. The academic & clinician side of me now kicks in and reminds me that medics tend to focus on identifying problems and incapacities first, and may risk losing sight of those moments and times (when the projection the medic carries from the patient) when the problems are overcome ( if only for a short time).

This is a long blog I think...to any reader who has got this far...well done you...goodnight...and a special thank you to Sonny for bringing us good dharma today!

Sunday 12 September 2010

Bushwackered today...

Successfully negotiated the adventure of an 18 hour door-to-door experience. One of the most exciting bits was the roar of the jet's engines as we took off from Manchester and Amy's face as she looked out of the window and everything was flying past...faster and faster it went. I remembered my own visceral excitement at being airborne. Greenland was another highlight, not much ice about compared to the last time I flew over about 20 years ago. Hours of flying over the Tundra of the Northern Territories, pock marked by thousands of lakes as far as the eye could see and no habitation of any kind; occasional logging camps. One of the most boring bits was waiting at least an hour in the immigration queue at Toronto..anyway guest-house good, the city very warm today and my head still a bit of a blur. Day off tomorrow to get bearings etc....have now found an internet cafe to do the blogging as the laptop I brought too old to cope with blogging.

Went to a cafe this morning for some serious coffee. Within minutes was in communication with a professor of Theory & Policy Studies in Education at the Uni here. He told me about the work of this russian psychologist called Luria who did important work on recovering brain function for wounded second world war soldiers. Does anyone know of Luria?...I have heard of Vygotsky & Bakhtin but not Luria. Anyway, fascinating man and plan to keep in touch with him, and his wife a research scientist in cell biology I think. He had one of these I Phone's, all singing and dancing only it was type 3 I think rather than type 4 if that matters?
Must go, getting hungry for some Thai or Lebanese food....more tomorrow...

Friday 10 September 2010

What's going on...

I work with an NHS Trust in West Yorkshire (see profile) as a part-time Dance Movement Psychotherapist. I have been doing this for 5 years now. I work in 3 day centres and on an 'acute assessment & treatment ward' at Calderdale Royal Hospital. I love what I do which is to use music, movement, dance, song, reminiscence and drama within a rehabilitative or remedial context, supporting older people 're-member' parts of themselves that they may think and/or feel they have lost access to or forgotten. Following 9 years of doctoral study & research at Roehampton University I was able to place myself and the work in a context related to what has gone before, from the early pioneers of Dance Movement Psychotherapy, to the pioneers in the field of Dementia Care practice today.

I like to think I am 'Building Bridges of Understanding' between people, between the 'known' & the 'not-yet-known', as people with dementia have so much to teach the rest of us about what it means to be fully human, living life to the full, in spite of this woundedness. As Peter Ashley says, 'I am living with dementia, not dying from it'! On with the dance!! More when we land in Toronto.

Today...

In the process of telling folk about this blog site and already had one reply from a colleague saying they can't work out how to blog here and I can't help at the moment! Anyone got any ideas? Am not good at this sort of thing but knowing that my 8 yr old daughter could and is currently at school doesn't help right now...