"The ability to have creative thoughts and innovative ideas is one of the most admired human traits, it actually helps to define us as humans. While we may not fully understand how the creative process works we know that creativity does not originate from an external muse but from within. It can be trained and encouraged.
Creative thoughts blossom when our minds are in a state of relaxation or our body engaged in physical activity
The creative process generates the new by seeing the know in an unusual way. It is founded on a sense of wonder and fed by the ability to pursue an idea simply to satisfy our curiosity.
The hormone dopamine stimulates neural networks in the frontal brain. These networks have access to the long term memory located at the back of the brain. These two brain regions are usually not strongly connected but in creative process they are brought together in a state of exaltation." (BodyWorks Exhibition: Science Museum, Vancouver)
The last few days have been extremely busy and really exciting for us. To summarise:
Spent the last week in and around Vancouver. I had the wonderful opportunity to spend the day with Shelly Klammer at the George Derby Centre in Burnaby. Shelly runs a programme called Artworks, which is an open workshop studio for residence of this wonderful care home. Shelly's studios are well equipped with a range of art materials and looms and the studio is open to all residents to drop by and take part in art. Here I met some real entrepreneurs, who in their later lives (80-100) are discovering that they are artists and that they can make a living and gain wonderful experiences by creating work. I met Joyce here, who is a resident from the UK and who randomly grew up in and around LIttleborough, a village that is about 5 miles from where I live. We spent some time together looking at her wonderful work and talking England!
I have had the opportunity to meet up with several of the guys from the conference and talk to them further about their work. Took part in a very inspiration and interesting workshops being run by Richard Coaten and have also arranged with Dalia that Purple Patch Arts will host the 2012 international conference for Creative Expression, Creativity and Dementia. Woop!!!
Have since had a few hectic days travelling from Vancouver to Cape Town. 40 hours with no sleep, yikes....makes one somewhat dizzy. Have now slept and am loving the fact that I am in my favourite street in Cape Town writing a blog about a wonderful adventure. All Sweet.
Have plans to relax for the weekend prior to starting more research next week. Spending some time with Altziemers SA next week which will be insightful and different I am sure.
Sam is great, loving Cape Town too. Big Love, Peace and Energy to all.
Friday, October 15, 2010
Monday, October 4, 2010
"One thing I know for certain.. I have never met a person without a mind"
| The CECD Conference Crew |
What an honour it has been to spend three wonderful days in the company of so many lie minded individuals and to learn, share and inspire one another in our practice.
The CECD conference ran over three days at a beautiful hotel in Penticton BC. With speakers from across Canada, UK and Australia it was great to get the feel for what practice currently exists, what the global barriers to more accesptance of the arts as a healing and transformative practice are and to gain practical tips on how to launch and develop our Dementia programme.
Key highlights for me were presentations from Dr Julia Clark, a neurologist who spoke eliquently about the control of movement at brain level and who communicated wonderfully the immence benefits of music therapy as a healing tool for movement disorders. Making it clear that many people living with Dementia also have profound movement disorders, generally manifesting themselves in the inability to move, Dr Clark introduced me to the "Piper Rhythm" and how through a strong and regular beat music can actually replace the bodies natural movement rhythm.
( http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6869036 )
Dr Clark went on the share that whilst in a movement disorder the body is producing decreased levels of Dopamine and Serotonin that listening to certain types of music, particularly Mozart, the body increases its release of these hormones!!! Music is medicine!!! Amazing
I also thoroughly enjoyed meeting and hearing Dr Richard Coaten. Richard is also a WCMT Fellow for 2010 and ironically lives 7 miles away from me in the UK, in Halifax. Hilarious that we came this far to meet and Sam and I have been really blessed to spend time with Richard, his wife Mary and their gorgeous daughter Amy.
Richard presented work on embodiment through movement and dance. It was wonderful to get the opportunity to not only hear, but also to feel the wonderful effects of the work that Richard is doing. It was during Richards presentation and then also through the words and ideas of others that I began to feel strongly that everything in Dementia care, and in our creative work within it has to be to do with connection. That without the connection we will never find the soul of the person trapped in the unmoving, un remembering body, and that without it we cannot reach or share or indeed heal and comfort.
It was wonderful to begin to recogonise that my journey into creative expression within Dementia Care actually holds vast synergy with my own creative journey, that within the practice of making and communicating and within my discovery of reaching my own inner peace I am already beginning to understand how Purple Patch will grow strategically.
Penticton is a wonderful location, we are staying in a lovely hostel, Sam is having a great time hiring bikes and hanging out. We had a wonderful time yesterday with the Coaten family in Kalona, and are both excited to return to Vancouver tomorrow for more frollocks and perhaps more sushi!
Love and Light all.
Friday, October 1, 2010
CECD and Penticton
Arrived in Penticton yesterday at 4pm. Its SO SO SO beautiful here, couldn't get over the drive from Vancouver as we entered this gorgeous vally and saw the water and vineyards, a truly inspirational setting for a conference!
We have checked into a HI in the centre of Penticton, have a great little room and wifi, what more could we want hey? Headed down to the conference venue to check it out and then went for burger and chips in a sports bar, which had about 10 TV screens all pointing in different directions. Sam and I don't have a TV, nor do we really eat burgers that much so I am going to refer to it as a culture shock...have never eaten so many fries or watched so much hockey, baseball and live poker simultaniously.
The conference started today. It was all I had hoped for, a coing together of like minded people who are all genuinly passionate about the language of creativity and the power that creative engagement. It was wonderful to begin to organise my ideas that I have been developing over the last few months and meet with others who have similar (and vastly different) ideas on the role we play as practictioners in the lives of those living with dementia.
www.cecd-society.org
One of the privilages of today has been to meet with Richard, Mary and Amy. Richard is also a Winston Churchill Fellow and ironically lives in Halifax, 7 miles away from me. It has been great to meet him and his family and to share some of our research already.
I am going to save blogging about the conference until after the entire event has finished tomorrow as I would liket to organise my ideas and thoughts a but better but wanted to update on being in Penticton and meeting the delegates at this event.
Am slightly shattered tonight so am off to bed.
Love and light
We have checked into a HI in the centre of Penticton, have a great little room and wifi, what more could we want hey? Headed down to the conference venue to check it out and then went for burger and chips in a sports bar, which had about 10 TV screens all pointing in different directions. Sam and I don't have a TV, nor do we really eat burgers that much so I am going to refer to it as a culture shock...have never eaten so many fries or watched so much hockey, baseball and live poker simultaniously.
The conference started today. It was all I had hoped for, a coing together of like minded people who are all genuinly passionate about the language of creativity and the power that creative engagement. It was wonderful to begin to organise my ideas that I have been developing over the last few months and meet with others who have similar (and vastly different) ideas on the role we play as practictioners in the lives of those living with dementia.
www.cecd-society.org
One of the privilages of today has been to meet with Richard, Mary and Amy. Richard is also a Winston Churchill Fellow and ironically lives in Halifax, 7 miles away from me. It has been great to meet him and his family and to share some of our research already.
I am going to save blogging about the conference until after the entire event has finished tomorrow as I would liket to organise my ideas and thoughts a but better but wanted to update on being in Penticton and meeting the delegates at this event.
Am slightly shattered tonight so am off to bed.
Love and light
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