GBTR Successful Aging Festival full of life
December 1, 2009 by Kristi Jut · 2 Comments
Afternoon naps and tea parties for senior citizens in Langley? Not likely.
Kwantlen’s Gerontology-based Therapeutic Recreation students put together a lively Successful Aging Festival on the Langley campus on Friday, Nov. 27.
The 20 students graduating from the program this year had to plan an event as part of their course requirements. Instructor Carol Hansen said she was extremely pleased with the outcome of event, which the students have been planning since September. The money raised from raffle tickets and donations will go toward community activities for seniors.
GBTR student Jenni Scott said students in the program had sent out posters and flyers to homes and throughout the community to promote the Successful Aging Festival.
The festival, which included over 30 kiosks that supported senior recreation, as well as a tarot-card reader and door prizes, lured many senior citizens from Langley and surrounding communities.
“It’s important to spread awareness to the community about senior-recreation,†said soon-to-be graduating student Aubrey Morrison. “Not a lot of people know that there are activity groups or outreach programs available.â€
Robin Bandenieks from the Fort Langley Artists group was there to promote an active interest in the arts to the aging community.
“I’m here to hopefully talk someone into taking up painting as a hobby,†said Bandenieks. “[Painting] can improve cognitive skills in older people,†she said, also noting that it keeps the brain active and is a defense against the effects of Alzheimer’s disease, which is common among the elderly.
Volunteer Parish nurse and senior citizen Agnes Bauer from the Ladner United Church was also there to promote workshops and activities for the community. “We run a disabilities support group,†said Bauer, but wanted to inform that seniors need the same type of counseling that younger people do—including issues with sex and drugs.
“We just had a very successful HIV workshop,†she said. “Some seniors think AIDS and HIV is not an issue for them, but they’re mistaken if [they] think they’re getting out of this life without knowing someone with HIV or AIDS.†Bauer also made a point of speaking on the church’s addictions program, which ranges from addictions to shopping, sex, and, of course, drugs.
Langley Seniors Centre leaders Donna Benoit and Arlene Brown had a lot to offer the senior’s community, with an extensive outreach program for lonely or dependant seniors and an adult day centre to provide relief for caregivers. The centre has worked closely with Kwantlen, they said, and has helped inform people about their programs.
Brown emphasized that awareness about the programs have become increasingly important. “However old you are now,†she said, “you’re going to be a senior one day.â€
The campus was free of paid-parking for the day of the event.