Thursday, May 30, 2013

Plans for a Kendal Talent Show



Plans are now under way to mark the opening of the new Amelia Gathering Room with a community talent show. As a first step, the date for the show has been set: Tuesday, September 10. So be sure to circle it on your calendars. It will be an occasion for us to celebrate the opening of our new assembly venue and to enjoy the wealth of talents, skills, and interests that we nourish in our community.

And by “community” we mean everyone who lives or works at or with Kendal at Granville – residents, staff members, board members alike. For this is truly a community event. And all sorts of talents will be on display. 

Thus this invitation goes out to singers, who are encouraged to come forward, perhaps as soloists or perhaps as duets or trios or choirs; and if you need an accompanist, just give the word and one will be found. 

The invitation is extended as well to all who play or played instruments in a band or an orchestra at some point. Here’s a chance to pull it out and surprise your friends. Again, accompanists can be found.

The Amelia Gathering Room will finally offer us the chance to have a piano on a stage, and that in turn affords the pianists in our midst an opportunity to share their gifts more broadly with the community.

We all recall a time when reading or reciting lovely poems or famous speeches was a part of our school education. So here’s a call to reciters in our company to help us recover the rich pleasure of hearing the spoken word deliver moving literature.

Surely some members of the community are comedians, right? Here’s a chance to hone your comedic timing, and to show your friends and neighbors your comic gifts.

And then there are the magicians. More than a few of us over the years have tried our hand at creating illusions. So here’s an opportunity for these prestidigitators to work up the old conjuring stunts and card tricks, and show us that the hand is still quicker than the eye.

This catalog of talent categories is not meant to be inclusive. Almost surely there are still other kinds of talents out in the community, still other kinds of gifts which can be shared. And so the three invitations go out. First, please don’t be shy about stepping forward to identify yourself as a participant; you will have fun, and your friends and neighbors will be delighted. Second, please recruit friends and pass on the names of community members whom you would like to see participating. Third, please mark your calendar and, even if you finally choose not to go up on the stage, join all of us on September 10 as we applaud the gifts of our community. 


Monday, May 20, 2013

Looking Ahead

For almost two years we have been looking ahead to the end of the construction of Phase II here at Kendal at Granivlle.  The project began with a ground breaking celebration and excitement about adding twenty-four new apartment, thirty-two new skilled nursing beds, and eleven assisted living units as well as our longed for Gathering Room and remodeling of the dining area and kitchen.  There was lots to talk about as to design and decor mixed in with the comings and goings of construction workers and supplies. 

Of course, this was accompanied by adaptation to the rearrangement of furniture and routines.  The most difficult part of this was during the work on the dining room and kitchen when the serving area was moved into one dining room which was consequently displaced into the main lobby.  At that time our dining and kitchen staff and maintenace staff really stretched themselves to the utmost to make it all work smoothly for us.  We rejoiced with them when the remodeled areas were open providing us with improved service and a reconfiguration of the space which lessened congestion in the serving area.

As the initial excitement  faded and it all became "old hat"  we began to grow anxious to see it come to an end.  When our Executive Director, and a representative of the construction company gave their regular reports at our Residents' Association meetings, there were invariably questions about "how soon?"   Both of them not only told us what we could look forward to in the next few week  but also patiently answered our questions and responded to occational complaints. 

Late last month we were provided with an opportunity to visit the completed new health center and the new apartments.   Those of us who had been patients in the old health center were impressed with the changes we saw showing how carefully the planners had listened to suggestions for improvement.  We were likewise impressed with the changes  to the apartment plans

Now as the end of Phase II is drawing near we are heartened by the arrival of the first contingent of residents to move into the  new apartments and look forward to the arrival of the others scheduled to move in this summer.  April 29 was a red letter day as the the occupants of skilled nursing were moved into the new skilled nursing beds. 

Constrution on the Gathering Room has progressed to the point where we can look into it through the windows and  see how grand it looks.  We look ahead to the kinds of programs  which can be held there with a stage and a lot more space for both the presenters and the audience.

Best of all we look ahead to the completion of the final phase of this project which began back in the summer of 2011.  According to our Director and construction representative we can anticipate the dedication of all of this at the end of June.  We look ahead to joining together in one really big celebration in our new Gathering Room. 

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Kendal U.

On two occasions in recent weeks we've enjoyed visits from faculty members from nearby colleges. They appeared as part of the ongoing program of the Kendal Speakers Committee to bring outstanding academic lecturers to the campus. Both were hits.

Judith Dann, Associate Professor of Humanities at Columbus State University, spoke of her work on an archeological excavation on a Roman bath house in Isthmia, Greece. Illustrated with projected images, the presentation treated both the historical background of the location – Isthmia was important as one of few sites for the staging of the ancient Olympic games – and the nitty-gritty of daily life at the dig. Anyone whose ideas of archeological digs had been shaped by the Indiana Jones epics would have found the collision with reality chastening. But even while dampening expectations of tales about dramatic chases and escapes from Nazi scientists, Dr. Dann conveyed something of the intellectual excitement that comes when careful record-keeping and painstaking sifting are rewarded with an unexpected insight into the social habits and belief systems of people who lived two millenia ago. Residents were able to see the people of ancient Isthmia as neighbors.

Karen Spierling, Associate Professor of History at Denison University, spoke about the Reformation, and she too had a series of projected images to help her deliver her message. Dr Spierling's goal was to complicate people's views of the Reformation. She set out to do this by presenting evidence that undercut the tendency of many moderns to let received and rigid views of the Reformation obscure evidence of interconfessional cooperation and interactions among Catholics and Protestants, and the range of joint projects designed by people in both camps to make daily life in an era of religious quarrels somewhat more pleasant and predictable. She stated that her goal, when she taught college students, was to prepare them for the real world of today in which the complicated social and political circumstances they read and hear about from the media are not reducible to formulaic oversimplifications. The residents appreciated her point of view and applauded her goal.

From the remarks I heard afer both talks I concluded that the residents of Kendal at Granville share an enthusiasm about the importance of education – and perhaps that's not surprising, given the number of retired teachers in our ranks. Even more happily, the residents are optimistic about the future of education. This is important (says someone who is very much a partisan on this issue) because in this era of challenges to many of the foundation stones of the American polity, education needs all the advocates, defenders, and cheerleaders it can muster. Drs. Dann and Spierling have shown us the project is good hands.