Recently our Teaching Artists gathered at AFTA’s offices at Non-Profit Village for their quarterly meeting, an opportunity to reconnect, develop professionally and share stories from their programs – stories like these:

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TEACHING ARTISTS AND AFTA STAFF (CLOCKWISE FROM UPPER LEFT): MILES SPICER, MARCIE WOLF-HUBBARD, SANDRA ROACHFORD, CAROL SIEGEL, NANCY HAVLIK, JOAN HAMPTON FRASER, JANINE TURSINI, DONNA MCKEE, ANNETTA DEXTER SAWYER, ANTHONY HYATT, BRANDI ROSE. NOT PICTURED: MARLA BUSH, PETER BURROUGHS, CANDACE WOLF

afta-4Nancy Havlik

“I repeatedly encounter Jim in my visits to Rockville Nursing Home.  Jim is in a wheelchair and bound by a neck-brace. At first I was apprehensive to interact with him, as he appeared so weak, so seemingly unable and limited. But in one session, when I started to read a poem, Jim began to talk and make comments on the poem. He couldn’t talk loudly, but he’d whisper his thoughts into my ear and I would repeat these to the group. It turned out that Jim used to be a college professor and still has an incredible intellect trapped inside this frail shell. One of the things that makes AFTA great is that, unlike many other programs, AFTA engages with the inner person, and allows that person to express themselves; that same self which is so often ignored in this world because of the body in which it is presented.”


afta-2Joan Hampton Fraser

“Recently, one of the regular participants in my Creative Writing class at Lewinsville Adult Day Care Center passed away. When his family visited the center after his death, the staff shared his writing from my program, which they had meticulously saved and copied over the months. None of his family members had realized just how much their loved one was able to remember and still express, and they were incredibly touched to have this writing with which to remember that there was still life inside of him during his final years.”


DSC_0039Annetta Dexter Sawyer

“Once when I was teaching a dance class, there was one woman who, apprehensive and shy, would hide off to the side of the group, wrapped in a blanket. As the music played, I saw, out of the corner of my eye, this movement forming underneath the blanket. Building in momentum with the music, the blanket started to unravel, and like a blossoming flower, she appeared out of it in dance.”


afta-1Carol Siegel

 

“Teaching a class at Alexandria Adult Day Health Care Center, there was one woman who always refused to partake or interact with the other participants. Often she’d leave before the class began, and sometimes halfway through, asking for the nurse to escort her away. During one session I was reading a Lucille Clifton’s poem “i am running into a new year” and this same woman somehow connected with it. She started to interact with the other participants, discussing the poem enthusiastically. It reminded me of the power a poem can have to make that connection, to get through to someone and open them up and change their mood immediately.”

 

i am running into a new year

i am running into a new year
and the old years blow back
like a wind
that i catch in my hair
like strong fingers like
all my old promises and
it will be hard to let go
of what I said to myself
about myself
when i was sixteen
and twentysix and thirtysix
even thirtysix but
i am running into a new year
and i beg what i love and
i leave to forgive me


afta-3Miles Spicer

“I often sing the song ‘Since I Fell For You’ at Downtown Clusters Geriatric Day Care. Usually I sing the first couple of lines before one participant in particular comes over to join me. She loves the song so much and sings it with such passion. When she was a child, she wanted to be a singer, but her father never allowed it. It’s just one of many cases which remind me of how AFTA gives people that opportunity to live their lost dreams. It’s never too late for anyone to grasp at that chance, and it’s our duty to make sure we give people the chance to do so.”