As Rochester welcomes the fall, St. John’s residents and staff say goodbye to another summer. The courtyard concert series provided many great memories and floor picnics gave a chance for time to be spent with friends and family out in the fresh air. As the change of season rolls in, so many other changes are happening as well, both in St. John’s and in our world.
When I arrived at college many years ago, I had no idea that a new friend’s obsession would turn into a tool for making connections across the lifespan. My friend Jaime was such a devoted fan of Days Of Our Lives that she would set up her class schedule with a break so that she could run home and watch the show each day. Despite all of my misgivings, I went from mocking its over-the-top plots and acting to becoming a devoted fan myself, determined to learn how Dr. Marlena Evans would escape Stefano DiMera’s latest ploy. After college, I quickly learned that Days of Our Lives was an instant bridge across generations, across family structures, and across the line between staff and elders alike in a care setting. For someone coming in to a new environment, having this touch point also helped to create community. Shared storylines became shared stories.
The elders at St. John’s have seen lifetimes of love, pain, humor, melancholy, joy, and every other imaginable experience. I wish their stories and histories could all be captured and shared, passing along wisdom and knowledge for future generations. While the writers on the soap operas sure had some tall tales, they fall far short in telling the stories we are honored to learn as we work with the residents of St. John’s.