Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

Lights of Honor Community Celebrations Honor, Remember, Celebrate

Honor lights are being lit across Minnesota as Ecumen communities host their annual "Lights of Honor" celebrations.

Last week, Ecumen Oaks & Pines in Hutchinson, Ecumes of Litchfield, Ecumen Scenic Shores in Two Harbors, and Ecumen LeCenter raised over $3,000, with all proceeds benefitting the local Ecumen community.

Honor someone whose life impacts yours.
Remember a loved one who has passed away.
Celebrate the caregivers that make a difference in your life.

Lights of Honor celebrations will take place at the following locations in upcoming weeks:

Ecumen Bethany Community: October 19 (Alexandria)
Ecumen Country Neighbors - Lake Crystal: November 1
Ecumen Detroit Lakes: November 3 
Ecumen Home Office: October 23 (Shoreview)
Ecumen Lakeshore: October 10 (Duluth)
Ecumen Lakeview Commons: October 24 (Maplewood)
Ecumen Meadows: October 13 (Worthington)
Ecumen Seasons at Apple Valley: November 10
Ecumen Seasons at Maplewood: October 25
Ecumen Parmly LifePointes: November 3 (Chisago City)
Ecumen PathstoneLiving: November 3 (Mankato)
Ecumen Prairie Hill: October 24 (St. Peter)
Ecumen Prairie Lodge: October 24 (Brooklyn Center)

For more information or to purchase an Honor Light, visit www.ecumengiving.org or a local Ecumen community.

 


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

The Unheralded Joy of an MRI - by Ecumen blogger Jim Klobuchar

I lunch occasionally with one of my medical friends, who basically avoids hospital talk. But now and then he brings himself up to date on the status of my joints and miscellaneous body parts.

The last conversation got around to one of the most popular miracles of modern medical science  - magnetic resonance imaging. Mercifully called “MRI” in clinical talk. My friend asked if I had tapped into this latest marvel. I said as far as I know I’ve had X-rays galore, but wasn’t sure about MRI.  He defined its remarkable gifts, including its ability to create a magnetic field that enables doctors to scan the body’s tissues from the spine to the brain and to discover whether there are any abnormalities.

I’m not going to implicate my friend the doctor in a call I made to a neurologist’s office a few weeks later. My next birthday, in April, will be my 85th. With no intention to create a documentary of my movements the last few years, I will confess that they have included treks in the Himalayas, workouts on the treadmill, tennis matches, a variety of authorships and races with my wife to the TV surfer when we were confronted with colliding tastes.

Still, the advancing calendar being hard to ignore, ultimately I made an appointment with a neurologist, who asked what I had in mind. “Moments of forgetfulness,” I said. “I came home from a meeting the other day and couldn’t find my billfold. I thought it might have dropped from my pocket where I sat; so I drove back to the meeting room, looked around, tried the parking lot, all the rest. Drove home. Turned the house upside down.”

“And?” he asked.

“The billfold was sitting harmlessly on the seat  of my chair in front of the computer where it had been all the time, same color as the seat.”

“You could have predicted,” he said. I nodded. But I said I was curious, wanted to maximize my later years if that was possible, and all…

He nodded and scheduled me for an MRI brain scan, which I took a few weeks ago.

I arrived early. 6:30 a.m. They had the necessary documentation. The nurse smiled a greeting, handed me the familiar wrap, cleared me of any metal objects, and said there was going to be a  lot of noise inside the tube. She asked, in fact, if I had any serious fear of being confined to tight and noisy places. Having worked for nearly 50 years in a variety of news rooms, I said I could probably deal with it.

So she slid me into the tube, gave me a set of ear phones and asked if I cared to listen to FM radio as a distraction from the noise. I considered this offer but then asked whimsically whether she could upgrade to Mozart instead.

“I have it,” she announced triumphantly.

And so the doors slammed shut, internal noise kicked in and suddenly here was the music of Mozart, and I could scarcely believe what the nurse had dialed in. Beside his operas and symphonies and violin music and a half dozen other forms, Mozart wrote 27 piano concertos. His last – the 27th piano concerto written not long before he died - has been my favorite since I first heard it played by a Japanese woman in concert years ago. The music the nurse had dialed wasn’t the opening but the slow second movement, marked Larghetto by Mozart. A melody neither sad nor gloomy, but tender and wistful and altogether lovely. And one more thing: It’s practically the only Mozart piano concerto that I can play bearing any remote similarity to how it was written.

So I was totally overjoyed and I couldn’t restrain a shout-out to the nurse.

“Can I sing?” I yelled to the nurse.

“No,” she yelled, definitely horrified. “DON’T sing.

In other words, you’ll mess up the magnetos or the pulses or whatever was creating the magnetism flowing through the tube. And now the Mozart had shifted to his violin sonatas. And I had to stop to consider: When I was kid so long ago, what I knew about the equipment available to doctors was pretty much limited to forceps, needles, swabs, scalpels, bed pans, stethoscopes and stomach pumps.

And now, thank God, they were into MRIs, quadruple bi-passes, stents and more. But that wasn’t all. Near the end of the MRI the Mozart disappeared, replaced by a banging and hammering that sounded like a runaway road grader assaulting the walls of my tube. Toss in what sounded like an in-house thunderstorm.

And then silence. The tube door opened to reveal a smiling nurse. She said it was all part of the electronic examination and ultimately the doctors would get a picture.

“But, it’s finished. How’d it go,” she asked.

“Fabulous,” I said. “Thanks for the Mozart and, the rest.”

She led me back to my locker and said I was an excellent patient, but she couldn’t give me a clue.

The results? The neurologist’s office called to schedule a follow up in a few weeks “The preliminaries,” he said, “are not at all bad.”

I told him I handn’t misplaced my billfold in three weeks. He thought that was progress.


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

St. Croix Hospice Team Wins 2013 Ecumen Changing Aging Invitational Golf Tournament

Congratulations to Team St. Croix Hospice, winners of the 2013 Ecumen Changing Aging Invitational held earlier this month in Roseville, Minn. Twenty-two teams participated in this year's tournament and helped raise funds and awareness for Ecumen Awakenings. Ecumen's innovative Awakenings program is working to transform America's culture of care for people living with Alzheimer's and related dementias by reducing the use of psychotropic drugs and other medications. Visit www.ecumenawakenings.org for more information or www.ecumengiving.org to lend your support!


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

Dena Meyer Named Ecumen Director of Business Development

 

Dena Meyer has been named director of business development at Ecumen.

Dena has 15 years of senior housing experience in both the for-profit and not-for-profit sectors and has developed more than 1,000 senior housing units in the Twin Cities. She recently served as interim housing manager of Ecumen Seasons at Apple Valley and was the first director of marketing for that community, overseeing initial sales efforts and opening events. Before that, she was the developer of the award-winning Ecumen Seasons at Maplewood, and she also worked on the development of Ecumen Seasons at Apple Valley.

 “Dena has a deep understanding of how planning, marketing, development and operations relate to successful communities,” said Steve Ordahl, Ecumen senior vice president of business development. “She forges strong and productive business relationships and approaches her work with resourcefulness and imagination.”

Dena is a graduate of the College of St. Benedict/St John’s University and lives in Prior Lake.

 


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

Jim Klobuchar: Vikings Get More than a Victory in London

You can read Ecumen blogger Jim Klobuchar's analysis of the MInnesota Vikings' first victory in this post he did today for MinnPost.


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

Suddenly the Tech World Loves People Over 50

The AgePower Tech Search, which will take submissions until October 31st, was recently featured in this article at PBS' NextAvenue.org and Forbes.  (Dig NextAvenue's tagline:  Where Grown-Ups Keep Growing)


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

Honoring Centenarians Muriel and Tillie at Union Central

Muriel Swenson (picture on the left)  was the first resident at Union Central Senior Living, an Ecumen managed community in Detroit Lakes, when it opened in 2010.  She is also the oldest at 101.  But not by much.  Tillie Dybing (right), who lives down the hall, just turned 100.

Muriel and Tillie had birthdays a week apart in August.  Both had very special birthday parties, with family coming in from all over the country to celebrate.

Both women are active and live independently and frequently socialize with each other at Union Central. 

Muriel and her now-deceased husband of 75 years, ran a dairy farm near Hawley and raised two children. 

Tillie grew up in a sod house in Manford, N.D., and later lived in Harvey.  She spent most of her adult life in Minot, where she and her husband raised two children.  Tillie worked a Bader’s Department Store in Minot for 27 years.

We honor centenarians Muriel Swenson and Tillie Dybing.


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

Heritage at Irene Woods, an Ecumen-Managed Community, Rolls Out Its New Approach to Senior Living Near Memphis

Heritage at Irene Woods near Memphis, Tenn., recently welcomed its first independent-living residents and the assisted living and memory care units will open October 1. The senior living community, located at Forest Hill Irene Road and Bill Morris Parkway near I-385, is in the first phase of a long-term development plan that includes multi-family housing.

“This is the only senior living community of its kind in this area-- offering exceptional value and a completely new and different approach,” said Charlotte Curtis, marketing manager for the development. “These apartment homes are definitely larger and less costly than many of the other newer communities near here. Plus, we are in a beautiful setting in an ideal location, with superior services and amenities.  No detail has been overlooked.”

This is Ecumen’s first managed community in Tennessee and with partner Edward Rose & Sons, headquartered in Michigan.  In the summer of 2014, Ecumen will begin managing another Edward Rose community in Clinton Township, Mich. 

 The 150-acre Heritage campus, between Germantown and Collierville, will become a multi-generational neighborhood over the next five years that not only has a broad spectrum of senior living services but also an adjacent multi-family apartment development sharing the amenities. “This will be a community for all ages,” Charlotte said. “It will truly fulfill Ecumen’s belief that growing older, no matter what the age or phase, is all about living.  Residents will have the freedom, choice and flexibility to enjoy the way of life they love with all the familiar comforts and traditions and the opportunity to pursue new experiences and connections.” 

The Heritage community is in a rural setting with small-town ambiance with towering live oak trees, deep woods and fields, yet is only minutes away from retail services, restaurants, shopping, Memphis International Airport, places of worship, golf courses and hospitals and clinics. 

The campus includes a three-story independent and assisted living building and a one-level memory care community with connected outdoor gardens and views overlooking Irene Woods. The entire community totals over 165,000 square feet and offer 140 units of senior living apartments,all available on a monthly rental basis with no entrance fees. 

“As residents’ needs change,” Charlotte said, “they will have access to all the benefits of a complete retirement community lifestyle, yet pay only for what they need, when they need it.”

Among the amenities at Heritage are three dining venues, concierge services, an arboretum, library and media room, club lounge and game room, on-site bank, general store, barber/beauty shop and spa, fitness and wellness studio, movie theater and chapel, outdoor courtyards, patios and walking paths, and indoor gardening.

For a tour or more information contact Charlotte Curtis at (901) 318-3886 or CharlotteCurtis@ecumen.org or visit www.HeritageIreneWoods.com


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

World Alzheimer Report, New American Psychiatric Association Statement Show Need for Different Kind of Alzheimer's Care

World Alzheimer Report and insight from American Psychiatric Association Illustrate Need for Ecumen Awakenings-type care approaches.

Read more


Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts and Roger Bock

The Voyage of Father Vincent from the Shores of Ecumen Lakeshore

On a dreamlike summer day on Caribou Lake near Duluth, a canoe cut through the glassy water. Father Vincent James Arimand, 92, was at the front of the boat, his paddle moving effortlessly, his dream coming true.

Father Vincent, a resident of The Shores at Ecumen Lakeshore, had been musing and wishing out loud that he could go canoeing again-- like he did so many times, so long ago.  Sandra Dantes of Ecumen Lakeshore at Home, which is the name of our at-home services in Duluth, heard him—and decided to honor his wish and empower him to make it happen.

“I couldn’t help but notice the gleam in his eyes each time he shared his canoeing stories with me,” Sandra said.  “He would reminisce about his earlier years and the hundreds of miles he covered while paddling a canoe.  I thought, let’s make this happen again.”

Sandra believed he could still do it.  She had seen him daily walking the Lakeshore grounds with only minimal assistance.  So she found a generous local merchant who donated the use of a brand-new canoe, loaded it on her truck, picked up Father Vincent and his personal aide, Leif Johnson, and headed for the lake.

On that picture-perfect Sunday afternoon, an elated Father Vincent eagerly climbed into the front of the canoe.  Leif took the back, and Sandra took the middle seat. They pushed off and glided the lake for several hours-- smiling and singing.

It was a beautiful day.  The past was present again.  And Father Vincent summed up this way: “If I am dreaming, please do not wake me up!”

Father Vincent isn’t dreaming, he’s living!  We look forward to more of Father Vincent’s canoe trips.