Friendship Center November Newsletter – Gratitude & Sign Language Addition!

NOVEMBER 2020
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Please consider making a gift to help support our activities and alternative care practices for members during this Covid-19 event.
Thank you!
Photos from our Drive-In Halloween Bash!!
Giving Thanks can make you Happier
by Sophia Davis, Advancement & Project Manager
November kicks of the holiday season with high expectations for a cozy and festive time of year. However, for many this time of year is tinged with sadness, anxiety, or depression. Research suggests that one aspect of the Thanksgiving season can actually lift the spirits, and it’s built right into the holiday — expressing gratitude.
The word gratitude is derived from the Latin word gratia, which means grace, graciousness, or gratefulness. With gratitude, people acknowledge the goodness in their lives. In the process, people usually recognize that the source of that goodness lies at least partially outside themselves. As a result, gratitude also helps people connect to something larger than themselves as individuals — whether to other people, nature, or a higher power. Gratitude helps people feel more positive emotions, relish good experiences, improve their health, deal with adversity, and build strong relationships.
People feel and express gratitude in multiple ways: apply it to the past (retrieving positive memories and being thankful for elements of childhood or past blessings), the present (not taking good fortune for granted as it comes), and the future (maintaining a hopeful and optimistic attitude). Gratitude is in your hands and can be cultivated.
Some Research Studies about Gratitude:
*** When you focus on the positive, you feel better ***
Participants were asked to write a few sentences each week, focusing on particular topics.
o  One group wrote about things they were grateful for that had occurred during the week.
o  A second group wrote about daily irritations or things that had displeased them,
o  and the third wrote about events that had affected them (with no emphasis on them being positive or negative).
Results: After10 weeks, those who wrote about gratitude were more optimistic and felt better about their lives. Surprisingly, they also exercised more and had fewer visits to physicians than those who focused on sources of aggravation.
*** Thoughtful and intentional gratitude is powerful and lasting ***
o  Participants wrote about early memories and then wrote and personally delivered a letter of gratitude to someone who had never been properly thanked for his or her kindness.
Results: Immediately participants exhibited a huge increase in happiness scores. This impact was greater than any other intervention, with benefits lasting for a month.
*** Gratitude is Positively Motivating***:
o  Gratitude can improve relationships. For example, a study of couples found that individuals who took time to express gratitude for their partner not only felt more positive toward the other person but also felt more comfortable expressing concerns about their relationship.
o  Managers who remember to say “thank you” to people who work for them may find that those employees feel motivated to work harder.
Ways to Cultivate Gratitude
Gratitude is a way for people to appreciate what they have instead of always reaching for something new in the hopes it will make them happier; it helps people refocus on what they have instead of what they lack. And, although it may feel contrived at first, this mental state grows stronger with use and practice. Here are some ways to cultivate gratitude on a regular basis:
o  Write a thank-you note.
You can make yourself happier and nurture your relationship with another person by writing a thank-you letter expressing your enjoyment and appreciation of that person’s impact on your life. Send it, or better yet, deliver and read it in person if possible. Make a habit of sending at least one gratitude letter a month. Once in a while, write one to yourself.
o  Thank someone mentally.
No time to write? It may help just to think about someone who has done something nice for you, and mentally thank the individual.
o  Keep a gratitude journal.
Make it a habit to write down or share with a loved one thoughts about the gifts you’ve received each day.
o  Count your blessings.
Pick a time every week to sit down and write about your blessings — reflecting on what went right or what you are grateful for. Sometimes it helps to pick a number — such as three to five things — that you will identify each week. As you write, be specific and think about the sensations you felt when something good happened to you.
o  Pray.
People who are spiritual/religious can use prayer to cultivate gratitude.
o  Meditate.
Mindfulness meditation involves focusing on the present moment without judgment. Although people often focus on a word or phrase (such as “peace”), it is also possible to focus on what you’re grateful for (the warmth of the sun, a pleasant sound, etc.).
An Update on the Community Connect Adult Program
and Virtual Activity Spotlight
By Christine Poarch and Naomi Edwards
It’s been a busy few weeks at the Friendship Center, as we began our Community Connect Adult Program. We have streamlined our new program to connect on a more personal level with members. With weekly phone check-ins, participant based classes, and more 1-on-1 home visits, we hope to make members feel as close as possible to our staff, albeit socially distanced.
The past few weeks have inspired new friendships and reignited old ones as we have welcomed new and familiar faces to our CCAP program. We have even had new membership enrollment from people we’ve never had the pleasure of meeting face to face. This is because CCAP membership has expanded it’s offer to people all over the world! Friendship Center is all inclusive, so if you have a friend living outside of the area that you think would enjoy our program, please invite them.
One of the most exciting parts of the CCAP program is our highly interactive, daily Zoom classes. For some of you, using the computer program ZOOM may be uncharted territory. It may seem like having a video call on the computer is like a scene straight out of The Jetsons! Please do not be intimidated. Ask us for help! We will walk through the entire process with you at your own pace. And if you don’t have a working computer or iPad, we can help you with that too! We currently have brand new iPads available for loan as part of your CCAP subscription. And if computers are not your thing, we will find other ways to be in touch with you (phone, in-person visits, letters, care packages etc). Either way, we are here for you and caretakers alike. Our staff looks forward to connecting with you soon!
Virtual Activity Spotlight: American Sign Language,
offered Mondays and Wednesdays @ 9:30am-10am via Zoom
As we get older, it is inevitable that we tend to slow down. Sometimes pushing
ourselves and learning new skills becomes a thing of the past, and many fall victim to the old saying of “you can’t teach an old dog new tricks.” The members of Friendship Center’s
Community Connect Adult Program are proving this old saying wrong week after week.
Along with other classes and lessons that our seniors are introduced to, many of them
have acquired an unusual skill: American Sign Language. “I am amazed at how much they
remember each time we meet,” says ASL teacher Naomi Edwards, who learned sign language in school from kindergarten through eighth grade. “Each week they surprise me with what they are able to sign. They have learned their names, the alphabet, counting, colors, animals, feelings, common sayings, and more!” Not only are the members learning how to sign, but they are also focus on the importance of sign language and why it is useful to know. Along with each class, Edwards also tries to show them how sign language is being implemented in communities around the world. Whether it is a barista in Virginia who learned sign to better communicate with her deaf customers, a news broadcaster who rose to fame for her use of sign language while reporting, or Koko the beloved signing gorilla who touched the hearts of millions, the Friendship Center CCAP members are learning that sign language is beneficial in many aspects of life.
If you were to ask any of our signing seniors what their favorite thing they have learned is, they would probably all agree that it is learning how to sign along to the song “You Are My
Sunshine”. Edwards decided to teach the class how to sign this song because she could tell it was a crowd favorite, and made them all genuinely happy to listen to and sing along with. The song is played at the end of each class, each member with a smile on their face and their hands busy in the air, signing along. The class is a beautiful example that you are never too old to learn something new. Our members are able to use their minds and bodies in conjunction while learning how to sign, and they walk away from each class with a feeling of pride and accomplishment!
*JOIN THE FUN!*
Here at Friendship Center, we foster and encourage strong partnerships with our family caregivers to assist our members in getting connected online, so that they can continue participating with their friends in virtual social settings – we call this our virtual community. We are ready to help make this possible, so please contact us and let’s embrace something new together!
Call Kathryn M-Th (9am-4pm) at:
(805) 705-4106