Sorry, these
images are crap. I'm house sitting, and all I have access to are a PC laptop with a sticky track pad and a mystifying printer-- (no camera since I sat on mine and
pixilated its viewing screen).
But I'm so excited, I'm showing you anyway:
these are Crazy Quilt squares made by the Sewing Group I work with.
Every
member is living a dementia-damaged "smashed-up life", as one woman called it, and these
are fleeting artifacts of the people themselves.
I could weep with happiness that after four months at this job, finally the conditions arose for spontaneous, organic creation:
I
had set a bag of scraps from our sewing projects (baby bibs, hot pads,
bear pillows) on the work table, where some people were cutting out baby
bibs. I had also set a bin of fabric out, for other people to sort and
fold.
And--wow--in a "your peanut butter got on my chocolate bar" moment, one of the women started arranging scraps on a piece of denim.
[CROW--THIS POST IS FOR YOU!]
(Crow sent us a whole lot of fabric, including cut-up old jeans that provide the base layer, here.)
This
woman had done this sort of thing before-- when I first started work and
didn't realize how the fabric of our minds--our ability to take
action-- becomes like lace when we have dementia. So I had noted it but
thought it was a common occurrence.
Well, not with this group it's not (nor, I think with most folks with Alzheimer's etc.).
At
any rate, I have not not able to recreate the circumstances under which
this sort of free play was possible,
until--unwittingly--today
It
has bothered me that people who are hired to come in to lead "fine art" projects with
the residents mostly offer paint-by-number kind of stuff. And yet, I end up doing that myself---it's easier to give people step-by-step direction---and most of them like it too.
It
bothers me, in fact, to be so directive. I don't
like giving directions.
And yet, people with dementia need direction
because their damaged brains can't provide it anymore. So I accept that direction is
a gift, but
I try always to give people some choice, even if it's just "red
or blue?", and even if they clearly do not welcome choice.
So, today, knowing what I now know, I snatched up this woman's pattern and I said, "Let's make a crazy quilt!"
"Yeah!" she said.
So I set a piece of denim in front of the other sewers and gave them each a pile of scraps (not too many, not overwhelming). "Let's make quilt squares," I said. "Please arrange these scraps on this piece of cloth."
And everyone did.We have seven squares now--I quickly stitched them together on the sewing machine, doing a pretty poor job, but in my hectic work, it's a matter of act now or forever hold your peace.
I hope this wasn't one-time magic, and we can make more. But even if it was just a fleeting moment, these remain like shadow prints of
lace on light-sensitive paper.