Posted by ALAA on May 11, 2011 at 6:06pm — 40 Comments
Moving down the street
Walkers and our feet,
Who needs a car
Walking's best by far
Slower and slower we go
Sharing the walk with Joe.
It's such a relief
Resting at the beach.
That's our seat -
A beach retreat.
Posted by ALAA on April 15, 2011 at 5:46pm — 8 Comments
The Pelicans.
I sit in an upholstered chair bequeathed to us residents on the tenth floor of the Ocean House where I live. I watch them. The Pelicans. Their black slim bodies and blacker wide spread wings drift through the iridescent afterglow of the sunset. It back lights them in blue, red-orange, gray-green, yellow, gold. They hover in the twilight sky. They are waiting for something.
The Pelicans.
They fly past my window, their regal wings parting…
ContinuePosted by ALAA on April 15, 2011 at 5:45pm — 9 Comments
The sun setting into the sea making ever changing multi-colored cloud shapes appear and disappear is my Higher Power.
This is how:
I become a part of the panoramic view each and every night.
The diaphanous clouds present themselves as sheep, lambs, lions, small auto cars, all colors, every hue of orange and red, redder, redder, pale blue-green aqua blue, dark blue,…
ContinuePosted by ALAA on April 15, 2011 at 5:44pm — 2 Comments
What is ALAA?
What if we could transform the conversation on aging throughout the world?
The answer is that we can – and in a very significant way.
The idea is really simple, but profound: have older folks document their own experience of aging, in photography, videos, writing and interviews. In all the extensive literature on aging, no one has ever asked older people, in such an extensive and organized way, to document their own experience of it.
This project began at two assisted living communities in Santa Monica, California. Participants were provided cameras and digital recorders, and given training and support in documenting their lives. This resulted in two large and well-attended photo shows, and the project has since gone worldwide.
In the contributions of you or your loved ones to Age Looks at Aging we will transform the conversation about aging, adding – at long last – the voices of those who are most knowledgeable and affected by it. In doing this, a dialogue has been created between people of all ages.
Many seniors who now live in independent and assisted living communities, as well as nursing homes, used to be the elders of the tribe. They were the people we went to for counsel. Through economic and social shifts in our society, family and community, to a great extent has been lost. ALAA is recreating community to bring our elders back to their rightful place at the head of the table. They need to speak, and we need to hear them.
Brian Braff
Founding Director
© 2024 Created by Dominique Einhorn. Powered by