<p>My mantra has been no talking about Covid-19 with our clients. So the staff meetings were brimming with only that.
For the past week, I had been struggling to keep it together and mostly succeeding at being professional and science-based in my planning for the Covid-19. My mantra at the morning staff meeting has been no talking about Covid-19 with our clients. So the staff meetings were brimming with only that, just to get it off our collective chests before clients arrived.
As supervisor for the supportive day program at the MV Center for Living, my vocation is to provide, with an excellent staff and fabulously talented Island contributors, the best possible program for our clients who live with many disabilities, some isolation and varied levels of memory impairment. But everyone is different, some live independently, some live with loving families and some have in-home caregivers who keep the household humming. So my crying as the final van pulled away from our building tucked away in Vineyard Haven on an overcast Friday afternoon, was a little surprising after a big week of doing the right thing.
Our clients, more than half in their 80s, come to us for so many reasons, some of which are to create art, sing together, reluctantly exercise, and be purposeful but mostly they come to us for kindness and understanding. We are facilitators that help them finish their sentences, listen to the third telling of very tall tales or believe that even though you are 85 you will still see your mother at supper and she will have made your favorite meal. It is lasagna.
We zip jackets and we cut up food. We remind our clients to drink water to stay hydrated. We distract away the bad thoughts, encourage friendships with careful seating arrangements, and change the subject (or redirect) to focus on the nice things. What we do is we make the best day.
We have big family style meals where we celebrate everyone’s birthday with the most decadently iced cakes we can make. We moved to cupcakes two weeks ago so blowing out the candles doesn’t spread anything but joy. The hugs, oh dear were replaced with Namaste hands or the elbow greeting. But then it became crystal clear, the clients and staff at the cnter for living are the polar opposites of social distance. We get close so we can hear, so we can understand, so that we can convey our care for these amazing people who through no fault of their own, need more help than they anticipated at this point in their lives. We know that being direct and positive and physically close helps with the best day. We believe that through our close proximity, big smiles and warm words make the day feel better too.
We also work in our own little bubble. We don’t watch television at the center for living. We like to read the paper but stick to the nature stories, garden reports, and high school success items. Yes, we nod to each other, “this community is so generous to every generation.” But really for six hours a day, our clients receive an earnest person centered care plan — we meet them where they are. The staff at the supportive day program is skilled at this. We work at being better every day and we are proud of what we do. Our little program serves over 25 Island households and is an oasis for people living with some of type of age-acquired disability. What you know after a bit is that we all have our strengths and our limitations, but we all carry the same hope, even with a faulty memory, that we can live better lives.
So as we Island folks self isolate let us make the goal of the day to just be the best day. What we do know about memory disability is that we don’t know the past well, we can’t plan for the future, but we can live now.
It is everyone’s job to help ourselves and the people around us stay calm, remind ourselves to breathe and find joy. That may require tricking yourself with news limits, having a phone chat with a friend to listen to their very tall tales, appreciating music and singing along. And if it is your birthday over this social distance period, take that packaged cookie, put a pretend candle on it and sing happy birthday loudly, because we while we may not be with you, we will certainly feel the joy you bring to the world.
Know that we are still answering the phone at the Center for Living. The number is 508-939-9440, Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30 p.m. Leave a message if we miss you. Or send an email to [email protected] and we can help with care, resources and support for any elder and their family in the community.
Mary Holmes is the supervisor of the supportive day program at Martha’s Vineyard Center for Living.

Comments
Thank you Mary and all the
June Manning AquinnahThank you Mary and all the Martha's Vineyard Center for Living staff who comfort our fragile clients on a daily basis. We can only anticipate everyone being back to their normal routine sooner than later. In the meantime, let's all practice self-distancing. Be well.
Bless you all and the work
Jane Stewart Vineyard HavenBless you all and the work you do. This too shall pass though the waiting is not easy.
What an uplifting article
Carol AtlantaWhat an uplifting article during this challenging time...Thank you!
Mary, you make the world go
Jonathan EdgartownMary, you make the world go round. Thank you.
My mom is in memory care in
Anne Palmer ScituateMy mom is in memory care in Massachusetts. Your reflections brought tears to my eyes reading about how sensitive and caring you and your staff are to the families you serve. It's amazing how much we can learn by giving and loving. Thank you for all you are doing for the island residents.
My good friends wife goes to
Tim Wolff EdgartownMy good friends wife goes to the MVCL and is so grateful for the care she receives. Thank you for providing such a wonderful place for our island community.
Having brought poetry to this
Fan Ogilvie West TisburyHaving brought poetry to this group I know what a haven/heaven it is. Mary is the archangel of them all. We’ll all return. Love, Fan
I’m a summer resident who
Laurie Howick Evanston ILI’m a summer resident who through luck found the Vineyard 40 years ago and await my annual spring ferry ride with joy. I hope to return this year. MVCL is one of the amazing social agencies that make MV a place I want to call home. I haven’t needed their help yet, but am so grateful that they are there. And the emphasis on social interaction and kindness seems even more important as we find ourselves forced to forgo so much in our daily routines right now. Thanks to all who are working so hard in all communities to bring back control of the things we take for granted and enable us to return to the activities that give meaning to our days.
Thank you Mary for your
Carlene Gatting EdgartownThank you Mary for your beautiful words. You all surely added life and love to my Mom's final years, and I will forever be grateful. I hope all my Mom's "old friends" can get back to the Center for Living real soon.
Your letter brought tears to
Melissa EdgartownYour letter brought tears to my eyes. My mom is one of ladies you have to zip her coat and listen to her tales over and over and act like it’s the first time hearing it each time. Mary, you and your staff are amazing. You provide exemplary care and support to both your clients and their families. We are truly blessed to have a place like MVCL on the island and the staff that runs it. Thank you all for the care you provide to my mom.
How beautifully you speak
Matthew Robertson EdgartownHow beautifully you speak about the qualities of kindness and generosity which are a redeeming part of human nature. Thank you.
We can never truly give
Lorraine EdgartownWe can never truly give thanks to our caretakers; they are jewels and mere thanks seem so trivial compared to what they do, but: Thank you all.
One can never fully
Susan Murphy ChilmarkOne can never fully appreciate just what the Center for Living’s staff does each and every day until one needs its services. I will be forever grateful for the many kindnesses you gave to my husband and me as his health declined. A more deserving non-profit on MV I cannot imagine, with the possible exception of MV Hospice. Stay safe, everyone, and thank you.
Just beautiful. Thank you.
Brad Woodger ChappyJust beautiful. Thank you.
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