The NPFOCC Office Building at 16520 Bake Parkway, Suite 120, Irvine, CA 92618 NPFOCC Upcoming Events January 2014, Volume II, Issue 1 Table of Contents Story Page NPFOCC Upcoming Events........................ 1 The NPFOCC Privacy Policy....................... 1 The Tremble Clefs Support Groups, both North and South Orange County, will be attending a Music Therapy Retreat in Arizona on Sunday, May 4th, through Tuesday, May 6th. They will be staying at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Phoenix, AZ. The event will include six Tremble Clefs groups from the western US and will feature training sessions, performances, and lots of fun. NPFOCC will be providing transportation to and from the event for the group of about 60 people. The next seminar sponsored by NPFOCC will be occurring on FebruRead more on Page 2 Understanding How to Be Helpful............. 1 The NPFOCC Privacy Policy Donations.................................................. 2 How it Affects You North Orange County Tremble Clefs.......... 5 Like most non-profit organizations, NPFOCC has a privacy policy that is on its website and also on the website of the National Parkinson Foundation. The part of that policy that is most important to you is the following: “All information transmitted to this NPFOCC Web site is secure to the extent possible using existing technology. We will store the information that you share with us securely and will take appropriate steps to protect it from unauthorized access or disclosure. We will limit Read more on Page 4 Parkinson’s Exercise Program Campaign... 5 Finding Balance in Giving and Receiving... 6 Book Reviews............................................. 7 Contact NPFOCC Understanding How to Be Helpful Phone: (949) 945-6200 www.npfocc.org https://www.facebook.com/NPFOCC Newsletter Editor: Janet Buell Helping someone can be the most rewarding thing in the world. Nothing equals the pleasure that results from a successful attempt to help. Those who act in some capacity as a “helper” know that one big success at helping can make up for a lot of little failures. In spite of the successes, people with a strong intention to help others also know that it can be a discouraging, frustrating, thankless job at times. Send letters to the editor at the address above or to jbuell@npfocc.org For additional copies of this newsletter, contact the editor Helpline: English/Espanol 1-800-4PD.INFO It can seem to us that people don’t really want to be helped, that they don’t deserve help, that they just waste it or ignore it or need it so constantly that helping them becomes exhausting. At moments like that we can all end up longing for some quiet occupation where no one ever Read more on Page 2 Page 1 NPFOCC Donations Donations Rand & Betty Hagelin Linus & Arlene Buss George & Marie Petressans Vicki Ann Martin Dian Chen & Yizhen Sun Robert & Susan McMackin William & Pamela Willis Neil & Barbara Hickey Shu-Ching & Cheng-Wei Lee Juanita Tsu R. & T. Bharat C. & M. Hamlin Dale Arlen Smith George & Juanita King Joseph & Sarah Nardacci Deborah Kuryan Raymond & Pat Zartler Curt & Ann Herberts Carl & Joann Goltermann Beverly K Smith Debra Ruby Muriel Vancouvering Wm Franklin & Emily Pierson Robert & Vera Kuehnl Jeanne P Siegel Patricia & John Usyk Benita Magbanua Henry & Valerie Franzoni Darek & Sophia Czechowicz Understanding How to Be Helpful (Continued from Page 1) suffers or dies if we don’t succeed. People who work at helping others deserve to get their batteries recharged regularly. It can be a responsibility-laden task and those who do it deserve to be helped when they need it. Donations In Honor Of. . . . Lawrence & Margaret Burkholder: Tremble Clefs Al & Dorothy Spigarelli: Ralph Spigarelli Vernon & Martha Trezise: Dave Escapite Emma Rose Martin: David Martin Maxine Strickland: Bob Voll Donations In Memory Of. . . . Lucille F Hoogesteger: Joe Lustition Marilyn Rowe: Don Rowe Jackie Lipton: Larry Nancy Grant: Donald Steven Scher: Stan Scher Barbara Porter: Jerry Mary Ferrell: Jack Hose SCALE OF EMOTION Exhilaration Enthusiasm Cheerfulness Interest Complacency Ambivalence Antagonism Anger Resentment Anxiety Fear Grief Apathy This Scale of Emotions, at right, is taken in part from a textbook called Beyond Psychology—An Introduction to Metapsychology by noted Menlo Park psychiatrist, Dr. Frank Gerbode. There are many different philosophies or technologies that have a similar scale. This scale is based on observation by thousands of trained observers that people move up and down through a basic pattern of emotional levels as their condition improves or worsens. For example a person who has always been very independent and strong may begin experiencing disturbing physical symptoms that make it difficult to remain active and eventually receive a diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease. Such a person may, by nature, have been someone who usually operated on this scale at a level of cheerfulness but the diagnosis of a progressive neurological disorder plunges him/her to the level of grief or fear where he/she may remain for a while. With some time and a bit of help in the form of friends or professional counselors who let the person talk freely about his/her feelings, the person will begin to progress gradually back up the scale. Depending on the quality of the help received and the magnitude of the loss, it may take months to regain a level of cheerfulness on the scale, if it ever happens. The key to the scale is high spirits, lively joy eager interest, zeal full of cheer, joyful wanting to know, see, do, or take part contentment a state of conflicting feelings active opposition, conflict strong displeasure, wrath feeling injured or insulted troubled, worried or uneasy feeling dread that danger or evil is near great sadness, heavy sorrow lack of interest or feeling this: a person will not simply go directly from grief back to cheerfulness. That person will pass through each of these emotions on the way. When the grief begins to become exhausted, the person may find him/herself feeling fearful. After all, there is now an awareness that life can dish out some cruel blows. Read more on Page 3 Upcoming Events (Continued from Page 1) ary 27th from 1:00pm to 4:00pm at the Elks Lodge in Santa Ana and will feature Dr. Sandeep Thakkar of Hoag Hospital, a movement disorder specialist. The primary focus of Dr. Thakkar’s practice is patient-centered care for Parkinson’s disease. He believes in the importance of creating a global awareness of the disease, and strives to stay current with all modalities of care throughout the movement disorders field. Page 2 Sandeep Thakkar, DO Understanding How to Be Helpful (Continued from Page 2) The person may next pass through a stage where he/she becomes less fearful but still manifests a lot of anxiety. Next the person passes through the more extraverted emotions. He/she may resent fate and feel angry at God or the doctors. Although the person is actually improving, his/her behavior may seem quite shocking to those around him. Finally, if allowed to express the anger, the person passes through that band and hits a level of boredom, complacency, and ambivalence. He/she has little interest in life but at least is not suffering acutely. Eventually the person begins to take more interest in life and may regain his/her earlier emotional level. As the disease progresses and other losses occur, the person may go up and down the scale repeatedly. One of the biggest barriers to being helped is the lack of understanding of those around the person of the fact that he/she needs to pass through some very unpleasant emotions on the way back to happiness. It’s possible for most of us to provide an understanding ear as a friend or loved one passes through grief and anxiety. We’re more than happy to listen sympathetically and offer reassurance. But when the person hits the emotional bands that are harder for us to confront, when he/she is angry, hostile, resentful or antagonistic, too many of us are shocked and upset. If we were still able to listen calmly, the person would continue to pass up through those emotions but when we react in shock, it can drive the person back down into grief and prevent a full return to normalcy. When you fully understand this emotional scale, it’s much easier to help because you don’t take the person’s anger and hostility personally. There are things other than an illness that can cause a huge drop on this scale. Any loss may do it: loss of a job, a friend, an opportunity, or a divorce or failure. Painful incidents, like accidents and operations may also drive the person down the emotional scale. When life’s blows come too frequently, it becomes harder and harder to make that journey back up the scale and so the person’s chronic emotional level becomes lower and lower. Eventually, the person can become thoroughly fixed at one of the lower levels and a number of changes occur when this happens. Where a person high on the scale wants to survive and his/her efforts are directed toward that goal, a person who is chronically low on the scale begins to want to succumb. Apathy seems to offer relief from the pain. After that point, the person’s actions begin to align with that desire to succumb. This is the point where a lot of the losses you suffer trying to help someone enter the picture. If you’re trying to provide adequate food and housing to people whose emotional level is chronically low, because of their intention to succumb, they will be unable to benefit from your help. Their housing is allowed to deteriorate, the help is wasted and you are left wondering why you bothered. Any help at this point, other than the intensive compassionate listening needed to raise their emotional state, will be largely wasted. As long as a person is still able to move easily on the emotional scale, even if he/she is still at a low level because of a recent loss or illness, that person can be helped but when he/she becomes quite fixed on the emotional scale at a very low level because of repeated losses or illnesses, then helping becomes very difficult. Someone who works daily at the task of helping others should know this scale well for it makes the behavior of the person in front of you far more predictable and therefore easier to confront and handle. Help that works could be defined as follows: that action which furthers the intention of the person being helped. If you do something for people that actually assists them in following their own intentions, they will perceive it as help, accept it, and be grateful for it. If your action conflicts with their intentions, they will ignore it, waste it, or refuse it. Thus, if they are stuck in a low emotional level and are trying to succumb, and you are attempting to help them survive, they will not perceive your actions as helpful, will not be grateful for them and will not benefit from them. Occasionally this fact will be masked. They won’t outwardly admit they don’t want your help, but they will find a way to waste it. This doesn’t mean, of course, that you go into agreement with their intention to succumb and help them locate a gun to do themselves in. No matter how warped their idea of help has become, you have to follow your own ethical code and give only pro-survival help. It does mean that with a better understanding of the situation, you might be able to help arrange to get them the only kind of help they could benefit from at that point. If you’re not trained to provide them with compassionate listening, you would at least recognize that they needed that sort of help first and possibly be able to help them get it. You would also learn to take it less personally when they were unable to be easily helped, and you’d recognize that the failure wasn’t yours. Some people are simply very, very difficult to help. This information comes from the book, Emotional First Aid Manual, by Janet Buell. Complimentary copies are available at the NPFOCC office or at our seminars and symposiia. Page 3 The Caregiver’s Luncheon The luncheon was held in the beautiful Beckman Center. NPFOCC sponsored a Caregiver’s Luncheon in November. It will become an annual event. The speakers included an expert on caregiving to provide some useful information and a comedian to provide some fun. The event was held at the Beckman Center in Irvine and included a wonderful lunch. There was no charge for the event and hospice care was provded to anyone who needed it. Caregivers play a vital role in the Parkinson’s community and NPFOCC wants to do anything it can to provide them with support. The event provided a wonderful opportunity for caregivers to relax. access to this information to those NPFOCC personnel with a need to know. We educate our staff about their duty to protect your privacy and provide training regarding the policy described herein.” There are reasons why this privacy policy is important to you. According to the Fundraising Non-Profit Resource by Tony Poderis, “Many nonprofit organizations exchange with other non-profits their mailing lists of people served, i.e. their clients, users, patrons, etc. They do this for marketing purposes, especially in the arts and culture world. And it could be said it is a good thing, in the spirit of cooperation and public service. But all too often the exchange, or even the sale, of nonprofit organizations’ donor listings is practiced. This is a much different method of mutual support, and it has its consequences. To many of us, such selling of our donors’ names and addresses would, in essence, be a “selling out” of our donors. It’s probably safe to say that most of them would take a rather dim view of this practice. NPFOCC will never sell or give your contact information to a commercial enterprise, another non-profit, or any other organization without your express permission. Sharing between non-profits can be a good thing to do. Non-profits collaborate with other non-profits when the op- Page 4 The NPFOCC Privacy Policy and How It Affects You (Continued from Page 1) portunity is there to obtain more money from a foundation with a partnership proposal. They share facility space with fellow nonprofits, share equipment, share program information, partner in advocacy activities, exchange brochures and other materials and, most of all, give encouragement. NPFOCC believes it is important to be generous and care and share, but we will never, ever give up our donors’ or community member’s names and addresses to outside organizations. The Tremble Clefs Start New North Orange County Group at Emerald Court in Anaheim The Tremble Clefs Group gave a wonderful performance at Emerald Court. Karen Skipper directs the Tremble Clefs’ Holiday Concert Parkinson’s Exercise Program Campaign Jacquie Massing is searching for a suitable space for an exercise gym. The Tremble Clefs are a support group funded by NPFOCC that provides vocal exercise for people with Parkinson’s and their care partners. Led by Karen Skipper, MT-BC, a Neurologic Music Therapy Fellow and owner of Orange Coast Music Therapy, and accompanied by Claudia Gambino, an amazingly talented pianist, the group has been growing so much it can no longer fit in the large practice room at the Florence Sylvestre Senior Center in Laguna Hills. Because of this rapid growth and to make the drive shorter for the many people with Parkinson’s in North Orange County, a second Tremble Clefs group is beginning at the Emerald Court facility in Anaheim, CA. The Laguna Hills group, now called the South Orange County Tremble Clefs, meet every Monday morning at 9:30 a.m. at the Florence Sylvestre Center at 23721 Moulton Pkwy, Laguna Hills, CA 92653. The new North County Tremble Clefs hold their first meeting on Thursday, January 16 at 9:30 a.m. at Emerald Court, 1731 W Medical Center Dr., Anaheim, CA 92801, in the 2nd floor in the Activities Room. Although the groups will practice separately, they will often perform together as they did on December 23rd at Emerald Court for the holiday show. As can be seen in the photographs taken at the performance, the group was in a festive mood. Two different reporters, one for the Orange County Register and one from the Anaheim Independent News, covered the event. Check out the article in the Register at the following URL: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/tremble-595117-clefs-group.html Joining the Tremble Clefs requires no auditions as the group is open to all who would like to maintain the strength of their voices. Come to a practice and join in the fun. My big resolution for 2014 is to bring into existence a dedicated gym in south/central Orange County that brings PD sufferers fun, pleasure and physical wellness. But to make that come about, I need a little help from your eyes, ears and brains. We need to find a 1500-2000 square foot site in south Orange County that we can convert to a PWR4LIFE type of gym (See www.pwr4life.org — I refer to ours as BRAIN PWR4OC). Our gym will be used at least five half-days a week under the guidance of a specialist in Parkinson’s movement disorders (I have one in mind). A first piece of equipment is already lined up; all we lack now is the place to put it. What I need from you is your help finding a facility leasable for exclusive Parkinson’s exercise use. So-o-o, START LOOKING, EVERYBODY—and ask your realtor friends or look on your own—for what may be available for non-profit use in south O.C.’s public buildings, churches, business districts, shopping centers, etc. Let me know what you consider to be promising for our use and I’ll check it out further. Email me your ideas and be sure to put ‘BRAIN PWR4OC’ in the subject line. Have a great year! Jacqueline G. Massing, 4jacquote@gmail.com Page 5 Finding Balance in the Giving and Receiving of Help With Parkinson’s Disease, as with most progressive conditions (including old age), there often comes a time when a person has to rely on others for some assistance. For a person who has always been independent, that need can make one very uncomfortable, especially if the need for help for oneself does not seem to be equal to the ability to offer help to others. It’s human nature for people to want to give as much as they receive. But when one partner’s ability to help becomes diminished by physical problems, it is often necessary to get very creative to maintain some balance between the giving and receiving of help between partners or family members. Here is an example of such a situation taken from an article in Today’s Caregiver Magazine. The text of the full article is available at the following URL: http://www.caregiver.com/articles/general/emotional_first_aid.htm Helen had ALS, a progressively debilitating and usually fatal illness. Her biggest concern was not for her own future; it was for her husband, Frank, who was performing more and more care-giving tasks. Helen was afraid that her illness would have a crushing effect on her husband’s health and spirits and she worried that her exchange with him would be out of balance. Helen wanted to find a way to contribute something to Frank’s wellbeing and she worked with a trauma counselor to resolve this issue. As she did so, she realized that the illness might have robbed her of the physical ability to be of help but she could still listen well and Frank certainly needed a good listener as he struggled to care for her and worried about the future. Helen received some training in how to be an attentive and compassionate listener and she and Frank began having conversations each evening where she coaxed him to talk about his whole life and about his concerns for the future. It was a tremendous relief to Frank to be able to have the conversations each evening. The couple’s close communication helped them work out a plan for Helen’s care that was less stressful for her husband. Frank realized that the most important moments of the day were the ones when they were talking on a deep level and he continued to talk to Helen even after she had lost the ability to speak. At Helen’s funeral Frank described those conversations as some of the happiest moments of his life. It’s vital to find ways for an ill person to contribute to the wellbeing of loved ones if it is at all possible. Even a very ill person may be able to learn to listen well and compassionately. If you’re a caregiver, watch carefully for signs that the ill person wants to contribute and then make the effort to see if such a contribution is possible. If you are the person with a serious illness, make an effort to see if there are ways to remain helpful in spite of your illness. Enabling people to feel useful throughout their life is a tremendous gift to give them and finding a way to stay useful is a tremendous gift to oneself. Listening well is a way of being helpful that almost anyone can do. If you would like to improve your ability to be a compassionate listener, read the following information which is taken from a training booklet on compassionate communication. Learning to Listen Well: There are three qualities essential in a person who wants to be able to listen well. Those qualities are compassion, curiPage 6 osity and persistence. No matter how much training you’ve had, if you’re lacking in these three qualities, you’ll be largely unable to listen well. No matter how little training you’ve had, if you possess these three qualities, you’ll be able to help your fellow man effectively. We’ve all heard of people whose friends turn to them in times of trouble because they just know they’ll feel much better if they talk to that person. Such people have a natural ability to be interested in others, non judgmental, and persistent enough to hear someone out. Compassion: In order to experience relief from worries and traumatic incidents, people must be able to talk to you very freely and openly—and feel safe while doing so. Otherwise they won’t be able to express the emotions, attitudes, and feelings that are necessary to gain relief. Consequently they won’t feel much better after talking to you. It doesn’t matter how awful a thing they’ve done, or how ridiculous a thing they’ve done, they need to know you’re not going to criticize them or feel critical of them. Then they’ll speak freely and not try to protect or defend themselves by withholding their communication. That’s where compassion enters into it. If people feel—whether you’ve openly expressed it or not—the least bit of criticalness on your part, they’re going to start defending their actions. They’ll try to convince you that their actions really weren’t that bad or that they were justified. Any time spent defending their actions is time that won’t benefit them. Example Alice had experienced the death of her husband and she’d been unable to recover fully from that death. Every time she thought of that event, the upset surfaced again. Alice had gone through a whole gamut of emotions: anger, fear, hostility, and grief. She was able to express the grief but not the anger. Alice felt that society frowned on a person being angry at a dead spouse and her Continued on Page 7 Finding Balance (Continued from Page 6) anger was very strong. She was sure that people would consider it wrong or shameful if they knew how she felt. After all, her husband couldn’t help dying. But it didn’t help Alice to analytically know that her husband didn’t choose to leave her. The fact is that she was very angry. A compassionate person helped Alice finally express the anger and she now feels tremendous relief. If the person to whom you’re speaking is known by you to be very compassionate, you’ll probably try expressing a bit of the anger and watch them closely for their reaction. When you can see they’re not horrified, shocked, or critical, you’ll feel free to express a bit more. Eventually, you’ll blow off all the steam that’s necessary and feel much better. The whole difference in whether or not you’re able to work through that cycle and get rid of those angry feelings will be the level of compassion that you perceive to be there on the part of the person to whom you’re speaking. Curiosity is the second trait that’s a key factor in our ability to listen well. There are some people who feel that curiosity can be intrusive or upsetting. Curiosity is upsetting when it isn’t coupled with compassion. If you’re feeling that the other person is curious about you and that they have a critical feeling toward you or toward what they might find out about you, you’ll find their curiosity or interest very upsetting. If you sense that the person is compassionate, then the interest or curiosity isn’t upsetting. It is, in fact, very reassuring and comforting. All of us enjoy having someone show a genuine compassionate interest in us. It’s a trait that makes it possible for us to open up and speak freely. If you feel that the other person is bored or lacking interest in you or what you’re saying, you’re not going to talk very much. If you can sense that the other person has a very strong interest in what you are saying, and that they’re compassionate, you’ll find yourself being able to express those deep, dark secrets that have been hiding there way too long. The last key factor is persistence. It sometimes takes a while to talk through an upsetting incident. If you don’t have the persistence to get all the way through the incident, then you might as well not have started. We can’t plunk someone down in the middle of a traumatic moment, let that person get all involved in it, and then not follow through long enough to complete the process. Our intent has to be to take our friends or loved ones all the way through. If people got no other training at all but learned to be a little more compassionate, show a little more interest, and a little more persistence, they would have increased tremendously their ability to help someone. It would make them better able to help their friends, their children, their acquaintances, and their loved ones. If you would like to learn more about how to be a great listener, check out the book, Nonviolent Communication: A Language of Compassion by Marshall B. Rosenberg, available in the NPFOCC lending library. Book Reviews from the NPFOCC Lending Library Delay the Disease, Exercise and Parkinson’s Disease by David Zid This is a 70-page spiral-bound book published in 2007, written by David Zid who is a certified fitness trainer. The book is on the library shelf of our NPFOCC office and is available to borrow. Zid has put together a thorough program of exercises designed to retard the progress of Parkinson’s Disease (PD). The book contains several testimonials as to the effectiveness of the routine. On most pages of the book, there are three or four pictures of Zid performing the maneuvers. Patients are divided into three groups: In Level A, everyone should be able to do these basic exercises which are done seated; Level B requires more balance and stability; Level C is the most challenging. The first group of exercises is called Wake Up Call. The neck, shoulders, wrists, hands, and ankles are flexed, extended, and/or rotated. Groups B Continued on Page 8 Page 7 16520 Bake Pkwy, S uite 120, Irvine, CA 92618 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED or C in addition move the lower extremities more vigorously, often in the standing position. Vocal and facial exercises are also done. Zid has a chapter on balancing drills and he recommends that all of the above be done daily. Book Review Next Zid discusses cardiovascular exercise. He says that if you could do only one exercise, it should be to walk. In each group, the speed and duration should increase as tolerated. The walking should be done for 20 minutes. For the Level C group, he recommends one minute of high intensity faster walking or going up a hill done twice during the 20 minutes. Books are reviewed by Alan Massing, M.D. and PD Patient, and are available to borrow from the NPFOCC Lending Library. Then Zid turns to strength training. “Everyone starts to lose muscle mass at some point in life. PD patients tend to lose it faster,” says Zid. He feels that free weights are good because they are portable and inexpensive but some results can be obtained with machines in health clubs. These exercises should be done three times a week, starting with one set, gradually increasing the weights, then going to two sets. Examples of some of the exercises include chest press, triceps press, shoulder press and biceps curl. On the days when weights are not used, he advises “core days” including exercises that are between the shoulders and the knees. The last category is called “night-time stretching” and the book includes seven examples. A second edition called Delay the Disease; Functional Fitness for Parkinson’s, was released on December 15, 2012. There is also a DVD called Functional Fitness. This book lays out an ambitious program of exercise in a clear succinct manner. Check it out. Page 8 (Continued from Page 7)
© Copyright 2024