“Stories are our primary tools of learning and teaching, the repositories of our love and legends. They bring order into our confusing world.”

~ Edward Miller, British Historian

How ‘bout letting one of the stories below be your wingman?
It might be just what you need to “prime the pump” to get hearts and minds engaged, but with other people as the main characters!

We hope one or all of these stories lead to meaningful conversations with friends, family, neighbors, co-workers…and your medical care support team. Let’s keep the “die-a-logue” alive!

Calling the Birds Home
Death of a Parent, Vascular Dementia, Caregiving Laura Cleminson Death of a Parent, Vascular Dementia, Caregiving Laura Cleminson

Calling the Birds Home

My mother and I have lived side by side on the same farm for decades. Our love was mutual and constant. In 2015 my mother developed vascular dementia, and with that began the loss of her emotions and her memory and the relationship of mother and daughter as we have known it for nearly 60 years.

My name is Cheryl St. Onge. I was born in Worcester, Massachusetts the only child of a Physics professor and a painter. I guess I take after the painter (my mother) and chose a creative path. I’m a photographer. Pictures are my words.

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Letters to Remember

Letters to Remember

A year before my father died, shortly before I was to return to England, where I was living in my 20's, he and I sat on my parents' deck in Marion, Massachusetts, overlooking the harbor bathed in a late summer light. There, my dad, looking remarkably well for someone whose prostate cancer had metastasized into his bones, told me everything a child wants to hear from their parent—that he loved me and was proud of me. These were things I knew, but had never heard him say so directly, with such deliberateness. A few months later a letter arrived to me in England in which he expanded on his feelings about me. And though I would see him again, it proved to be his goodbye.

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