June - Friends Fellowship Community

Transcription

June - Friends Fellowship Community
2030 Chester Blvd. Richmond, IN 47374 Ph: 765-962-6546 Fax: 765-962-9188
WHAT’S HAPPENING
Spotlight on Activities
Monday, June 1st: We welcome singer
Gene Sherfy to Friends Fellowship. He will
entertain us at 2:00 p.m. in the Community
Room. Gene sings gospel, country and
golden oldies.
June
2015
Tuesday, June 2nd: There will be a picnic
on the patio for all Health Care Center
residents at 11:30 a.m. Would you like to go
see a baseball game? Please sign up if you
would like to attend a RiverRats game which
begins at 7:05 p.m. Tickets are $6.00.
Volume 31
Issue 6
Editor
Ted Halsted
Wednesday, June 3rd: Independent Ladies
Luncheon will be in the Community Room at
11:30 a.m. Shanron Rider will be sharing her
mother’s doll collection. Her mother was
resident and doll maker Mary Malone. Please
sign up to attend.
Inside this issue:
Pond Reflections
2
Life Enhancement
News
3
What’s Happening
in The Courtyards
5
Birthdays
6
Anniversaries
7
Wellness News
8
Thank You to
Our Supporters
9
Library News
10
Marketing News
11
Tuesday, June 16th: Singer Tom Wr ight
will be in the Community Room at 2:00 p.m.
Tom sings the unforgettable songs from the
golden era of radio. The Out to Dinner
Bunch will be going to El Rodeo this month.
The bus will leave at 4:30 p.m. Sign up to
attend.
Wednesday, June 17th: Come meet the
FFC Board of Trustees at 4:00 p.m. in the
Community Room.
Thursday, June 18th: Tr aci Lewis fr om
the Cope Environmental Center will be in
the Assembly Room at 2:00 p.m. with
another wonderful program. This month’s
topic will be turtles.
Sunday, June 21st: Worship Service
will be held in the Assembly Room at
Sunday, June 7th: Wor ship Ser vice will be 10:30 a.m. Leading the service will be Nancy
Faus Mullen. HAPPY FATHER’S DAY.
held in the Assembly Room at 10:30 a.m.
HCC and AR residents and their children are
Leading the service will be Bonita Porter.
invited to a Father’s Day reception. The
Monday June 8th: Join us to celebrate with party will be from 2:00 p.m.- 4:00 p.m. in the
the residents that have June birthdays.
Community Room. Please call the office to
Entertainment will be provided by John
make a reservation.
Kogge.
Wednesday, June 24th: Cr aig Hopkins
Tuesday, June 9th: Ther e will be a picnic will be the speaker at Men’s Breakfast
on the patio for all residents living in the
beginning at 8:00 a.m. in the Community
Assisted Residential apartments at 11:30 a.m. Room. Craig will speak about raising
Sunday, June 14th: Worship Service will be peacocks.
held in the Assembly Room at 10:30 a.m.
Thursday, June 25th: Ther e will be a bus
Leading the service will be Keith Kendall.
trip to Garfield Park Conservatory and
There will be a 1:45 p.m. bus trip to the Rose Sunken Gardens in Indianapolis. The bus
Garden on the east side of Richmond. Sign
will leave at 9:30 a.m. Please sign up to
up to attend.
attend. There will be a bus fee and an entry
fee, and we will eat lunch in Indianapolis.
Monday, June 15th: We will be taking a
bus trip to the Minnetrista Museum in
Sunday, June 28th: Worship Service will be
Muncie, Indiana. Please sign up to attend this held in the Assembly Room at 10:30 a.m.
trip. The bus will leave the back door at
Leading the service will be Barry Cramer.
1:00 p.m. There will be a bus fee and a small
entry fee. Wellness Assessments with HTS
Monday, June 29th: The Nigerian
Therapy will be given in the Wellness Room. Women’s Choir will sing in the Community
Get signed up! Independent Residential
Room at 10:30 a.m. We are blessed that they
residents will be assessed from 9:00 a.m.have been able to make the trip to Richmond.
11:00 a.m. and Independent Housing
Morrisson-Reeves Library Readers will
residents and Independent Living residents
share stories with us in Assembly Room at
will be given from 1 p.m.-3:00 p.m. Angie
2:00 p.m.
Howard from HTS will also be here to
Tuesday, June 30th: Don Miller will be
demonstrate new exercises in the Assembly
Room at 3:30 p.m. Join us to get fit and have our speaker for “Going Down Memory
Lane.” Please enjoy this activity in the
fun doing it!
Assembly Room at 2:00 p.m.
Pond Reflections
I’m a word freak! I’ve been one all my life, with a passion for
words, their sound, their meaning, and where they came from. It
all began in early childhood. Our family’s evening table grace was
in French: “Mon ame, benis l’Eternel! Et n’oublie aucun de ses
bienfaits! (“Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His
benefits.” Psalm 103:2). My parents, who had been on the staff of
a Methodist orphanage near Lyon, France before I was born,
carried on their private conversations in French so we kids
wouldn’t know what they were talking about. In my early
childhood, Mother sat at the foot of my bed every evening to help
correct my club feet by exercising each ankle one hundred times. As she did this, we counted to one
hundred in French, first as she put outward pressure on one ankle, and again as she exercised the
other one. My brother and two sisters and I weren’t permitted to say “shut up” to each other, but we
could say “tais toi,” (tay twa) which means the same thing, only more respectfully.
My fascination with words got a big boost when I was in the sixth grade. The teacher—I can’t
remember his name—gave us an assignment for the next day. “Look in the dictionary and find three
words you’ve never heard before. Write down the three words you choose and their definitions.
Tomorrow we will share with the class these new words we’ve added to our vocabularies.” What
fun! When I got home I immediately reached for the dictionary and went hunting. With thousands of
words to choose from, what three would I pick? I decided to find three fascinating words near the end
of the alphabet.
I still remember my choices. The first word I chose was “ubiquitous”— “being, or seeming to
be, everywhere at the same time.” “How intriguing!” I thought as a 6th grade boy. The word has been
useful over the years.
The second word I chose tickled my funny bone: “xanthochroid.” The “highfalutin” adjective
refers to a pale yellow hue, in other words “blonde.” Can you imagine calling a woman
“xanthochroid!” You might get slapped! I’ve hardly ever used the word, but I’ve remembered it, ever
since the sixth grade.
The third word I chose for my sixth grade assignment was “xenophobia”—meaning hatred or
fear of foreigners or their customs. There certainly is a lot of xenophobia in the world today, and right
here in our own country. Xenophobia is a phobia we need to cleanse from our hearts.
My word freakiness went into overdrive at DePauw in an English course with Professor Jerome
Hixson. I became fascinated with word etymologies, the study of where words came from. I learned
that 50% of the words in the English language have a Latin ancestry and 13% come from Greece,
with many other words having an Anglo-Saxon origin. I learned that most of the names of our
domestic animals are one syllable Anglo-Saxon words: cow, pig, sheep, goat, fish, etc., while most of
the names for different cuts of meat come from Norman-French: bacon, beef, mutton, sirloin, pork,
filet, etc.
I continue to be a word freak, fascinated by the words we use to communicate with one
another, to express our feelings, to articulate beauty, and to convey meaning. It is true that a
dictionary, with all the words in our language, doesn’t have a story line or plot, but what an amazing
gallery of metaphors! For example, “daisy” from “day’s eye.” Almost every word has a picture within
it.
—Ted Halsted, Editor
June 2015 Page 2
Reflections of May Activities
Friends Fellowship Community is fortunate to have so many
residents that have been great parents. A day with your mother
or father is like a sunny day. Many families celebrated Mother’s
Day on May 10th with music played by Carol Lou Woodward.
Father’s Day will be celebrated June 21st which will provide
another time to be close to family and reminisce about old times.
Reflecting on days gone by gives me the chance to review some
of the May activities.
The National Trail Steel Band started the month off with a BANG!
What a fun activity and a super opportunity for the youngsters.
A trip to the Raper Center to view quilts old and new was amazing. What patience and
creativity these ladies had on display for everyone to enjoy.
The new residents reception was a huge success. Many FFC
residents welcomed the newcomers.
Morrisson-Reeves Library Readers came this month and spoke
about the history of Richmond’s library. Many participants
remembered the glass floor and the reading room in the old
building. Some residents shared their own experiences and
knowledge.
Richmond Community Orchestra
entertained residents in the Community
Room on May 18 at 6:30 p.m.
Richmond Jazz Orchestra also came to introduce their newly
organized group. Carol Lou Woodward and Caroline KlempererGreen also performed a violin and piano concert.
Duane Hodgin spoke at Men’s Breakfast and shared information
about his new book on the Korean Conflict and the Vietnam War.
Tom Walker provided a delightful sing-along for the residents at
the May birthday party. Tom provided fun and familiar music that the residents enjoyed.
Whether you have enjoyed familiar activities or activities new to you, I hope you continue
to participate. Many wonderful activities are planned for June.
A Special Tree
farm.
This is the story of a special maple tree that began its life in the woods on our family
Many years ago, before my mother was born, my grandmother and grandfather drove
a horse-pulled wagon to the woods on their eighty-acre farm and dug up the young maple
tree. They brought it to the yard in front of their new, two-story house and planted it. The
house and the tree were on a little hill, so they named their home Maple Hill Farm.
Over the years, the tree grew and its branches spread farther and farther. Many
children played under it and grown-ups rested or visited under it on summer evenings. After
my mother and father married, they too lived on Maple Hill Farm. By the time I was born, the
tree had spread its branches over most of the yard, and the trunk was so big that it took
three or four children reaching out to circle it.
That tree was one of my favorite places when I was a child. A farm can be very busy
with all kinds of interesting and noisy things going on, but under our sturdy tree it always
seemed peaceful and safe.
My father hung a swing from one of the branches strong enough to hold an adult. I
spent many hours in that swing. I could also climb up into a fork just about six feet off the
ground where the big trunk divided into three trunks. In between was a place with just
enough room for me to sit and lean against the rough bark. Under that tree I would play with
my dolls or kittens or just lie on the soft, green grass and look up into the leaves and think
and imagine - sometimes alone, sometimes with cousins or friends.
Time passed and on a lovely June day, my love and I were married in the nearby
Richsquare Meetinghouse. The reception was in the house at Maple Hill Farm. Cousins set
up a table under the sheltering maple tree in the front yard, and there, with family (including
several small children) and friends gathered around, we opened gifts. Our car was in the
shade on the north side of the tree, ready for our “get away.”
My husband and I did not live in the farmhouse until our three children were grown
and moved away. After my father died, Carl and I moved in with my mother and spent
several years there. Every weekday, we walked under the tree to get our mail from the
mailbox. In the fall, we gathered its many fallen leaves and used them to mulch our
garden. In winter snows we shoveled a pathway to the mailbox. The tree always seemed a
member of the family.
Sadly, by the time we were grandparents, some of its branches had become rotten
and, because it had become dangerous, we finally had to have it cut down. I turned the
place where it had stood into a round flower bed with tulips, daffodils, other perennials, and
milkweed to attract butterflies. It was a beautiful spot, in memory of the beloved maple tree
that spread its branches over five generations of my family - a special tree, always
remembered with a mixture of sorrow and joy - most of all joy.
Terry Price
Director of Life Enhancement
June 2015 Page 3
By Lois Jordan
June 2015 Page 4
What’s Happening In The Courtyards
What better way to start off the month of May than to celebrate our
wonderful mothers. Our Mother’s Day Tea was held on Saturday, May 9th.
There were many special memories shared, delicious food eaten, and new
memories made. The residents enjoyed many fun activities including a steel
drum band from National Trail High School, a choir concert from Centerville
High School, and a performance from the Richmond Community Orchestra
during which Carol Lou Woodward & Caroline Klemperer-Green performed.
We also enjoyed a Mary Kay spa day and a birthday party with Tom Walker.
If we had any more fun it would be against the law!
Sunday
1
Doris Hart
Carter
Lanning
Happy birthday wishes went out to Dr. Albert Huff, Juanita McGill, and
Miriam Huff. All were celebrated in The Courtyards tradition, with cake,
punch, singing, and balloon ball.
Our second annual FFC Ride To Remember will be held on Saturday, June
13th. Registration starts at 10:30 a.m. and bikes leave Friends Fellowship at
12:00 p.m. Last year Friends Fellowship raised over $4,000 towards finding
a cure for Alzheimer’s. This year we hope to do just as well. We would love
for you to join us in September for the Alzheimer’s Walk. For more
information please contact Erin Miller or Shannon Burk in The Courtyards.
Monday
Tuesday
2
Wednesday
Friday
Saturday
3
4
5
6
13
June
Gwyn
Sam Ridge
7
8
9
10
11
12
Donna
Hollenberg
Nancy
Brewster
Numon
Johnson
Frieda
Brandenburg
Margaret
Sherrow
Jean
Weigle
16
Dick Hert
17
18
19
Mary Fran
Caldwell
14
15
Beverly
Cox
Sandra
Morrison
David
Wertemberger
21
22
Darlene
Moegerle
Phil
Stafford
23
28
Russell
Ferris
24
Mary
Hair
25
26
Paul
Hartman
Jim
Johnson
29
20
Clarice
Warrick
Phil
Norman
30
Mary Alice
Adney
Jack
Burrows
Gilbert
Turner
June 2015 Page 5
Thursday
June 2015 Page 6
27
Employee Anniversaries
Resident Anniversaries
Mildred Mahoney
14 Years
Jacqueline Christensen
13 Years
Virginia & Keith Esch
12 Years
Doris Miller
12 Years
Lucille & William Ward
10 Years
Betty & Ernie Mills
Administration
John Robinson
Debbie Rea
Dietary
Deborah Grimes
Autumn Lawhorn
9 Years
Dorothy Thorman
7 Years
Fran Engle
5 Years
Alice Daggy
4 Years
Barbara & Lincoln Blake
3 Years
Sue Felton
3 Years
Peggy Frazier
2 Years
Emma & Sam Ridge
2 Years
Phillip Cronk
1 Year
Harry McCafferty
1 Year
Madalene & Stanley White
1 Year
8 Years
1 Year
Environmental Services
9 Years
Wayne Stidham
17 Years
13 Years
Tammi Dalton
Carolyn Hayes
Victoria Barr
Jenniffer Lunt
28 Years
23 Years
6 Years
2 Years
Terry Price
3 Years
Nursing
Danielle Gray
Deborah Isenbarger
Betty Emmons
Jackie Bond
Judy Shroyer
Brooke Kirk
In Memoriam
April 30
Just like one cares for a treasured flower or plant, don’t forget to treasure yourself! With a little
TLC, we all bloom and continue to re-bloom throughout the years. Friends Fellowship
Community is here to help that process along. Once again, we are scheduling Wellness
Assessments in conjunction with Healthcare Therapy Services. The Wellness Assessments will
be held on Monday, June 15th.
If you live in Independent Housing or in an Independent Living Apartment, please call or visit the
Main Office to sign up for a time on June 15th between 1 p.m. – 3 p.m.
If you live in an Independent Residential Apartment, please call or visit the Life Enhancement
Office to sign up for a time on June 15th between 9 a.m. – 11 a.m.
We hope to see you all there. Wellness just feels so good!
Life Enhancement
1 Year
The Courtyards
th
Keep Your Good Health in Full Bloom
through May 25 , 2015
Resident Name
Joann Rahe
th
Date of Death
May 24
18 Years
7 Years
4 Years
4 Years
2 Years
Tabbatha Woolwine, Wellness Coordinator
First Impressions
Sunlight
I had just entered the woods
when I heard a crow—
no doubt his caw announced my arrival,
telling everyone I was trespassing.
My first impression— how annoying!
It’s rather cool today
but warm in the sunshine.
Bright, bright sunlight
that gleams from my book
making it almost too much for my eyes.
It shines in this place on the reddish-brown deck,
wood patterned with varying lines
showing nature’s tree growth.
Some straight lines, some curved ones,
a few knotholes, a few fibrous areas
that seem lively in this dazzling brightness.
Deep in the woods
a gathering silence overtook me.
The silence was emphatic—
no wind, no bird songs,
no rustling in the thicket,
no creaking limbs.
I stopped and stood and beheld.
The silence was like a ring of light
placed on the finger of the moment,
joining together
me and the creatures, seen and unseen,
the trees, the stones, the grasses,
gifting us to each other.
On the deck railing, red geraniums spaced
in terra cotta pots are absorbing the sun.
They reach upward, they grow,
their redness becoming more brilliant.
There is the tinkling sound of wind chimes,
one handmade, one from Bar Harbor.
From the tall green trees and the smaller ones,
birds sing in the background,
appreciating the day.
“I like you, sunlight”…I’m sure they sing.
“And please, come again tomorrow.”
Again, I heard it—
the cawing of the crow.
Silence smiled.
I smiled, too, and gently
we moved on.
The caw was the crow’s “Amen.”
So much for first impressions!
By Ken Schomaker
FFC resident
June 2015 Page 7
June
2015 Page 8
By Doris Phelps
FFC resident
Library News
Summer Update
The Knitting and Crocheting Group are not meeting on
Tuesdays due to lack of participants.
The folk dancers and the short story group are taking a
summer break. These groups will begin again in the fall.
There are some new additions in the Recreation Room.
Please feel free to use the corn hole game, the croquet set, or the
lawn darts. Please return them promptly to the recreation room
when you are done using them so other residents can have fun
with them also.
Thank You to Our Supporters
Friends Fellowship Community is grateful for the financial support given by the following
during the period of April 28, 2015 through May 27, 2015.
GENERAL ENDOWMENT FUND*
Gifts:
Centerville Stamp Club
FFC Silent Auction
In Memory of All Residents who Passed
Away During the Month of May:
Dick & Jan Bohlander
GENERAL ENDOWMENT* - Cont.
In Memory of Dr. Kenneth Sherer:
A.J. Daggy
In Honor of Carol Jelly:
Charlotte Kane
In Honor of Karen Seal:
David Sherick
*Endowment Fund income is used to support residents whose personal funds are diminished.
June 2015 Page 9
In Regular Print:
Unsinkable, A Memoir of Winnie Nirich, by Terry Gray
This book presents the incredible true story of a young boy's journey following his
dream to America. Chuck Avery, Pal-Item columnist, has known Winnie Nirich for
45 years and made him the subject of his column in March. Chuck notes that
"every chapter of Winnie's life is fascinating - from his birth into a fairly well-to-do
family with a villa on the Adriatic Sea to his present life in rural East Central
Indiana." Describing the extreme deprivation of the WWII years, the story
continues with Winnie joining the merchant marines, working on the Andrea Doria
and arriving in New York with no English, little money and no prospects. The book
covers Winnie's adventures in New York, his troubles with immigration, his life in
the U. S. Army, and tells how he got to eastern Indiana.
Our Only World - Ten Essays, by Wendell Berry
Off the Shelf - Secrets of the Blue Hill Library, by Emily Thomas
Invisible City, by Julia Dahl
Honor Eternal: Wayne County Men in the Civil War
In Large Print:
Mrs. Grant and Madame Jule, by Jennifer Chiaverini
The author imagines the inner life of Julia Grant, beloved as a Civil War general's
wife and the First Lady, yet who grappled with a profound and complex
relationship with the slave who was her namesake - until she forged a proud
identity of her own.
June 2015 Page 10
News From the Marketing Department
Just a reminder—do not forget the wellness assessments coming up on
Monday, June 15th. Check the bulletin board for reminders PLUS you may
be greeted by smiling faces with a cheery reminder in the weeks to come!
In June we will have an artist from Laramie, Wyoming, staying at FFC!
The artist will be painting a mural at the VFW on S. 8th Street. On Monday,
June 8, at 6:00 p.m. there will be a reception to meet the artists and see their
designs. This event is open to the public at the Firehouse BBQ on N. 8th
Street. Stop by if you are out and about that evening! It will be fun for the
community to watch as the murals are being painted in June and July.
Two more homes will be available in June! As soon as we have them ready
to show, the letter will go out to our waiting list. Also IH #17 is still available.
If you know of someone you think might be interested in this home, please
call Susan, Wendy or me.
Pam Merchanthouse
Vice President of Customer Services
"There is little difference in people, but
that little difference makes a big difference.
That little difference is attitude. The big
difference is whether it is positive or
negative.”
~W. Clement Stone
New Residents
Louise Spotts from Richmond to CY II 82L
Alice Fulle from Richmond to IR 210
Paul Lacey from Richmond to HCC 39 West
June 2015 Page 11
Friends Fellowship Community
June 2015
Sunday
7
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
1
2
3
4
5
6
10:30 Exercise AR
2:00 Gene Sherfy CR
3:30 Wellness AR
3:30 Painting with Anita AS
10:30 Exercise AR
11:30 Lunch on the Patio
for HCC residents
7:00 Silent Meeting S
7:05 RiverRats Game
10:30 Exercise AR
11:30 Ladies Luncheon CR
Shanron Rider, speaker
2:00 Bingo AR
3:30 Wellness AR
6:30 After Dinner LL
10:30 Bible Study GR
2:00 Current Events LL
2:00 Handmade GR
7:00 Dean Martin Classic TV
10:00 Writer’s Group S
10:30 Exercise AR
1:45 Movie GR
3:30 Wellness AR
10:00 Greeting Card
Party AR
2:00 Manicures
8
9
10
11
12
13
10:00 Writer’s Group S
10:30 Exercise AR
1:45 Movie GR
3:30 Wellness AR
10:00 Hand Massages
2:00 Sequence Game GR
10:30 FFC Church
Bonita Porter AR
2:00 Visit and Play Corn Hole
on the Patio
10:30 Exercise AR
2:00 Birthday Party CR
3:30 Wellness AR
10:30 Exercise AR
11:30 Lunch on the Patio
for AR Residents
6:00 Therapy Dog Visit HCC
7:00 Silent Meeting S
10:30 Exercise AR
2:00 Bingo AR
3:30 Wellness AR
6:30 After Dinner LL
10:30 Bible Study GR
2:00 Current Events LL
2:00 On the Patio
2:30 Catholic Communion FR
2:30 Bible Study with Bob Hall AR
6:30 Let’s Play Cards AR
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
10:30 Exercise AR
1:00 Minnetrista Bus Trip to
Muncie
3:30 Wellness Assessments with
HTS AR
3:30 Painting with Anita AS
10:30 Exercise AR
2:00 Tom Wright CR
3:15 Reid Presbyterian AR
10:30 Exercise GR
4:00-5:15 Meet the Board of
Trustees CR
6:30 After Dinner LL
7:30 Bus Trip— Shakespeare
Festival, Titus Andronicus
10:30 Bible Study GR
2:00 Cope Center—Turtles AR
2:00 Current Events LL
10:00 Writer’s Group S
10:30 Exercise AR
1:45 Movie GR
3:30 Wellness AR
10:00 Manicures
2:00 Ice Cream Floats GR
10:30 FFC Church
Keith Kendall AR
1:45 Bus trip to the Rose
Garden
4:30 Out to Dinner—El Rodeo
7:00 Silent Meeting S
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
10:30 FFC Church
Nancy Faus Mullen AR
2:00 Father’s Day CR
Music by Tom Walker
10:30 Exercise AR
2:00 Gourmet Club GR
3:30 Wellness AR
10:30 Exercise AR
2:00 Trivia and Popsicles
on the Patio
7:00 Silent Meeting S
6:45 I Love Lucy GR
8:00 Men’s Breakfast CR
Speaker Craig Hopkins
Speaking about raising peacocks
10:30 Exercise AR
2:00 Bingo AR
3:30 Wellness AR
6:30 After Dinner LL
10:30 Bible Study GR
9:30 Bus trip to Garfield Park
Conservatory
2:00 Current Events LL
2:00 Games on the Patio
6:30 Let’s Play Cards AR
7:30 Bus Trip— Shakespeare
Festival, A Midsummer
Night’s Dream
10:00 Writer’s Group S
10:30 Exercise AR
1:45 Movie GR
3:30 Wellness AR
10:00 Hand Massages
2:00 Fudgies and Games
on the Patio
28
29
30
10:30 FFC Church
Barry Cramer AR
2:00 Sundae Sunday GR
10:30 Nigerian Women’s Choir CR
2:00 Morrisson-Reeves Library
Reader AR
3:30 Wellness AR
3:30 Painting with Anita AS
10:30 Exercise AR
2:00 Going Down Memory
Lane—
Speaker—Don Miller AR
7:00 Silent Meeting S
7:00 Yahtzee GR
SR—Sewing Room
AR— Assembly Room
LL—Library Lounge
CR—Community Room
MG—Memorial Garden
S—Solarium
FR– Family Room
FDR- Founders’ Room
RR—Recreation Room
AS—Art Studio
GR—Garden Room
This Calendar is ALIVE.
Watch your mailbox and
the bulletin boards for
additions or changes
throughout the month.
The Courtyards June
SUNDAY
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
6:30
7
10:30
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Church
Exercise
Sunday Stroll
Snack
Daily Chronicles
3:00
4:00
Church
Father’s Day
Celebration
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Church
Exercise
Sunday Stroll
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
6:30
3:00
4:00
Church
Exercise
Happy Birthday
Jack Burrows
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Brain Waves is a
one-to-one brain
stimulation session.
Residents have a
weekly scheduled
time.

Thursday
Friday
1
2
3
4
5
Coffee & Conversation
Sensory
Exercise
Happy Birthday
Doris Hart
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Walks By The Pond
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Brain Waves
Exercise
Book Club
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Coffee & Conversation
Smile Power Day
Exercise
Book Club
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Reminisce about Picnics
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
6:30
Coffee & Conversation
Brain Waves
Exercise
Let’s Take a Walk
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Monday Night Movie
10:00
11:00
1:15
3:00
4:00
6:30
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Nigerian Women’s Choir
CR
Exercise
Going Fishing
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10:00
11:00
1:00
2;00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Trivia Tuesday
Out for A Drive
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Father’s Day Talk
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Brain Waves
Exercise
Tom Wright CR
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
4:00
6:30
Coffee & Conversation
Pampering
Wayne County
Fair Trip
Daily Chronicles
Blue Ribbon Recipes
30
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Brain Waves
Exercise
BINGO
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Weather Watching
Exercise
Book Club
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Pampering
Exercise
Book Club
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
6:30
Coffee & Conversation
Brain Waves
Exercise
Book Club
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Pampering
Exercise
Upsy Daisy Day
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Reminisce About 1950
10:00 Coffee & Conversation
11:00 Brain Waves
1:00
Exercise
2:00 Cope Center AR
3:00
Snack
4:00
Daily Chronicles
6:30
Summertime Memories
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
6:30
Coffee & Conversation
Smells of Summer
Exercise
Underwater Adventures
Snack
Daily Chronicles
6
9:30
10:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Chaplin Service
Exercise
Let’s Walk
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Walks Outside
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Chaplain Service
Exercise
Let’s Take a Walk
Snack
Daily Chronicles
9:30 Coffee & Conversation
12:00 FFC Ride To
Remember
1:00 Exercise
2:00 Betty Picnic Day
3:00 Snack
4:00 Daily Chronicles
20
9:30
10:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
26
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Chaplain Service
Exercise
Backyard Campout
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Coffee & Conversation
In The Kitchen
Exercise
Super Saturday
Snack
Daily Chronicles
13
19
25
10:00
11:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Chaplain Service
Exercise
Book Club
Snack
Daily Chronicles
Saturday
12
18
24
10:00
11:0
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
Brain Waves
Exercise
Let’s Take a Walk
Snack
Daily Chronicles
11
17
23
10:00
11:00
1:15
Coffee & Conversation
Pampering
Exercise
Book Club
Snack
Daily Chronicles
10
16
29
10:30
Birth-To-Five
Brain Waves
Exercise
Happy Birthday
June Gwyn
Snack
Daily Chronicles
9
22
28
10:30
1:00
2:00
Wednesday
15
21
10:30
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Tuesday
8
14
10:30
2:00
Monday
Coffee & Conversation
In The Kitchen
Exercise
Painting by the Pond
Snack
Daily Chronicles
27
9:30
10:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
Coffee & Conversation
In the Kitchen
Exercise
Sucker Saturday
Snack
Daily Chronicles
A truly rich man is one whose children
run into his arms when his hands
are empty. -Author Unknown