News

denise holmen, queenswood librarian, retires

Posted on July 29, 2009 by Stefan Jonsson, Programs and Marketing Coordinator.

Denise started at Queenswood 8 years ago under the direction of Sr. Audrey Beauvais, ssa, her mentor and predecessor.  Since then, she's become a fixture in the library, offering us all her caring guidance and support.  The library is filled with nearly 13,000 items, offering guests and library members a diversity of topics including spirituality and religion, biography and autobiography, psychology, social justice, leadership and fiction.  Her constant goal has been to make the library a welcoming and enriching resource for personal and spiritual growth.  We'll greatly miss Denise -- especially her warm smile and sense of humour -- but she'll continue to be part of the Queenswood community as a library volunteer.  At the same time, we welcome our new librarian, Janet Frost, who is eager to continue in the work and tradition of our previous librarians.

We invite you to leave messages of gratitude and appreciation for Denise's years of service to the Queenswood community below.

caregiver burnout

Posted on July 20, 2009 by Stefan Jonsson, Programs and Marketing Coordinator.

Caregiver burnout is a state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion that may be accompanied by a change in attitude--from positive and caring to negative and unconcerned. Burnout can occur when caregivers don't get the help they need or if they try to do more than they are able--either physically or financially. Caregivers who are burned out may experience fatigue, stress, anxiety, and depression. Many caregivers also feel guilty if they spend time on themselves rather than on their ill or elderly loved ones.

Read the rest of this article from U.S. News here.

Photo by Janie Jolley.

meditative walks

Posted on July 17, 2009 by Stefan Jonsson, Programs and Marketing Coordinator

Walk your troubles away by following the tranquil path of a labyrinth

By Joe Rayment for Chatelaine magazine

Walking is more than just exercise. It’s a part of our day we set aside to think and shed the stress of busy lives. So why not join a growing movement and take its relaxing aspects to the next level? Walk a labyrinth.

It’s not a maze
First thing’s first: You can’t get lost in a labyrinth. It doesn’t involve hedges, dead ends or obstacles; it’s not a maze. Instead, there’s only one path, often marked only by paint or stones, that winds toward the centre of a pattern. To leave the labyrinth, you follow the same path that you walked to get in.

It’s a form of meditation
Labyrinths even have some of the same health benefits as meditation. Studies done by Herbert Benson, an associate professor at the Harvard Medical School and director emeritus of the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, show that walking a labyrinth can lower your blood pressure, help insomnia and promote fertility. But what you’ll notice immediately is how walking a labyrinth relaxes you. The clear, winding path encourages you to notice the repetition of your steps and your breathing. Essentially, it encourages a state of meditation. “I think this kind of meditation helps because it gives the body something to do while the mind is thinking about other things,” says Holly Nelson–Becker, a University of Kansas professor who teaches meditation as a way for social workers to overcome emotional fatigue.

It’s easy, even for beginners
You can walk it any way you like – you’ll figure out what’s best for you. “Some people just walk it with no expectations. And if you’re a beginner, that’s probably the best way to do it,” says Diana Ng of Minerva Innovations Consultancy, who built a labyrinth in partnership with the city of Surrey, BC. Typically, there are three phases to walking a labyrinth: release, receive and return. As you enter, stop and try to clear your mind by focusing on the moment. Open yourself up to the environment surroundings as you walk to the centre. Pay attention to the movement of your legs, the clothes pressing against your skin, the smell of the air, and accept whatever it brings to mind. Stop at the centre and continue this for as long as you like. On the way out, reflect on your life outside the labyrinth in light of what you just experienced. Your experience will partly depend on what you’d like to get out of it. Some people go in with a question in mind. Others will use it simply as a chance to reflect and unwind.

It’s pretty commonplace
You can often find labyrinths near churches, parks or health-care facilities. Labyrinthlocator.com has an extensive list and can pinpoint the closest one based on your address, postal code or city.
 


Visit the Queenswood labyrinth any day or time.  It's an outside 9-circuit classical labyrinth enjoyed by all.  Our sincere gratitude continues to go out to the volunteers who constructed it in 2002.

restore caregiving to medical science, harvard prof urges

Posted on July 12, 2009 by Kate Fagan Taylor, Executive Director

Queenswood's focus on caregivers was chosen by the community because we are at a crucial time in the development of the art of caregiving.  I was glad to see that Harvard University's Arthur Kleinman wrote a thought-provoking article on this subject for Saturday's Globe and Mail.

Arthur Kleinman is professor of medical anthropology at Harvard University.  He proposes that a reform of the culture of contemporary biomedicine is what is needed:

"to prepare for a career of caregiving, medical students and young doctors clearly require something besides scientific and technological training. Indeed, current professional education can even be seen as enabling the physician as a technical expert, while disabling him or her as a caregiver.

To overcome this trend, we must incorporate the humanities into medical training as a means of rekindling and deepening those human experiences of imagination and commitment that are essential for caregiving, and resisting the bureaucratization of values and emotional responses that causes failure in the physician's art. In essence, the practitioner must come to feel that the art of caregiving is as much at stake as the science and technology of diagnosis and treatment."

We're hoping that Queenswood can be a crucible for this transformation!

Read full artice from the Globe and Mail

richard leblanc shares his passion at queenswood

posted on June 26, 2009 by Kate Fagan Taylor, Executive Director

Last night Richard LeBlanc was our featured guest at Passionate Lives and shared about the exciting next steps for the Woodwyn Farm Project.  More than 100 guests joined in the dinner and dialogue to learn more about the development of this therapeutic community, which will help to provide a real solution - "a hand up, not a handout" for hundreds of homeless people in Victoria. Queenswood is proud to be a supporter of this project because it addresses several of the most pressing social issues we face today-- the ecology,  homelessness, and belief in citizen-led change.  We're happy to be donating the net proceeds of the evening to Woodwyn Farm.

Richard shared the long-term plan for the Woodwyn Farm property in Saanich, which is now legally in the care of the Homelfullness Society.  It includes many exciting therapeutic elements including a market garden, orchards, beekeeping, berry fields, horse training, the restoration of the creeks on the property, and the cultivation of traditional native camas. Caring for the land will be the focus for the community of formerly homeless men and women. Eating food that they themselves grow will be part of the physical, emotional and spiritual healing process for participants. (For more details on the proven value of this therapeutic model click here to check out an article from Monday magazine last year.) Richard reported that work and repairs on the property are moving ahead with the enthusiastic help of more than 60 volunteers at the last workparty.  The final elements of the program now are being determined, including an off-site residence for the first group to live in community while working on the farm.   Congratulations to Richard, the Homefulness Society Board, and all the many volunteers and supporters who are making this dream a reality by daring to, as the project's slogan says, "believe in people!"