Art of Dying Art of Dying_Volume III_joomag | Page 37
chatted about our families, our friends and our backgrounds. Before I moved
here, I only
thought of
all the things
older people
couldn’t do but
now I’m here,
I see endless
possibilities.
2, which showed me just how much she went through when SORES, RESIDENT AT HUMANITAS HOME FOR
THE ELDERLY
‘I see endless possibilities.’
“I really enjoy living here,” says Sores, who is one of the six
students who currently has an apartment at Humanitas. “It’s
such a warm and friendly place."
“Living here is a win-win situation for us students. There’s
a shortage of student accommodation in Holland and it’s
also often very expensive but as students live here rent-free
in very nice apartments, I don’t need to worry about my
financial situation. And there’s always someone to talk to."
“Living at Humanitas has changed how I look at older
people. Before I moved here, I only thought of all the things
older people couldn’t do but now I’m here, I see endless
possibilities. Elderly people are just like me and my friends,
only older."
“Soon after I moved in, one of the members of staff asked if I
would help a 91-year-old lady, Marty, with her iPad. Our iPad
sessions soon developed into long conversations, where we
Recently, Marty told me about her experiences in World War
she was young."
“To me, my friendship with this lady highlights just how
worthwhile it can be to spend time with people of an
older generation and to talk to them about their lives and
experiences. I look at my friend and neighbour now and no
longer see a 91-year-old woman – I see my good friend who
has so many different aspects to her life.”
WENDY GLASS has been a magazine journalist since she
left school, working first on the legendary teenage magazine Jackie
and then working on a selection of magazines published by DC
Thomson & Co Ltd, including Annabel, Babycare & Pregnancy and
My Weekly before moving, 25 years ago, into the world of freelance
journalism. Wendy is proud to be a regular contributor to, amongst
others, The Scots Magazine, My Weekly and The People’s Friend.
Wendy lives in Kirriemuir, Scotland, a small town at the foot of the
Angus Glens, with her husband, teenage daughter and two dogs.
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