Kristen Dixon spent a lot of time with her grandmother when she was younger, but dementia robbed Jeanne Corby of the ability to enjoy the kinds of activities they once shared so easily.
The two find a welcome reprieve at the Musical Memories Cafe, inside an old bakery turned performing arts venue, where people eat, sing and dance together.
The cafe, about 20 miles south of Buffalo, is a social gathering space twice a month for isolated older adults, those with dementia and their loved ones.
โItโs a nice memory to have with her, especially since itโs hard to make any new memories,โ said Dixon, 40, a medical accounts manager who lives in West Seneca.
Many cafe visitors walk slowly, use a cane or a walker, or arrive in wheelchairs as they make their way to the tables at the West Falls Center for the Arts. They listen to live music for an hour, eat lunch and commune together.
โThe music makes them reminisce about their lives,โ said musician Doug Yeomans, who started his set last Wednesday with โHere Comes the Sun.โ
โYou know when youโre at that age and youโre thinking youโve got more years behind you than you have in front of you? I think it means a lot to them to just get to remember,โ Yeomans said.
For regulars with Alzheimerโs and other kinds of dementia, listening to music stimulates their minds.
โTheyโll sit together, and theyโll remember the verse of the song. Theyโll sing every verse of the song. Theyโll clap,โ said Carolyn Panzica, executive director of the nonprofit arts center, which has operated the memory cafe since 2018.
โFor that hour, they get some of that old joy back.โ
The latest cafe lunch included pulled pork sandwiches, macaroni and cheese, salad and dessert. The music, food and fellowship are all free.
The need is great
In New York, Alzheimerโs is a growing crisis. The state…
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