With this newly acquired skillset, Julian Suresh, an administrative manager, plans to customise reminiscence-based sessions to better foster connections and shared experiences among the senior residents in the Welfare Home where he works.
Zoe Ang, a staff at Ang Mo Kio Methodist Church, hopes to impart the knowledge to her younger colleagues so that they can better engage with the shut-in seniors in the church. She quipped, “Personally, I’ll change the way I talk to my husband, a young senior!”
For caregiver Jillian Lee whose father lives with dementia, she learnt that reminiscence could be a way to communicate the gospel, and that there can be expressions of emotions like joy amidst sadness even when a loved one has cognitive decline.
MWS will provide the participants with practicum opportunities at its Senior Care Centre and Active Ageing Centres to hone good practices and share in a community of learners.
By interweaving spirituality with reminiscence, meaningful relationships can be forged across the generations. These experiences deepen faith and spur Christians to reach out to seniors with empathy, respect and love. Truly, the way to future-proof the ageing Church is to remember God’s covenant with us. For he has promised that he will never forsake us, that “even to your old age I am he, and to grey hairs I will carry you. I have made, and I will bear; I will carry and will save (Isaiah 46:4)”.