Thanks for the Memory 12 May 2019 raises £1,200

Dave Egerton Big Band Concert back for a 6th Year!

We had a great afternoon with a lively audience and once more raised money to help those with dementia.

In total we raised £1,200 with half going to the Alzheimer’s Society and half to Mid Cheshire Hospital Charity Dementia fund.

We are pleased to say Ageless Ukes are also joined us again this year at Cranage Hall Hotel.

 We are also really pleased to say this concert was also sponsored by

Carrie-ann Digital Marketing and Innovas

 

Thanks for the Memory Woolston Social Club Warrington 2018

Dave Egerton Big Band Concert was at Woolston Social Club on October 7th 2018
 
This was our first Thanks for the Memory concert there and we were joined by Sixpence Stage School.
 
We had a great afternoon and raised £ 350. We hope to back again next year!
 
Woolston Social Club: 50 Manchester Road
Woolston, Warrington WA1 4AD
 
All proceeds went to the Alzheimers’ Society

Thanks for the Memory 2018 – May 13 – another great afternoon

Dave Egerton Big Band Concert was back for a 5th Year!

We had a great afternoon once more hosted by Cranage Hall who have supported us now from the beginning.Once more the audience joined in singing and dancing along with the music.

We are pleased to say Ageless Ukes are also joined us again this year.

Over £1,000 was raised in total

 

Proceeds went to the Alzheimers’ Society & Mid-Cheshire Hospitals Charity supporting those with Dementia

 

Thanks for the Memory Big Band Concert at Cranage Hall May 15th 2016

Thanks for the Memory Big Band Concert
was held on 15th May from 2 – 5pm
at Cranage Hall Hotel and Conference Centre Cheshire

Another superb afternoon of Big Band music and songs from the 1920’s to 1980’s. Hosted by the Cranage Hall Hotel and Conference Centre and featuring the superb Dave Egerton Band.

With music from Glenn Miller to the Beach Boys; Fred Astaire to Vera Lynn to Van Morrison; Frank Sinatra to Smokey Robinson, and Stevie Wonder.

Great news Cockney Carol and Ageless Ukes who played in our 2015 Variety Show joined us again to play at Cranage.

This year we raised £1,000 to support Congleton Museum in its work with dementia, and the Alzheimer’s Society.

Photos of Thanks for the Memory Variety Show 22 November 2015

Our first Thanks for the Memory Variety Show was held on 22nd November 2015 from 2 - 5pm in the theatre at The Winsford Academy, Cheshire

It was a superb afternoon of entertainment with music through the years from the Dave Egerton Big Band, Cockney Carol and the Ageless Ukes, Sam Lyon, Spotlight Glee Club, Winsford Education Partnership Choir;  and Music, Drama and Dance groups from the Winsford Academy.

For more information on our next concert please contact:
E:ticket.sales@thanksforthememory.org.uk
T: 01606 551122 M:07710 603 952 Tw: @Memory_Moments 

Thanks for the Memory Big Band Concert at Cranage Hall -10 May 2015

Thanks for the Memory 2015 50 years of Music 1920's - 1970's with Dave Egerton Big Band

The Concert was held on Sunday May 10th 2pm Hosted by Cranage Hall Hotel & Conference Centre

We had a great afternoon of Big Band music and songs from the 1920’s to 1970’s with the Dave Egerton Big Band bringing back the memories and laughter of the past.



This year writer/singer/radio host, Jan Eberle, also supported us. Jan is the youngest daughter of singer & music pioneer Ray Eberle. Ray, of course, is remembered as the original male vocalist for the famed Glenn Miller Civilian Orchestra from 1938-1942. 

Jan strongly believes that: ‘music is the universal language that transcends all. While time and disease may rob us of so much, including our memory, it is music that knows no bounds.’

The audience sat back while we took them down memory lane to the Swing era, from Glenn Miller to the Beatles; Fred Astaire to Vera Lynn to Van Morrison; Frank Sinatra to The Temptations … and much much more.

Through this great afternoon of entertainment we raised money for Nantwich Dementia Friends Group and the Alzheimer’s Society.

The concert was sponsored by Cranage Hall Hotel and Conference Centre and Oakmere Wealth Management

 

 For information on upcoming concerts and to book tickets for events please contact:

W: www.thanksforthememory.org.uk | E: tim.ashcroft@thanksforthememory.org.uk
T: 07710 603 952 Tw: @Memory_Moments

 

Dame Vera Lynn also supported us again and wished us luck.

This year writer/singer/radio host, Jan Eberle, also supported us. Jan is the youngest daughter of singer & music pioneer Ray Eberle

Jan strongly believes that: ‘music is the universal language that transcends all. While time and disease may rob us of so much, including our memory, it is music that knows no bounds.’

Ray, of course, is remembered as the original male vocalist for the famed Glenn Miller Civilian Orchestra from 1938-1942.

The audience sat back while we took them down memory lane to the Swing era, from Glenn Miller to the Beatles; Fred Astaire to Vera Lynn to Van Morrison; Frank Sinatra to The Temptations … and much much more.

Nantwich Museum

Through this great afternoon of entertainment we raised money for Nantwich Dementia Friends Group and the Alzheimer’s Society.

The concert was sponsored by Cranage Hall Hotel and Conference Centre and Oakmere Wealth Management

 For information on upcoming concerts and to book tickets for events please contact:

W: www.thanksforthememory.org.uk | E: tim.ashcroft@thanksforthememory.org.uk
T: 07710 603 952 Tw: @Memory_Moments

Thanks for the Memory Concert a great success!

Big Band Music and Songs from the 1930’s, 40’s, 50’s and 60’s from the Dave Egerton Band.
A letter of
support from Dame Vera Lynn.
Many of the audience coming from care homes, some with dementia, and all singing along to songs they thought they had long forgotten.

Thanks for the Memory’ was a fantastic event. We also received a letter of support from Dame Vera Lynn which was read out before we sang ‘ There’ll be Blue Birds over the White Cliffs ofDover’ , and of course ‘We’ll meet again’. Having started with music from 1926 we finished with the Beatles and once more all sang along to Hey Jude!!! It was inspiring to see so many people there, many accompanied by their carers, clearly enjoying themselves, laughing and singing along.

During the interval Sam Lyon, a local singer song-writer, played songs from the 1960’s.

Chris Daffy ran the raffle and we raised in total £1300 that afternoon and this will be donated 50/50 to the Alzheimer’s Society and Nantwich Museum Dementia Friendship Group.

General Manager of Cranage Hall, Richard Mansell, said: “We are absolutely delighted to be able to support ‘Thanks for the Memory’ and be part of the inaugural concert series”. It is now planned to repeat this next year.

So … what next … well … we are planning put on another Thanks for the Memory concert later this year, in Nottinghamshire, which will be hosted by Eastwood Hall Hotel – a sister hotel to Cranage Hall. We are planning a charity dinner in the autumn at Cranage Hall to also raise money; we are already booked for next year to repeat this back at Cranage Hall: and we are investigating other opportunities to use the power of music to help those with dementia and to raise money to help them.

So many people helped to make this happen and we hope others will also want to put on similar events. Please contact us if we can collaborate.

For more information please contact:
W: www.thanksforthememory.org.uk | E: tim.ashcroft@thanksforthememory.org.uk
T: 01606 551122 | M: 07710 603 952 | Tw: @Memory_Moments

 All photos are by Cheshire Media Academy.

For more photos please follow this link.

Why Dame Vera is still top of the pops in Nantwich

Forces’ sweetheart Dame Vera Lynn is the all-time favourite music star amongst people with dementia in Nantwich, according to the local museum staff.

The White Cliffs of Dover – which was recorded in 1942 a year after the Battle of Britain – and other songs by Dame Vera are the biggest hits with members of the Nantwich Museum’s Dementia Friendship Group.

“Everyone in the group has different tastes in music, from opera and classical to more modern beats, but Dame Vera has proved the most popular,” says museum manager Kate Dobson. “Perhaps it’s because the songs are so evocative.”

Nantwich Museum

Kate and her group of volunteers host monthly tea parties which allow people with memory loss to journey back into the past – while making friends and having fun along the way. While many museums run reminiscence sessions, most are aimed at the elderly. Nantwich is unusual in running a group specifically for people with dementia, says Kate.

The group started six months ago. “It’s a completely new way of working for us and we are not experts by any means, but we have had training from the Alzheimer’s Society,” she adds. “We were nervous at first we’d say or do the wrong thing but we needn’t have worried, it’s a very relaxed atmosphere.”

The group started six months ago. “It’s a completely new way of working for us and we are not experts by any means, but we have had training from the Alzheimer’s Society,” she adds. “We were nervous at first we’d say or do the wrong thing but we needn’t have worried, it’s a very relaxed atmosphere.”

Each session has a different theme each time but music has proved particularly popular and has the added benefit of encouraging participation by people with limited speech. Other activities have included biscuit decorating and crafts.

However things don’t always turn out as expected. “We did holidays one month and thought everyone would talk about the seaside when in fact their memories were of more far-flung and glamorous locations like America and Australia. It turned out the group were very well travelled and one member was a former professional ice hockey player who had toured the world.”

The museum’s permanent exhibitions also attract some interest, in particular the collection of Victorian boots and shoes as some members can recall their parents wearing similar footwear. Amongst the temporary exhibitions, photography has proved a talking point, particularly a display by the local camera club. The museum has also commissioned a unique ‘object dialogue box’ from artist Karl Foster which will be revealed soon, and which contains objects linked to the items in its collection.

Not all reflections are happy though. “One time we had an exhibition of children’s drawings which included a picture of the outside of a house,” adds Kate. “One man pointed to the closed doors and told us, ‘That’s how dementia feels’.

“People do get emotional and can go from happy to sad within the space of a couple of hours. The good thing is that everyone wants to come back.”

You can download this article here:

Why Dame Vera is still top of the pops in Nantwich (595 KB)


Our Dementia Friendship group provides support to many people locally.  The Thanks for the Memory Big Band Concert’ on May 11th is raising funds to assist us and the Alzheimer’s Society. Your support is really appreciated.

Kate Dobson – Museum Manager | Nantwich Museum, Pillory Street, Nantwich, Cheshire CW5 5BQ | Tel: 01270 627104
www.nantwichmuseum.org.uk | Follow us on twitter: https://twitter.com/NantwichMuseum | Nantwich Museum Trust Ltd is a Registered Charity number 509386

Living well with Lewy Body Dementia

When I was originally diagnosed with early onset Lewy Body Dementia, I confess that it came as quite a shock as I had only ever heard of Senile Dementia.

However after losing my job, we moved back to the family home in the North East, where I had to be diagnosed all over again because the first hospital had lost all my notes. But in many ways, this second diagnosis was done in a more caring and sensitive way, so much so that I was given the advice needed to start all over again living a new life with dementia

This new consultant told us to go to the local Alzheimer’s Society office where we would get all of the support and advice needed to get us through the minefield of dementia services. From here I became a volunteer with the Society, and spent a long time travelling around the UK doing talks about living well with Lewy body dementia, and this was something that was unexpected.

This led to my proudest moment with the Alzheimer’s Society , the day when I was asked to speak in Westminster at the launch of the Governments Cross Party Group on Dementia, something I look back with immense pride.

Speaking about this illness has also I feel helped my try to remove the stigma we come across with dementia, each day. The more we speak about it the quicker we remove the stigma  

However looking back to when I was working I found it difficult to speak in large committees let alone rooms with a large audience, and yet for some reason I was now enjoying doing something alien and was getting started on a totally new life helping others. How this can happen I simply don’t understand. 

I was also given a lot of support and help by my wife and daughter, both of whom would not let me sit and worry about what may or may not be coming in the future

My Consultant also gave me some advice to help me get started on my own. One was to write my own life story, as a way of keeping active, because by this stage I was starting to struggle to write and had problems using my computer.

This also helped others including my family and grandchildren to understand who I was and where I came from as much of my early life was unknown even to my wife. At first I found this very hard, especially when trying to remember things from the past, but eventually it became easier, and started to take over my life.

Another thing I was told to do was to write a diary, as I was having problems with very graphic nightmares during the night. The idea was that I could keep this diary explaining what was happening, in the hope that something would come out of this in the way of an explanation.

 I must have been slightly naive at first because I chose an online blog, not thinking that anyone would be looking let alone read it, but I got a shock after many months, when I found a button which said audience, and when I looked it was being read around the world. On one particularly bad day, I pressed the wrong button and deleted the whole blog, something which was devastating.

But I was lucky because all of the pages had been written in WORD, before being posted on the blog. So I had two choices either forget it or start again

I chose the second as I had got so much out of doing this blog, and not just that but other people had thanked me because they had learnt so much about this illness through me writing my own problems down

Since then I have never looked back, and today it has been read by over 38,000 people in 104 countries, something which is quite humbling, but if  am helping others I have achieved more that I set out to do.

I am also very proud to help out at local Universities, where I speak to graduate nurses etc, about my illness, in the hope that they will be able to have a better understanding of dementia, and learn to treat us with the same dignity and respect that they would expect from others   

I have heard many people say that they suffer from this illness, but I don’t think that is the right words to use. Yes I struggle with this, but that’s because I am losing control over everything I have learnt throughout my life, but to me that’s totally different from suffering from dementia, as I am not in pain.

Through working with charities like the Alzheimer’s society and writing my blog, I have learnt to adjust and live well with this illness, but perhaps I had the right support and help in the first place, and this has stayed with me throughout my illness, and meeting likeminded people on my travels has made a vast difference  

I still hang on to my favourite hobby of photography which works well on good days,  but it’s a learning curve and it’s amazing how many people with this illness live that hobby as they really feel as if they can achieve something

My advice to anyone getting a diagnosis of dementia, no matter which type, is to go out and enjoy life while you can, and remember that no two people are the same or go through the illness with the same problems or symptoms.

If you are diagnosed early enough, take each day as it comes and like me try to do something new, you may fail, but you may get a nice surprise

Ken

 

This is the next in a series of articles about living with dementia. Please follow: @Memory_Moments to keep posted as they appear. Also previous articles are available on the website in the news section.

You can download this article here:

Lving well with Lewy Body Dementia Living well with Lewy Body Dementia (1166 KB)

Living not Suffering with Alzhemiers – Tommy’s story in 3 Parts

I’m Tommy Dunne I’m 61 years old and I live with Dementia.

This is a summary of my story from the last few weeks. As told from the Inside!

Part One: As told from the inside – out

I thought you had Alzheimer’s not Dementia a lot of people will say so let’s clear up this misunderstanding straight away:

Alzheimer’s does not stand alone it is Dementia and Dementia is the umbrella that all the others sit under.

Next the saying that we suffer with Alzheimer’s or Dementia.

We do Not suffer. There is no physical pain. You do not have a headache or migraine symptoms. You are very frustrated and lonely yes, but there is no physical pain – so please stop saying we suffer from it. It causes fear to people who are worried about getting Dementia.

Since I learnt to talk again (when you are diagnosed with Dementia you go into a shell) I was able to tell people and the medical profession what it is like to live with Dementia and the loneliness that goes with it.

When you are in a full room it can be the loneliest place on earth. 

People will talk over you, around you, about you but never to you.  Then people used to come up to my wife while I was standing or sitting by her and say to her “how’s Tommy it must be very hard for you” and “how are you coping with him”  “I don’t know how you do it?”.

It was around this time that I realised that when you have Dementia you developed a super power, the power to become invisible in public.

Sometimes I felt as if I was at my own wake and when I heard my wife saying “I feel as if I’ve lost him I’m grieving and want my Tommy back” my heart use to break, I mean I don’t feel any different a bit stranger but not different.

So when did I start to get my life back? It began at a meeting of Service Users and Carers in 2012 (a service user is a new name for patient i.e. I use the services of Merseycare Mossley Hill hospital therefore I’m a Service User (S/U).

For the rest of part one of my story: http://bit.ly/1hXQPID

Part Two: the Carers Story By Joyce Dunne my Wife

I first noticed a change in Tom about 10 years ago, both of us had full time jobs so I brushed the little things off as a bit of stress from his work as he had a stressful job.

But as time went on Tom became more and more withdrawn and he was becoming more absentminded, silly things at first like he would put the milk in the microwave, leave the lights and TV on, put the bolts on the front door but leave the door open, he even went to work one day with different shoes on each feet.

Then over the last 5 years he never spoke to me unless I asked him anything and even then the answers would be short. When I used to ask him was anything wrong he used to snap at me – ‘Nothings wrong why – would anything be wrong just leave me alone!’

… The good news is you don’t have bipolar. The bad news is you have young on set dementia and the early signs are its Alzheimer’s. I felt a strange relief that would explain a lot of things, Tom just looked dazed. The psychiatrist then said I’ll leave that with you for a day or so to sink in then we’ll talk.

Then another bomb shell hit me. Tom had stopped paying the bills and was hiding the unopened letters in his draw under the bed so I was shocked to see that we were in dept I felt physically sick Tom could not understand it and said put them back. …

Don’t get me wrong, life is not a bed of roses living with Tom he can be a pain sometimes and a bit snappy because when he thinks he’s right, he’s right but now I just walk out of the room for a minute and then when I come back in he is as right as rain.

I know I’ll never get the Tom that walked out the door all those years ago back but he has taught me that even if he is only here in body he can still hear me even when the day comes that he cannot answer me he has told me he will hear me.

For the full story of Part 2: http://bit.ly/1ce1V7Y

Part Three: People don’t know how to talk to people with dementia, they don’t realise we still have our intelligence.

‘Alzheimer’s, I thought they said Alzheimer’s that can’t be, I can think, I can function, does this mean I’m going to be put in a home and have to spend the rest of life sitting in a chair in a home where my family would visit me every week, and then that week would go to every fortnight, then every holiday.’

Fear ran through my veins, my blood ran cold, I imagined being still able to think and not being able to communicate with my family, and the only words they would speak to me was “are you OK, you look well”  “its nice here, nice and cosy” and then being given a pair of bed socks and a bunch of grapes.

Believe me, there’s a lot rushes through a brain that’s not supposed to be working at this time.

I withdrew into a shell and would stay in bed till late, watch daytime TV (the same things over and over) and go to bed early. This is what I thought you did when you had Alzheimer’s, you could not contribute to society.

I’ve heard it over and over again, You suffer with dementia and that was the one thing that terrified me, that I was going to be suffering all the time, but as time went on I never had any pain, so I asked other people who attend some of the support groups I helped out at if they suffered, without fail everyone of them said they did not suffer.

When I’m in a room full of people I know, I feel the loneliest person in the world, because people will talk over me, around me, about me, But never to me.

Yet when I’m in a room with strangers, they talk to me, until I say the magic words “I’ve got dementia” and hey presto I turn invisible, Yes you gain the power to become invisible when you get diagnosed with dementia.

People don’t know how to talk to people with dementia, they don’t realise we still have our intelligence. You see it with people in wheelchairs, people talk to the chair. With a blind person they speak to the guide dog, but dementia is an invisible illness because we look well.

Tom

This is a summary of the series of 3 articles over the last few weeks. Please follow: @Memory_Moments to keep posted and to catch up on all the articles.