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Sunday, April 19, 2015

Windham Police Department honored at Sea Dogs double header - By Michelle Libby



Last Saturday, The Portland Sea Dogs held their season opener, a double header against the Reading Fightin Phils. The night was in honor of hometown heroes and the Windham Police Department was selected to be the honor guard for the night. Members (left to right) were Officer Eric Quatrano (guard), Officer Josh Katuzny (American flag), Det. Gene Gallant (Maine State flag), Sgt. Jason Andrews (Commander, rear of formation), Officer Matt Cyr (Windham PD unit flag), Officer Jason Burke (Law Enforcement Officer’s Memorial Flag), Det. Rob Hunt (guard) . 
 
In addition to the honor guard, three Windham Police officers were nominated as hometown heroes. Friend and family from the police department, including soon to be new police chief  Kevin Schofield and his family attended the game, in support of Rob Hunt, Matt Cyr and Paul Cox (who couldn’t be there.). The three honorees were recognized for their work on the case involving the threats to the school back in December. 

“It’s nice someone nominated us,” said Cry, who had never been to a baseball game before.
“It’s a nice feeling to be able to recognize the Windham Police Department in this manner. I was just one of the pieces to that cog,” Hunt said. He noted that between patrol, criminal investigations division, Maine Computer Crimes Task Force, the care was able to come to a swift and safe conclusion.
“I live in town. My kids are a part of the school. There’s a level of intimacy to it. There was an urge, need, a desire to get it solves so the kids could get back to school and get on with their education,” Hunt concluded. 

Other public safety officers were recognized at the game from Raymond Fire/Rescue Department (Nic Davis, Ben Fox, Hunter Holt) and Windham Fire Department (Mike Benecke, Dale Doughty, Steve Stackhouse). 
 
The Sea Dogs won the first game 4-2, but didn’t win the second of the double header. 












Community Day at Mancehester School showcases volunteerism - By Michelle Libby


Manchester School celebrated Community Day on Wednesday. This day is a celebration of what kids can accomplish when working toward a mission. The theme of the event is “kids caring for the community,” said teacher and organizer Stacy Sanborn. “We keep getting better at it. It’s amazing what the kids take with them after they’re done [at Manchester].” 
 
All year, the classes at the school have worked on projects from taking care of the Presumpscot River to the Maine State Society for the Protection of Animals to birds and Veterans. 

Keynote speaker, high school principal, Christopher Howell, said that it was his 10th Community Day. “I’ve never missed the chance to celebrate the community and all the things that happen here at Manchester School,” he said. “Our community depends on you.” 

Howell also issued a challenge to the students and parents in the room. “Listen with your ears and look with your eyes. Be aware of people around you,” he said. He encouraged the students to get involved and have fun. If they find someone in need, they should find an adult and do something for them. 

The other is what he calls “stealth community service”. Do something for someone else without them knowing it was you. He gave the example of paying for someone’s dinner at a restaurant. 

Two AmeriCorps volunteers who work at the REAL School and are now volunteering at Manchester more than 40 hours a week, spoke. “Our students have taken ownership of these things,” Robert Deakin said. He told the kids that he has a few things he tries to do every day. “Try to make someone laugh, say thank you, help someone and do the best you can do every day,” Deakin said.  

Local law enforcement and veterans were honored including Game Warden Pete Herring, who patrols the area. “I work with landowners keeping the land open for you folks,” he said. Eighty-five percent of land in Maine is privately owned. Those landowners often open their land for people to recreate on. “It’s not a right,” he told the student. “It’s a privilege. If it’s abused it goes away.” He also mentioned that this is “baby animal season”. He encouraged the kids to leave animals alone, even if it looks like they may be without their mother. 
 
Teacher Sabrina Nickerson was named the 2015 Educator of the Year from the American Legion post 148. Pam Lantz, the former guidance counselor, was acknowledged for her help with the community gardens. 

Another class donated $751 to the MSSPA for the care of two horses, Penny and Marley. Officer Matt Cyr organized a drive for non-food items for the food pantry in Windham. A competition between the fourth and fifth grades was fierce. With a tie being declared, just before a last minute donation from a fourth grader put that class over the top. All together the school collected 2,888 items. 

“Isn’t this place awesome,” said superintendent Sandy Prince, who reiterated Howell’s challenge of being kind and doing random acts of kindness. 

The event that started at 7:30 a.m. with breakfast for 270 people, ended with the announcement that principal Cindy Curtis will be retiring after 10 years at Manchester School. Some of the students that were in the school when Curtis took over, have gone on to the military or college. She loves to see what becomes of the students. “It has been an honor. I will be watching,” she finished. 









"Let's Dance" a family's journey with Alzheimer's - By Walter Lunt


Judy Gorman looked deep into her mother’s eyes. There was an expression of vague familiarity mixed with confusion and fear. The elderly lady was afflicted with the most common, and all too familiar form of dementia, Alzheimer’s disease. Nancy Leonard, 82, arrived in Maine during the late fall of 2013 from Florida, where she had lived for ten years. Her light clothing spoke of the warmer clime to which she was accustomed, but she had refused to wear a coat. Her new home was with daughter Judy and her husband Mike Gorman in Gray. Both knew of her illness but welcomed the reunion.

Judy remembered her mother’s arrival with the clarity of a vivid dream. In Florida her mom had been subjected to a double nightmare: While debilitated with Alzheimer’s, a caretaker had assumed control of her finances, including social security benefits and a pension. Further, the caretaker had placed her house under a reverse mortgage. A neighbor of Nancy’s had contacted the family in Maine, who then had to convince Nancy to “go on a vacation in Maine.”

Although one option for the Gorman’s would be to arrange for care in a suitable facility, such as assisted living, both felt that compassion and care would best come from home. 

“Mike and I didn’t really consider any other option,” Judy told the Eagle. With the loss of her mother’s finances, there were still pharmaceutical and medical expenses to cover. Judy would stay in the home to care for her mother. Mike owns and operates Gorman’s Automotive Repair in Windham.

“At first, we envisioned a fresh start for Mom filled with the love and support of her immediate family,” said Judy.

But they were naïve. First, Nancy’s obsession for routine, typical of Alzheimer’s patients, often did not meet the daily living habits of the busy Gorman household. Then came the anger and rebellion. Mealtime became a battle zone. There were loud protests over food choice, resulting in dishes being thrown and demands for a change in menu, including Twinkies for breakfast.

But it was safety that worried family members the most. Nancy would often refuse to use her walker, or a cane. She fell at least twice, fortunately with no serious injuries. Round the clock monitoring became the norm. The house had to be, for lack of a better term, “childproofed.” 

Gates were installed in doorways before bedtime, as Nancy tended to wander in the night, often re-arranging furniture and knick-knacks and turning on lights.

Household items, such as important papers, keys or lotion began to disappear, showing up days or weeks later, usually in Nancy’s bedroom.

And all the while, Nancy insisted on returning to her home, at one point threatening to walk to Florida. “Finally, we had to tell her we were in Florida and that this was her home – we had just painted her walls.” Despite the obvious snow, ice and cold outside, “she bought it,” Judy recalled. “I felt guilty about the lies, but it brought peace to our family, and it made her calm.”

Feeling impatient, even exasperated, the Gorman’s consulted doctors and specialists,…”but really, they don’t know anything either. VNA hospice was our saving grace, along with a number of understanding and helpful friends.”

The hardest part, according to Judy, was watching my mom “travel backwards in time. “… (her) maturity and intellect regressed through middle age and even into her teens, at which time she even started hitting on boys.” 

Nancy was uncomfortable and unsure of her connection with the people she now lived with, and seemed only vaguely aware that she was part of a family. Was she a sister, cousin, the mother or live-in guest? On some level she understood there was special connection. 

One day Judy gave her mother a photo of the family. She had carefully labeled each image with a name. “She carried it with her everywhere,” Judy recalled, “pointing out to herself and to visitors the name of each individual. It was like she was desperately trying to hang on to a reality.”

The days were filled with emotional highs and lows, one minute sad, the next chatty and busy. “There were days,” Judy remembers, “when Mom would almost ‘wake up’ and live in the present, but it would be brief.” The time around late afternoon would often bring on what doctors describe as “sundown 
syndrome,” making Nancy feel depressed and alone. On several occasions she would say she wanted to die and beg Judy to give her a pill. “I won’t tell anyone, I promise, she would say, I just don’t want to be a burden.” Judy responded by changing the subject, and soon the matter was forgotten.

Looking back, Judy describes the whole experience as a “roller coaster ride of emotion. I cried every day.”

And then, a turning point: Judy walked into her living room one afternoon and “there was Mom, dancing.” She was smiling broadly while gyrating to an imagined tune. Upon seeing her daughter, who was staring at her with unbelieving eyes, she exclaimed “Come on, dance with me!”

“I felt silly and tried to avoid the suggestion, but I gave in.” The two partnered up, and in the middle of the room, in the middle of the afternoon, shimmied and shook to a phantom song. “A defining moment,” said Judy, “it finally dawned on me, she’s not going to conform to our world no matter how hard we tried to make her, so we (joined) hers.”

If Mom wanted to go outside to “crunch in the snow,” (Nancy’s term for taking heavy, deliberate steps in the snow), we did. If she wanted a Twinkie for breakfast, we had a Twinkie.” Social rules were abandoned. Judy, who once worried what others thought about her mother’s odd behavior, was no longer concerned about “being judged.”

One night, around 2 a.m., Judy woke to lights and singing. Downstairs, Nancy was again dancing. And again, she invited Judy to join her, “C’mon, let’s dance.” Weary from weeks of caring for her mother, and tired from what had been a long, busy day, Judy fought back the need for sleep, and instead put on a record (perhaps Sinatra – You Make Me Feel So Young).  Nancy loved the big bands and the old standards. In their nightclothes the two danced into the wee hours.

Now the whole family, albeit sometimes reluctantly, joined Mom’s moment-to-moment world, where there were no rules, just joy. “We were all happier,” Judy said. “Not to suggest it was easy, but the rest of the journey filled up with great memories.”  

One occurred on a particularly bright morning when both were out walking after a fresh snowfall. Nancy approached the branch of a tree and stared at it intently. It was heavy with new snow and she implored Judy to “come see the colors.” It was beautiful, Judy recalled, “I hadn’t ever noticed that new, fluffy snow, when the sun hits it just right, lights up in all different colors.” Mom noticed things that others did not.

The beginning of the end came with the diagnosis of a tumor growing remarkably fast in Nancy’s neck. It required daily doses of morphine. The Alzheimer’s had also grown worse. “It got so bad that Mom was forgetting to swallow when she ate. By the grace of God it took her.”

Judy said the experience was harder on her family than on herself. “But you know what? I’d do it again in a minute.”

Today, at this writing, it’s not over for the Gorman’s. There are lingering bills to pay, and a legal battle against the Florida caretaker.

Meanwhile, Mike’s mother has taken ill. The diagnosis, all too common and all too familiar: Alzheimer’s.




Monday, April 13, 2015

Creator of Bedtime Math program visits Windham Public Library - By Michelle Libby


Last week Laura Overdeck visited with the Bedtime Math group at the Windham Public Library. The invitation only potluck dinner was in honor of Overdeck who is the creator of Bedtime Math, a national program that takes the scary out of math and makes it fun. 
 
“This was a blog that turned into a fairy tale,” said Overdeck. “Kids aren’t afraid of math until we make them afraid of math.” 

Overdeck an astrophysicist by education, started to do a math problem with her child every night before bed. “We’d read a book then do a math problem. When the third one turned two he wanted his own math problem,” she said. Her friends encouraged her to write the problems down, that was in 2012. It started with 10 friends, and their kids bugging them to give them math problems. By May of 2014, 40,000 kids had participated in Bedtime Math. It hasn’t been quite a year and already the program is a reaching into homes, transforming how children and adults think of math. 

Bedtime Math consists for one problem written for four different levels – Wee ones, little kids, big kids and sky’s the limit. Each problem is pulled out of real life, from viral videos, which are great for math, Overdeck said. “Those things write themselves. These things all have numbers behind them.” 

Overdeck uses her children and their friends to test out the activities. “The kids come over and ask, ‘What are we throwing today?’.” 

Windham Public Library, under the direction of Laurel Parker, started a Crazy 8s Math Club. It was one of the first clubs and still has the distinction of being beta testers for Overdeck and the program. “They’ve been the trailblazing group,” she said. “Laurel has been just great.” 

Although Overdeck and Parker have corresponded frequently, they had never met until Wednesday.
Over the last two years, the Windham group has been sending feedback and new problems to Overdeck. “We felt our feedback had been really listened to,” said Catherine Miller, the library’s new coach of the Crazy 8s. 

“We have a good connection,” said Parker. “We’re on the cusp of piloting things.”

“Everyone looks out for the younger ones,” she said, as the kids made paper airplanes at Wednesday night’s dinner. The parties at the library were pajama parties and they did activities like giant tangrams and giant clocks. 

Bedtime sends a kit filled with everything they need to do to fill the hour from tape measures to paper for the airplanes. Usually there is more to do then time to do it. The clubs have the responsibility to find a coach. There are two levels, kindergarten to second grade and third to fifth grades. They are identical kids, but the questions are different. 

When asked what her favorite activity at the library’s Crazy 8s club has been, Ally Miller replied, “How am I supposed to choose?”

When the program started, they called Parker because of her role as the chair of the youth services section of the Maine Library Association. “Bedtime Math called me to see if I would promote the idea of a program in a pack. The whole thing has evolved,” said Parker. The club has 11 members and Miller and Parker are trying to get a younger group going. “It’s an interesting mix of kids. These are kids who would never be brought together otherwise,” Parker concluded. 

“The whole concept is math is fun,” she said. No paper or pencils required. 

Overdeck also has Bedtime Math books. Each one sold helps the non-profit foundation continue.
The clubs are in 2,500 locations and are expanding as the need demands. 

“I’d love to see where these kids are 10 years down the road,” said Parker. 

“We want to keep it going so they already love [math]. When it becomes challenging they will love it and embrace it,” Overdeck said. “Everything has a size, shape and speed. It’s fascinating when we really stop to look at it.” 

After dinner and two new activities for the children, Overdeck headed to Augusta to speak at the Barbara Bush Conference in Augusta. 

For more about Bedtime Math or for the daily math problem, visit www.bedtimemath.org. To get involved in a Bedtime Math Crazy 8s Club, call the library at 892-1908.