Finding Home
Featured Posts
1 2 3 4 5

John Braithwaite Community Centre (JBCC) and the North Shore Neighbourhood House (NSNH) hosted Finding Home seniors dialogues. During the dialogues, seniors shared their experiences and generated practical tips about: moving from your home into a smaller place; the art of forgiveness; and how to find home within yourself. Throughout each dialogue, the seniors shared about the importance of gratitude in living through and responding to these everyday challenges. Highlights from each dialogue were turned into educational posters and are being distributed throughout North Vancouver as part of a larger strategy to create an age-friendly community.

To celebrate the seniors’ achievement, the dialogue participants hosted a community-wide Finding Home dialogue on Seniors Day at John Braithwaite Community Centre. The theme of the dialogue was about the importance of gratitude in creating home. In particular, all the seniors present shared their gratitude towards JBCC and NSNH staff and volunteers for all their work in providing quality programs for seniors and how crucial both community centres and neighbourhood houses are in creating a sense of home for older adults. One senior explained, “Neighbourhood Houses are my family.”

Recently, the seniors who participated in the Finding Home dialogue series have been invited to present their posters and findings to the City of North Vancouver’s interagency meeting. In addition, an invitation from a local school to talk with youth about the art of forgiveness and values for a bully-free world are in the works. Keep an eye out for these North Shore seniors as they make waves in their own lives and communities.

Seniors Say Gratitude Creates Home - Graphic Facilitation by Cheyenne Dyer from Big Picture Graphics

North Shore Seniors Say Gratitude Creates Home - Graphic Facilitation by Cheyenne Dyer

During Fining Home seniors’ dialogues at John Braithwaite community centre and the North Shore Neighbourhood House today, seniors shared experiences of moving into a smaller place. One dialogue participant shared his story of having to move from a house to one bedroom after a recent health and financial crisis. He had no time to adjust to the change or decide what to keep and what to let go of. For him, it was a traumatic experience to discover his most cherished momentos had been given or thrown away. Together the group brainstormed how to find a sense of home in a smaller place. Drawing on past experiences as a student, living on a boat or as a traveler they generated new solutions for this present day challenge. Read more…

Midway through Finding Home’s launch dialogue in 2007, where over 155 participants from diverse backgrounds explored the concept of Finding Home in our current global and local contexts, a participant asked, “How do we make sense of all these individual interpretations of what creates home and arrive at a sense of ‘collective home’ where we can all belong?”

In response to this question, Dianne Shiner from Whidbey Institute relayed a story about working in a foster care project for unaccompanied refugee children. The staff, one day discussed what they felt was the one indicator that cut across diverse cultures and indicated when a child felt a sense of belonging. After many discussions they identified what became known as the “refrigerator factor”. When a child feels comfortable enough to go to the
refrigerator on their own, open the door and help themselves to the food knowing it belonged equally to them – this indicated that a child felt at home – that they truly belonged.!

In reflecting on her story, the challenge was put to the group “How do we create a world, a town, a home, where people feel they belong and can come to the refrigerator and help themselves?”

Site design by Vancouver web design company Aleomsoft.

This blog is proudly powered by WordPress