Lethbridge Herald

SOAR program lifts spirits at CRH

WEEKLY INITIATIVE PROVIDES HEALING THROUGH ART

- Sherri Gallant ALBERTA HEALTH SERVICES

It’s Thursday afternoon and several people filter in to the Golden Eagle Lodge on Chinook Regional Hospital’s fourth floor. They have come for the weekly Spirit of Art and Reconcilia­tion program (SOAR), a joint initiative developed by the Indigenous Health Program and Therapeuti­c Recreation.

On this day, they’re creating a teepee out of stiff paper and other supplies, while learning the historical meanings behind teepee designs of First Nations tribes. Relaxing music plays. They laugh and talk, or sometimes just work in silence. Some patients are Indigenous people and others are not — everyone is welcome — but the cultural underpinni­ngs of SOAR are built on First Nations traditions and practice.

Participan­ts have experience­d healing through art in this way since the start of 2018 on these Thursday afternoons. The dropin group is designed to help patients — some former patients return each week, too — create Indigenous art while learning about the culture associated with it, to tell stories and to connect with one another.

Heidi Davis, an AHS Recreation Therapist who created the program together with the Indigenous Health team in the South Zone, helps participan­ts when needed, while Ann Fox — the Zone’s Traditiona­l Wellness Counsellor — leads them first in a smudge ceremony and imparts cultural wisdom throughout the afternoon.

Smudging is the sacred Indigenous practice of using the smoke from medicinal plants to purify the space and centre the person. Some patients have experience­d smudging, but those who haven’t are guided through the process. Then they sit down to work with an array of paints and art supplies.

“They always have something to say after, about how content they felt,” says Fox. “Patients come from many different situations. Some patients come in with PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder), and this is a way to connect them with the culture and with finding peace. Sometimes when they come in, their art is so distorted at first, and then — as they heal and get better — oh my gosh, such beautiful artwork.”

Waylon, an Indigenous patient who has mobility issues and uses a wheelchair, said he enjoys everything about the art experience of SOAR, but especially loves the smudge, and hearing the Blackfoot language spoken.

Andy Rocks, who is Métis, started coming to SOAR as a patient, and has continued to return since he was discharged.

“I feel a great connection here,” he said. “And I love doing the artwork and learning the stories behind it. It’s so relaxing.”

Roxy Vaile, one of the Hospital Liaison staff with the Indigenous Health program, has been amazed to see the positive changes brought about by SOAR.

“They find that it opens them up,” she says. “It creates engagement with each other. One of the patients has been really shy and quiet and now he’s visiting — it makes the atmosphere so nice. His laughter and his humour is coming out.

“Even though they’re sick, it does something for the spirit that brightens it and that part has really been good in their healing. Even when they know they’re going to be discharged, they want to come back, and they’re welcome to. It’s not just for the Indigenous people, it’s for anyone who wants to come. Other than through food, it’s a really good way to break the tension and create an understand­ing. It’s more than just painting.”

Davis notes that while it’s difficult to capture the outcomes, they have found ways to do it.

“A lot of it is storytelli­ng, it’s connection­s, it’s hearing Blackfoot spoken, it’s learning about traditiona­l practice or historical things that maybe even Indigenous people don’t know, maybe they’ve had a disconnect from their culture,” Davis says.

“At the beginning and two hours later at the end of each session, we ask participan­ts to check in and we measure their happiness, anxiety and energy. Overwhelmi­ngly people leave feeling happier. They leave feeling more energy, and they have a reduction in anxiety. And the artwork itself can be used as a tool for outcomes — it tells its own story. The art is going to be our ultimate outcome, along with narrative feedback. We had one woman come in and she created this … jumble. She said it was a dreamcatch­er. The next week, she came in and did this beautiful picture of Chief Mountain with a feather over top of it. It had the most obvious clarity about it, just one week later.”

Art is a powerful medium for people for wellness,” Davis says, and when she sees people come in, prepare their mind and heart through smudge, and then stay in the space to visit or create, she can’t help but be moved.

“We had one non-Indigenous patient come. She was on oxygen and quite sick. At the end she started to cry and she said to the staff, ‘thank you so much for including me into this space; this just broke up a threeweek stay in the hospital for me, and I feel like myself again.’ It’s those kinds of comments. . . This is the kind of opportunit­y where we are truly patient centred.”

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? A person participat­es in the SOAR program.
Contribute­d photo A person participat­es in the SOAR program.

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