Aging Wisely: The Podcast
In this, the final English language episode of Season One, we meet Adam Galchus, currently studying for a Master's Degree in Special Education. Prior to commencing these studies, he obtained a Bachelor of Science in Music, with a concentration in Jazz and Commercial Music. He is also the composer of Aging Wisely: The Podcast theme music. Adam was born with a disability. Notwithstanding that, he and his parents found his gifts in the arts, specifically music. From the age of eight, his gift was cultivated and he began his journey to musicianship when he took up the drums...
info_outline Doing the Work and Navigating AutismAging Wisely: The Podcast
Theresa Lyons is a Yale trained computational chemist who had her eyes set on a career on the corporate side of the pharmaceutical industry. She started on that journey, but life had other plans after the birth of her daughter. At the age of three she was diagnosed with autism and Dr. Lyons life would be forever altered. Dr. Lyons journey alongside her daughter was difficult but through of all of their hard word, they both came out on the other side of that dark tunnel. Today, Dr. Lyons works with families of children with autism. Her work is directly inspired by her daughter, her first...
info_outline The New (Immigrant) Face of New York's Aging PopulationAging Wisely: The Podcast
While working at the Center for an Urban Future, Christian Gonzalez-Rivera undertook a research project that sought to really look at the ever present. growing AND aging immigrant population in New York City. The result is a report, "The New Face of New York's Seniors" that is incredibly comprehensive and looks at practically every aspect of what aging in a city means for its resident and the impact that it has on a population that, in many ways, struggled to adapt to a new city, not to mention county. What we learn is that while cities, like New York, can offer a lot to aging...
info_outline Neighbors Taking Care of Neighbors: the NORC Aging in Place ModelAging Wisely: The Podcast
In this episode you will meet Anne Foerg, a Geriatric Social Worker and a Program Manager at the NORC at Penn South, which is a naturally occurring retirement community in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan.
info_outline Taking It "Step by Step:" The Journey through Special EducationAging Wisely: The Podcast
Special Education can feel like you are running through a gauntlet. It may feel isolating, but it doesn't have to be, especially if you are educated on how the system works and what to realistically expect.
info_outline "Eyes and Ears Everywhere": Elder Abuse is Everyone's BusinessAging Wisely: The Podcast
In this episode, Attorney Deirdre Lok from The Weinberg Center for Elder Justice in New York City, discusses elder abuse.
info_outline Theatre is for Everyone: The A.B.L.E. EnsembleAging Wisely: The Podcast
Today you will meet Kathryn “Katie” Yohe, the co-founder and Executive Director of the A.B.L.E Ensemble, a Chicago-based performing arts non-profit that works with teenagers and young adults with cognitive and developmental disabilities, like down syndrome, autism, cerebral palsy-among others. Their members range from their mid-teens to their late twenties and early thirties.
info_outline The Privilege of Practicing "Old People" MedicineAging Wisely: The Podcast
Veteran Geriatrician Jomarie Zeleznik, M.D. speaks openly about the practice of geriatric medicine.
info_outline Living in the Present, Thinking of the Future: This Lawyer's Take on IncapacityAging Wisely: The Podcast
People think that an incapacity can never happen to them or someone they love. It's hard to ever think of ourselves or anyone else being in that situation.
info_outline From Big Brother to Disability Services ProfessionalAging Wisely: The Podcast
In this, the first episode of Season One, you will meet Bryan Connelly.
info_outlineToday you will meet Kathryn “Katie” Yohe, the co-founder and Executive Director of the A.B.L.E Ensemble, a Chicago-based performing arts non-profit that works with teenagers and young adults with cognitive and developmental disabilities, like down syndrome, autism, cerebral palsy-among others. Their members range from their mid-teens to their late twenties and early thirties.
As Katie said during the interview, once you are accepted into A.B.L.E, you can stay for as long as you like. In addition to being a place for the members to showcase their creative expression, in whatever way fits them, it is also a second home. For young disabled adults, life changes dramatically as they enter adulthood. One of Ms. Yohe’s objectives is to always be present for her performers and their families. To be a constant in an ever-changing world.
During the interview, we learn about Katie’s childhood, putting on theatrical performances at home, and the eventual pursuit of her initial dream to become a classically trained theatre performer under the bright lights of Broadway. A series of serendipitous events eventually led to the creation of the A.B.L.E. Ensemble.
Through Katie’s training in Applied Theatre, and with the collaboration of Teaching Artists and Facilitators, her team creates original stories in partnership with their actors or adapts classical theatre works, like Shakespeare, to modern times and to reflect the diversity of abilities within their ensembles.
Even though Katie’s goals changed, she still accomplished her dreams. In the last five years, she has brought her love of performance and its transformative magic to young people who currently have no space in traditional theatre. She created a space for them, to be unapologetically themselves.
To learn more about the A.B.L.E. Ensemble, go to https://www.ableensemble.com
To learn more about Aging Wisely: The Podcast, go to: https://www.agingwiselypodcast.com