Tag Archives: fundraiser

If It Were Just the Memory Loss

Dear friends and family,

At a brainstorming meeting for Louisville Walk to End Alzheimer’s team captains last week, I talked with a woman who had just lost her husband at age 60 to Alzheimer’s disease. So much for the concept that Alzheimer’s is only about older people who will be dying soon anyway.

That sounds really harsh, and perhaps a bit bitter, I know. But that concept is one of the barriers we face in raising awareness and money for Alzheimer’s research and support services.  Here is my response:

1.  Early onset Alzheimer’s can affect people even in the 40s. The woman whose husband passed away in July said he was diagnosed at age 54. While our family was devastated at the loss of my mother-in-law who suffered 13 years with Alzheimer’s before her death at age 91 last week, I am grateful for the 20+ additional memory-intact years we had with her that my new friend was unable to have with her husband.

2. The memory loss is just one aspect of the disease.  Other symptoms of Alzheimer’s can include personality changes that make caring for your loved one incredible difficult.  Anger, aggressiveness and severe depression are just some of these symptoms.  There’s also the embarrassment of having to have assistance with eating, toileting and other personal care - these experiences can lead to uncharacteristic outbursts  of frustration that grow more and more common, and often more severe, as the patient continues to lose functionality.

There are medications that help slow some of Alzheimer’s disease’s symptoms, and they are  a huge blessing.  To date, however, there is not one drug that can slow the progression of the actual disease itself.  So, as of now, once the connections inside the brain of the Alzheimer’s patient are broken, they cannot be mended. Retraining eventually becomes impossible as more and more connections are destroyed.

3.  And then there are the dangers that become more and more serious as the person with Alzheimer’s continues through the later stages of the disease.  A dear friend of mine had to lock all of the exterior doors in her home so that her husband, who had been a nuclear physicist for NASA, wouldn’t wander away and get lost.  Imagine having to child-proof your home to protect your formerly brilliant spouse from going out to work in his garden.

4.  Alzheimer’s doesn’t just affect the person who has the disease. As with other diseases, it affects the whole family, including the spouse or child who is often the primary caregiver.  While more than 80,000 Kentuckians have Alzheimer’s today, there are nearly 265,000 family members and friends who are providing care for someone with Alzheimer’s in Kentucky, according to the Alzheimer’s Association.

If it were just the memory loss, that would be sad enough. But it’s the loss of dignity, the personality changes, the danger of wandering away or eating something bad for you or forgetting how to swallow that make Alzheimer’s so insidious. It is the inability to say goodbye. It’s the thousands of unpaid hours of care in a situation that, as of now, can only end in death.

The purpose of my blog is to help increase understanding of what Alzheimer’s is and how it really affects the individual who has been diagnosed, as well as his or her friends and family members.  I also hope to encourage more people to get involved. If you haven’t already, please visit www.alz.org to learn more. Thank you.

Sincerely,

Bonnie

Don’t Ever Think That Just Two People Can’t Make a Diffference

Dear Family and Friends,

Ten years ago, Cathy Nagy and Susan Oswald held the first Backyard Baseball event to raise funds for Alzheimer’s in honor of their mother.   It was literally a “backyard” baseball tournament, held in the empty lot behind Cathy’s backyard.  They signed up friends from the neighborhood and their children’s schools and raised $400 for their Walk to End Alzheimer’s team. That’s better than a lot of garage sales, and a whole lot more fun for the kids!

The event grew over time to include food, raffle items and a silent auction.  Every year, in the weeks before the event, Cathy’s living room would look like a warehouse facility for an “odds and ends” variety store. A few sponsors and donors became regulars they could count on year after year.  The kids grew into teenagers and looked forward every year to the event.  The neighbors, instead of complaining about the growing crowds and cars, joined in.

As they approached their seventh year, Cathy and Susan decided it would be their last, and they pulled out all the stops and set a goal: a total of $100,000 in funds raised for the Alzheimer’s Association over eight years.  Their loyal friends, colleagues and family members stepped up, as did sponsors, and in 2009, they reached their goal.  Over seven years, Cathy and Susan had raised $100,000 for the Alzheimer’s Association.

In 2010, Becky and Brent Beanblossom stepped up.  The event had too much name recognition, too many loyal participants and too much sponsor support to let it fade away.  Longtime supporters of the Alzheimer’s Association, Becky and Brent held a successful 9th Annual Backyard Baseball event at a new location, a local church, to accommodate the ever-growing crowd. Of course, Cathy and Susan continued to held tremendously, as they do today.

In the fall of 2010, I held  the last fundraising event for my younger daughter’s soccer team.  My specialty had been corn hole tournaments, an idea germinated by her Ballard High School soccer coach, Brooke Burd. I found that these were fun, family-friendly events that brought together multiple generations to enjoy an evening together for a good cause.

That’s why I agreed to begin chairing Backyard Baseball in 2011.  I relied a great deal on Cathy, Susan, Becky and their husbands, of course, and the name recognition that drew their dozens and dozens of friends, family and other supporters each year.

We are working to grow Backyard Baseball & Bar B Q into more of a community event. We’ve added live music — this year it was Muench (www.muenchband.com) — and scrumptious bar b q from Mark’s Feed Store.  The sponsors who have stayed with us over the years — Home Instead Senior Care, Byerly Ford/Nissan, First Capital Bank of Kentucky, Norton Brownsboro Hospital, YUM! Brands, LPL Financial, The Benefits Firm and WHAS AM 840 – have been joined by Guthrie/Mayes Public Relations, Christian Care Communities, WAMZ  97.5 FM, Q Country 103.1 FM, ESPN 680 AM, and Dr. Gary Reasor. Our generous donors continue to step up every year with wonderful gift baskets, gift cards, sports team logo wear and hand crafted items.

To date, Backyard Baseball & Bar B Q has raised more than $130,000 for Alzheimer’s (the numbers are still coming in for the 2012 event)!  This money funds workshops and services for people affected by Alzheimer’s in Kentucky as well as research to find a cure.

$130,000!  Don’t ever think that just two people can’t make a difference.

Sincerely,

Bonnie

It’s Team Week – Daily Contests and Incentives to Boost Team Recruitment!

Walk to End Alzheimer’s 

2012 Team Week
July 9 – 13

 Team Week will feature daily contests and incentives to help boost your recruitment efforts. 

It’s all about getting your team members registered & having a little fun doing it! 

Help us reach 500 registered walkers by Friday, July 13!!

The theme is “Hollywood”

 Monday- Matinee Monday

 Tuesday- Theatre Tuesday

 Wednesday- Drive-In Wednesday

 Thursday- All-Star Thursday

 Friday- Feature Friday

Insider Scoop – Team Captain’s must REGISTER for the Walk to join in the fun!  
It all starts Monday !!

See if you can achieve your 15 minutes of fame, but remember 
the impact you are making in the lives of those living with Alzheimer’s lasts much longer! 

For more information on recruitment efforts or to have one of our staff members visit your company or facility, please contact 
Whitney Vogel 
whitney.vogel@alz.org or 502-451-4266

One-Third of the Way to our Goal for Walk 2012!

Dear Friends and Family,

I am so pleased to announce that the 2012 Louisville Walk to End Alzheimer’s is one-third of the way to reaching its fundraising goal of $300,000!  That means teams have signed up and are already recruiting members and raising funds! My personal friends and family team is well on its way to reaching our goal as well.

But there is still a lot to do for both the Louisville Walk and for my own team. And we are down to just under 10 weeks to go!!

At the team captain kick-off luncheon last week, we handed out some really useful materials with lots of ideas for recruiting team members, raising funds and motivating your team.  I have heard about yard sales, block parties, workplace matching gifts, “casual for a cause” dress-down days and raffles. If you weren’t able to attend, we will have some more team captain networking events soon, and you can always call Whitney Vogel at the Alzheimer’s Association at 502-451-4266, whitney.vogel@alz.org to get the materials and talk about fundraising ideas.

I was asked to speak at the kick-off luncheon and I took moment to talk about why I walk. Because we all walk for a reason. Maybe it’s for a parent, or a grandparent.  Maybe it’s for a spouse, or a dear friend.  Perhaps we work with people who have been affected.

I walk for my mother-in-law, “Mom,” who is pretty much unable to recognize or interact with her family or friends or caregivers any longer. But every once in a while, even as recently as last fall (she is in her 13th year with Alzheimer’s), she will hear my husband’s voice, raise her chin from off her chest, and look around and say, “That’s my David.”  I walk because I want my David to always be MY David, too. I want him to always be the gentle, kind, thoughtful and insightful man who Mom raised and that he has been throughout our 26 years of marriage.  And I walk so that our daughters will not have to suffer this terrible, always fatal disease.

The new Walk to End Alzheimer’s registration website, at www.alz.org/kyin , is very user-friendly. It has email tools so you can communicate regularly with your team members and let them know how you stand on progress toward your goal.

If you haven’t registered yet, please do so right away! Set your individual or team goal and then use the website tools to help you reach it. I’ve used the email tools and found them very adaptable…I can personalize my emails or just use the language that is provided. 

And once you’ve registered, please comment below and share with everyone who follows this blog why YOU walk.  We need to support each other in our efforts to find a cure.

Thank you!

Bonnie

Walk Recruitment Event Makes Alzheimer’s Even More Personal

Dear Family and Friends,

As involved as I am in the Alzheimer’s Association of Greater Kentucky and Southern Indiana, I hear a lot of statistics about the disease.  Did you know that there were 80,000 Kentuckians with Alzheimer’s in 2011, and that more than 264,000 family members and friends provided these persons with more than 300,000 hours of unpaid care?

But here’s  where it gets personal. So far this spring, I have attended two community events to recruit teams for the Walk to End Alzheimer’s in Louisville on Sept. 8 and, without fail, every single person we talk to at these events has been affected in some way by Alzheimer’s disease.  For some, it was a grandmother or grandfather who had died, or was currently struggling with the disease. Several people had lost their husband or wife. For others, it was a friend, some close, some more distant.  One gentleman at a Farmer’s Market last Saturday first answered “no” when I asked him if he knew someone who was affected…but then he backpedalled and said, “Oh yes, yes I do,” as his face took on a sadness in stark contrast to the sunny morning in St. Matthews.

That same Saturday, a woman about my age and I shared stories about our mothers-in-law.  And we both lamented that Alzheimer’s is one of the top 10 causes of death in the United States for which there is no cure. How can that be the case, so many years after the disease was identified? Yet, to date, there is not even a treatment to stop the progression of the disease as it creeps through the brain, destroying both cherished memories and practical knowledge. There are treatments for symptoms, but nothing to stop it or cure it.

One woman did pull me aside and say that all disease, including Alzheimer’s, was the victims’ own fault for not taking care of themselves.  She proudly stated that she was 76 years old and was in perfect health, thanks to her lifestyle choices.

I suppose nothing will change that woman’s mind, but I would like to have seen the conversation between her and my mother-in-law before Mom was diagnosed.  Mom may have been subtle and even proper in sharing her points of view, but she would never have let that woman walk away without setting her straight.  I might have argued more vehemently with the woman, had I not been so shocked, and then saddened by her mindset.

Mom has had high cholesterol throughout all the years I’ve known her. She was born with the propensity for it, and until she started losing her memory and ability to take care of herself, she took every precaution advised by her doctor. She took her medication religiously. She rarely ate an egg, and she watched her weight and exercised.  I don’t remember her ever being sick, in fact.  She was one of the healthiest persons I had ever known. Yet she counted that as a blessing, rather than something she’d earned.

Yes, diet and lifestyle may reduce the risk of getting Alzheimer’s disease.  But, if everywhere you look and everyone you meet has been touched by the disease in some way, we begin to understand that we have to do more to stop it. We have to find a cure.

For me, like so many of you, Alzheimer’s is personal. My husband’s grandmother suffered dementia, although we don’t know if it was Alzheimer’s. And now his mother is in the final stages.  I don’t want him to suffer the indignity and loss that always comes with this disease. And I don’t want our children to suffer that either.

I suspect Alzheimer’s is personal for you as well. Let’s do something about it. Let’s Walk to End Alzheimer’s on Sept. 8.

Sincerely,

Bonnie

Sharing an article: “Eight Letters: The Space Between Their World and Mine”

Dear Family and Friends,

I was particularly touched by this news article, which ran in several newspapers in Kentucky, and wanted to share:

http://www.lebanonenterprise.com/content/eight-letters-space-between-their-world-and-mine

Sincerely,

Bonnie

Honorees at Making Memories Event Pictured in Business First

Business First re Making Memories Louisville 4-27-12

College Kids Doing Good!

Dear Family and Friends,

A group of 12 college students from Western Kentucky University are planning a two-month bike trip across the country with a plan to raise $175,000 for the Alzheimer’s Association.

This will be the second time the Fijis have ridden cross-country for Alzheimer’s – the first time was in 2010 when they rode from coast to coast and raised $56,000. That ride was the inspiration of Fiji member Tyler Jury, who created the event in honor of his grandfather, who had Alzheimer’s.

 This year, the Fijis will be starting their trip in International Falls, Minn., on May 25 and riding to Key West. They expect the ride to take approximately two months and at each stop along the way, they will be hosting fundraisers for local chapters of the Alzheimer’s Association. The Greater Kentucky and Southern Indiana Chapter will benefit from stops in Evansville, Louisville and Bowling Green; visit http://www.bike4alz.org/explore-the-route/ to lean about their other stops.

This is a fantastic example of young men working together to fight a disease that, for them, is a distant possibility. I’m inspired by their commitment to a future without Alzheimer’s and while many of us cannot imagine biking more than 3,000 miles this summer, we can support their efforts to use their youth and strength to fight a cruel and unfair disease. 

To learn more about these young men and their fight against Alzheimer’s, visit www.bik4alz.org. They’ve also created a video that is available on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OJOX5MZ5Ss.

Thanks for reading!

Bonnie

 

Alzheimer’s Association is an Official Charity of Derby Marathon, Mini-Marathon

Here is some information about free training being offered for Team Alzheimer’s members: ALZ Marathon Training Flier

First 2012 Committee Meeting – Ambitious!

Dear Family and Friends,

The 2012 Louisville Walk to End Alzheimer’s committee met for the first time last week and we came up with an ambitious agenda of activities for boosting participation in the Sept. 8 event.

One of the things we will be doing is setting up tables at various venues around town where you can sign up for the walk and, if you donate $25 at that time, you will be entered into a drawing for a free e-reader! We will have a computer with to make it as easy as possible to sign up. Keep an eye out for these great events.

Also, I wanted to let you know that a couple of what we call “third-party” events are scheduled already – these are events put on by Walk teams to raise funds toward their teams’ donation:

  • I am chairing Backyard Baseball & Bar B Q on July 28 from 4-8 p.m. at St. Thomas Episcopal Church on Westport Road. This is a family-friendly event that includes an old-fashioned baseball tournament for teens and kids, as well as a silent auction, raffles, dunking booth and live music by Muench! Great food will be available as well and everything is donated so that all proceeds go directly to the Alzheimer’s Association.
  • The Mudd Sisters Steamboat Race Annual Benefit is an enormously fun gathering at Kingfish Restaurant on the Ohio where you can watch the Kentucky Derby Festival’s Great Steamboat Race an help raise funds for the Alzheimer’s Association at the same time. This 7th annual benefit is held in honor of Trudy Mudd, who has suffered with Alzheimer’s for 23 years! Dinner and dancing to a live band, cash bar and heavy hors d’oeuvres are included in the price of $35 per person. May 2, 5-11 p.m., call 451-4266 for more information.

You can hold your own third-party fundraiser event, and it can be as simple as a car wash or a rummage sale, or as big as one of the above events. If you need ideas, please don’t hesitate to comment here, or to call Devin Roos at the Alzheimer’s Association at 502-451-4266.

Thank you!

Bonnie