Due to creative thinking by our executive director and the hard work of our kitchen staff and volunteers, our Senior Nutrition Program is in the midst of a dramatic turnaround.
By Russ Alman, Communications Director One of the disturbing things about the internet is information about you is collected by a variety of information aggregators and shared on public information sites. This information is collected through a variety of legitimate sources, including public records documents and combined with information you share on social media to create a profile about you. Then these public search sites display the collected information for the entire world to see. Their goal is typically to upsell website visitors to view more complete information (like current phone numbers and complete addresses) and even offer background checks for a small fee. (Yes, anyone can do a background check on anyone on the internet!)
Together, board members have now contributed $60,000 toward the project fund. The 10 members of the Wenatchee Valley Senior Activity Center Board of Directors are leading by example to support the center’s capital improvement project.
In like a lion, out like a lamb! It is definitely feeling like that around here recently and not just with the weather. I’ll have to admit, though, I think we are still in the “lion” part of everything — I am so ready for the “lamb.” We have had such a busy time around the center with so many additions to our membership and new clubs now splitting at the seams with participants. The grounds are looking like they need some spring attention (volunteers, anyone?) and the requests for after-hours event rentals have exploded. Truthfully, I wouldn’t have it any other way but please understand if you pop into my office with a question or a need and instead find me up on a ladder somewhere. I will make time for you, I promise
by George Wiley This story is dedicated to our former executive director, Dave Tosch.
Old Joe Hankins angrily stomped out of the ophthalmologist’s examining room, through the office, and tried to walk through a closed door. He stepped back, fumbling for the doorknob and loudly declared, "Nobody is going to cram me in a blankety blank hospital bed for a month!" Wes and Claire Johnson followed Joe out to the sidewalk urging him to reconsider, but he would not. The young eye doctor had explained to Joe that in this year of 1960, a person losing their sight to cataracts could have them removed. Unfortunately, it then entailed a month in the hospital. Joe refused even to think about it. by Lydia Agidius, Program Director Hello again! I hope everyone is staying warm and enjoying the new year so far. This is a time of new beginnings, new goals and new experiences that will last a lifetime. It's often during this season of reflection that I find myself thinking about the monumental moments of my life. I often return to the same few: the day I met my husband, the day I got engaged, my wedding day, and the day my babies were born. But what I've noticed over the years is how easily we as humans get caught in the cycle of working tirelessly toward that next big thing—the “one day” goal that will bring us happiness. We pour ourselves into it and once it’s achieved we quickly move on to the next goal, often without pausing to savor the accomplishment we’ve just reached.
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