Abstract
In the spring of 2022, six caregivers, defined in the loosest of parameters as one who is providing or has provided care for an ill individual, participated in a five-week residency that utilized storytelling as a processing tool to cope with the demands of caregiving. To balance the importance of remaining grateful in the present with preserving the past, caregivers shared stories that left them open to heartache, but also to great joy and deep and meaningful connection. Each 75-minute session found the Community in Dialogue as caregivers opined on thought-provoking questions that directly scaffolded into the weekly Write/Share. The resulting shares improved and restored individual and relationship narratives and provided aesthetic distance to reflect on guilt, burnout, and disappointment from support systems. Inspired by love, memory, and self-discovery, caregivers shared with sincerity and empowerment, and built for themselves troves of accessible joy. At the end of the residency, caregivers self-reported not only that they were more prepared for uncertainty and able to appreciate the meaningful work they had accomplished to make their loved ones comfortable, but that they also felt their loved ones’ true essences with less effort. Each participant gained perspective and empathy, felt heard and understood, and became an integral part of what has proved to be a lasting caregiver community.
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Daniel Kenner
Daniel Kenner is a proud member of Actor’s Equity, SAG-AFT RA, and National Players Tour 60. Film credits include “Late Night,” “The Wolf of Wall Street,” and “Delivery Man.” Daniel has acted at regional theaters such as Arena Stage, Studio Theatre and Olney Theatre Center, and directed the D.C. premiere of Sarah Kane’s “Crave.” Upon publication of the memoir “Room for Grace,” Daniel was the featured guest speaker at CaringKind Brooklyn Alzheimer’s Walk 2019. Having recently written the plays “Fragments” and “All that Promise,” Daniel is currently seeking programming for his verbatim projects “A Window at the Moment” and “Someday I’m Gonna Lose You.” Daniel holds a MA in Educational Theatre from NYU, a BA in Theater from George Washington University and attended the British American Drama Academy.