Olive tells me she’s ninety-five and made mainly of metal. There’s her hip replacement, the rods in both her legs. She sits in a metal wheelchair, uses a metal walker. We’re in an aged care home, there’s half an hour until lunch. But my mind is chess, sonnets and, sometimes, orchids, Olive says. Nothing metal there at all. Metal or not, I reply, how on earth did you reach such an impressive age?
My visit is part of Writers Meet Elders, a project I developed with Age UK Bromley & Greenwich. For this local branch of a national charity, I'm a writer-in-residence, creating poetry and micro-fiction with – and for – older people. I like to spend time with those in later life, partly because my grandparents died when I was young and also because I want to share my enthusiasm for creative writing with others.
I was thrilled to be awarded a travel grant from the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust, which has allowed me to meet those working in similar fields in Australia and the US.
My research considers the best ways to commission and develop authors, poets and spoken word artists to work with older people.
What have I discovered so far?
I have big ambitions to design new literary projects. One-to-one commissions partnering older people with writers/artists–a creative befriending scheme. Plus an experimental group project in which we’re writing or performing live. Both will aim to engage, inspire and dispel the myths of what both writers and older people can achieve.
Gemma Seltzer writes online, live and in print. Her latest venture is Writers Meet Elders: projects and research about creative writing with older people. www.writersmeetelders.wordpress.com and www.gemmaseltzer.co.uk
Images provided by Gemma Seltzer
We would like to hear about similar projects that are occurring in Australia? Leave us a comment.