Last weekend I drove 34 miles to the Laemmle Theater in Pasadena
because that was the closest theater showing the documentary Alive Inside. I'd
heard about the film on NPR, and I knew from the clips and blurbs I saw and
read online that I would love it. I did.
Here's the basic premise of the film: Provide era-specific
music to dementia patients, then sit back and enjoy the miraculous result.
More specifically: Social worker Dan Cohen (upon whom I now
have a pretty serious fan-girl crush), in doing volunteer work with the elderly
and Alzheimer's patients, wanted to find a way to connect with those who seemed
lost inside themselves. He recognized music as a powerful, evocative force
which is universal in its appeal. So he filled up some iPods with music from
specific decades, purchased a few sets of headphones, then invited a filmmaker
to come along and document his attempt to reacquaint patients with the music of
their childhood.
To say the resulting footage is profoundly moving would be
an understatement. I knew this film would make me cry; the soundtrack of my own
life includes all the pieces I have sung in church, in weddings, in funerals,
at sporting events, in the shower, on horseback, on my bike, on a mountaintop,
in my classroom and a thousand other places. My mama was a singer as was my
sister, and my last good memories of my father before he died center around him
singing—even as his life ebbed slowly away. But oh my lord, I first began to
tear up just seconds into the movie. One minute past that, tears were streaming
down my cheeks. Click here to see the story of Henry.
Dan Cohen's foundation, Music & Memory, is dedicated to bringing
music to individuals with Alzheimer's and other dementias. What Cohen and
others have found is that music stimulates memory in a positive and healthy
way, and that it is far more effectual than medications and other traditional
therapies for reaching dementia patients who have previously been unresponsive
to treatment. Cohen devotes his time and energy to raising funds through Music
& Memory in order to offer iPods and headphones to nursing homes across the
country.
Alive Inside is an intensely personal film which depicts
human kindness and tenderness in its most raw and authentic form. I came away
changed, determined to spend a bit more time with my guitar—and also determined
to try to help Cohen's vision reach fruition.
Find this movie and go watch it—even if it means a bit of a
drive to get there. Then go hug your grandma (if she's still around). Then go
to Music & Memory and make a donation. Then—and only then—sit down with
your family and sing a few of your favorite songs. Because you still can.
Here's a link to a beautifully done trailer for the film. It's two minutes long but you may need multiple tissues to get through it: Alive Inside trailer