Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

JudyM

(29,509 posts)
Fri Feb 10, 2017, 10:08 AM Feb 2017

New tender documentary about a Scottish hospice: Seven Songs for a Long Life

Watched this last night and wanted to share it here because it's quite touching. Song and humor support and help open expression of feelings and understanding.

See it here (1 hour):
http://www.pbs.org/pov/sevensongs/video/seven-songs-for-a-long-life/

Filmmaker Statement
I came to Strathcarron Hospice with strict instructions: “Hang around.” Being an artist in a medical establishment you get good at hanging around. Feeling useless becomes your evolving art form. Finally the patients took pity on me. Maybe they were feeling a bit useless too. Disease can do that. Then they started singing to the camera. I loved it! Myself, I was banned from the singing circle right in nursery school. But the songs that came from the patients at Strathcarron were so full of passion, dreams, anger, regret, acceptance — I felt it was their whole lives tunneling into the camera microphone. We started making little music films together, three minutes, five minutes, interspersing the song with observational footage of their time in the hospice and at home. The requests came in thick and fast and I learned an interesting thing — when you’ve been told you have a disease that is going to kill you, you don’t waste time. And you want pleasure. To receive it and to give it.

Time is one of the greatest gifts someone can give you. When you sit with someone you are giving them your time. I spent four years filming in Strathcarron, listening, watching and taking up time from the patients and the staff. Sometimes there was a sense of urgency — if someone is in pain then each second of pain is a second too long. Sometimes time looped back on itself and we were transported by the songs back into someone’s childhood, or their first love, or the moment they lost their spouse. Julie, one of the patients who had been told she had months to live, lived firmly in the moment. As the moments stretched into months, and then years, she had a rethink. She dyed her hair blonde and went back to work, fell in love, got married. Is she scared of dying? Not anymore, she is ready. How long is a good marriage? How long is a long life? As Dorene says after her successful stem cell treatment, “This treatment has given me five years—and five years is a long time.”


Latest Discussions»Support Forums»End of Life Issues»New tender documentary ab...