Weekly News & Updates
Caring for Older Adults Since 1907
MARGOT & WARREN COVILLE ASSISTED LIVING & MEMORY CARE
Come see the JSL Difference!
Contact Janet Antin
248-967-4240 jantin@jslmi.org
FAMILY MEMORIES
By Jo Strausz Rosen
Gather your loved ones around and consider exchanging answers to questions that define who you are and how you have lived your life. The essence of these answers will live on in the stories you share, so that future generations will have a chance to know you. Sit quietly at times to recall challenging moments and reveal how you got through the tough times. What did you tell yourself? What do you remember your parents telling you about succeeding or failing?

Take the time to write the answers down or type them out and add photos with captions and dates and the personal relationships to accompany the text… and put them with your end-of-life documents and let your loved ones know you are saving these. The pages on our calendars continue to turn. Fill up calendar squares with a few memories or sentences about surviving each day. Save these calendars.
HONORING 18 JEWS WHO IMPACTED OUR COMMUNITIES
All year long, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency reports about the deaths of Jewish newsmakers in our community. To close out the year, we wanted to turn our attention to people who may not have been household names but whose stories deserve to be remembered.

We invited readers to share their remembrances of people they lost in 2021. Here, with their help, we recall 18 Jews who shaped their local communities and made a difference in the lives of those close to them. They include rabbis whose impact extended for decades, teachers who inspired generations of students and parents and grandparents who were the backbones of their families. May their memories be a blessing.
FUN ACTIVITIES FOR GRANDPARENTS WITH LIMITED MOBILITY
While a grandparent’s love never grows old, aging can make it harder for grandparents with limited mobility to enjoy all the activities they once did.

It may be harder to get up and down, lift a child, or engage in outdoor sports. But there’s no need to let mobility issues limit the fun. Here are some time-tested favorite activities.
HOME WORKOUT
Get your blood pumping with this fun 7 minute cardio workout!
DOROTHY & PETER D. BROWN MEMORY CARE PAVILION
Receive your third month free! (rent portion only)
Contact Jill Bengle
248-661-2999 jbengle@jslmi.org
RESIDENT SPOTLIGHT
Last week, Hechtman residents were invited to view paintings created by resident, Shelley Skelton, who lives with her husband, Bennie. All 20 of the paintings on display hang in their unit. We are looking forward to getting to know them further when this couple is featured as one of the many “love stories” at JSL in an upcoming article during Valentine’s Day week.
(CARE)GIVING AND TAKING: MAKING TIME FOR YOU
Taking care of a loved one can be difficult. So can ensuring that your own needs are being met during this challenging time. It's easy to feel isolated but Jewish Family Service and Jewish Senior Life are here to offer family caregivers support, comfort and a sense of community.

Join us for our series held virtually on Thursdays at 2 pm:

February 10 - Take a Breath Brake
with Rabbi Elimelech Goldberg

March 10 - Taking Care of the Caregiver
Author Rabbi Laura Geller

April 14 - It's Okay Not to Be Okay
Dr. Micky Golden Moore
THIS WEEK'S RECIPE
Make this in celebration of
Tu B'Shvat!

Fruit-Topped Brownie "Pizza"
Whipped cream
Cut up strawberries, grapes, cherries, pineapple, or blueberries
Chopped nuts

Directions
1) Bake your brownies in a nine-inch (23-centimeter) round pan. (Adjust baking time as needed — they may need an extra five to 10 minutes.)
2) Top with whipped cream or parve whip (beaten until stiff) and your favorite fruits, such as strawberries, grapes, cherries, pineapple, and blueberries.
3) Sprinkle chopped nuts over the top, serve, and enjoy!

This recipe is from kosher.com
FRIDAY FUNNY
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SHABBAT SHALOM
Rabbi Dovid S. Polter, JSL Community Chaplain

A Seed of Wisdom

The holiday of Tu B’Shevat, the New Year for Trees, (Jan.17th) celebrates the reawakening of the plant kingdom each spring. On a deeper level, this corresponds to the human potential for periodic growth and self-renewal, for continual advancement in the quest for spiritual enlightenment. From everything a person observes, he can harvest information that adds to his wisdom. This includes such commonplace occurrences as the blossoming of a tree.

Trees, like most species in the plant kingdom, consist of three distinct parts: the roots, the body (trunk, branches and leaves), and the fruit (a peel or shell, the fruit itself and its seeds). Some observations can be made from the differences between these parts.

The roots, although completely hidden from view, draw in the tree’s primary life-force. It is only through its root system that a tree achieves physical stability; if its roots are strong, the tree will not be uprooted, despite all the winds blowing against it.

The body of the tree comprises the trunk, which provides its main source of balance. Over time, the trunk, branches and leaves thicken, also adding to the body. The tree’s age can thus be determined from the rings in the trunk.

However, the ultimate perfection of a tree, and its route to immortality, comes through the production of fruit. Within each seed lies the potential to germinate a new tree, generation after generation.
 
Shabbat Shalom by Phone - Enjoy some inspiration
Dial Toll free: 605-313-4107 Access code: 270368#
(Reference number not needed)
Dial # to hear the most recent recorded message.
Rabbi Dovid S. Polter Jewish Community Chaplaincy Program Jewish Senior Life
248-592-5039 • dpolter@jslmi.org
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Shabbat Shalom
Nancy Heinrich, Chief Executive Officer
Kara Powers, Chief Financial Officer
Barbra Giles, Executive Director, Strategic Initiatives
Jo Strausz Rosen, Executive Director, Development
Dianne Azzopardi, Executive Director, Human Resources
Ron Colasanti, Executive Director, Dining Services
This newsletter was created by Jo Rosen and Amanda Martlock

We’re human, prone to mistakes, so if we erred in our newsletter, please forgive us!
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