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Job Corps Healing Hands Make A Difference
Tags: Alaska | Chugach Alaska Corporation | Healing | Job Corps | Make a difference | Mat Su Senior Center | Mat Su Valley | palmer | Senator Begich | Senator Murkowski | Senior Center | Yupiq

Job Corps Healing Hands Make A Difference

          

           Usually it takes months or years to make a difference in another person’s life.  But for Alaska Job Corps students, the connection was nearly instant and the distinction was clear.

           Stella and Kameri are both Health Occupation students at Job Corps. This week their Nursing Assistant class went to the Mat-Su Senior Center.  The trained Job Corps students were  offering hand massages for the aged population. 

        At first it was awkward.  It seemed both the 10 students and 63 elders were hesitant.  But the moment when the students began to individually hold and stroke the seniors’ hands, was exactly the same moment that one could visibly see a profound calming effect and difference in demeanour. 

            Such is the power of touch.  Healing hands eliminate boundaries and make a connection.  Communication allows understanding.

            All of the Job Corps students studied hand physiology and understood the clinical procedure of the therapy.  But the psychological results were stunning. 

The students leaned in and the elders leaned in closer.  The elders relaxed and closed their eyes, immersing themselves in the comfort and warmth of the students’ careful hands.  As the aged population watched and waited their turn, a sweet stillness took over the room.

            As Stella and Kameri massaged old hands, they heard a rich but simple story. “These hands had seen 83 long, cold winters and 82 short and frantic summers.  These hands had held babies, braided hair and picked baskets of berries.  These weathered working hands cut fish, butchered a moose, loaded the steam-house, plucked birds, and sliced roots.  The ordinary hands had nursed the ill, dressed wounds, splinted bones and cared for the dead.  These hands were old and tired.  These hands begged for care and attention.”

         Stella and Kameri were intent in their work but still receptive enough to hear the collective story as they gently massaged each finger, tendon and muscle.  

        And this was the tipping point where both female students realized that they had chosen the correct career decision.  This confirmation, and the comfort and joy in the elders’ faces, had made a  definite difference.

         AKJCC Health Occ students:  Brandy B, Lisa B, Nicole B, Wendi C., Judge C, William E, Stella M, Elia M, Kameri S, and Mark C.

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