ZUMBA FOR SENIORS
Why i teach zumba gold
October 28, 2013
I believe that we, who teach #ZumbaGoldChair to the elderly and infirmed in Assisted Living, Adult Day Care, Memory Care and Skilled Living facilities, are an unusual and special group of instructors.
I never thought I could do this. In my first first few weeks teaching Zumba Gold Chair classes to people with Dementia, Alzheimer's, some in wheelchairs and walkers, I thought about my own mortality and I was scared. I could not imagine what it must be like for them to live the rest of their lives sick or in a wheelchair or suffer with a degenerative neurological condition. I also thought how wonderful it could be if I could bring them some fun and excitement through Zumba Gold Fitness movements. I could help them remember the joy of music and exercise.
We, Zumba Gold Instructors, may not be the best dancers, with the best choreography, but we have something special to share that's just as important..our love, our enthusiasm, our passion. It's all about our participants and making sure that they are all involved, People will often hear me say, "No sleeping in my class. We're here to have fun, dance and move. If you don't use it, you'll lose it. So let's shake it." We know we're making a difference for them today. Many of my participants have kissed my hands, hugged me and thanked me for "keeping them alive" today. SOme of them have told me I'm doing God's work, that I'm one of God's angels here on earth. Never have I received so much appreciation and gratitude for what I do. We, instructors, who continue to work with geriatrics, have something deep within us that calls us to keep going back.
Many of my participants are in the last stages of their lives. Many of them will never leave their facility alive. My role is to impart my love of music and movement as a healing tool to the participants. Besides loving the music and loving to teach, we Zumba Gold Instructors have to be extremely devoted and passionate about what we do with this population.. We have to be because It's very difficult emotional and physical work. I'm not speaking about the dancing aspect of the class. It's how we have to generate ourselves to be to be able to encourage their participation. I don't do choreography . I gear the movements to whatever the individuals are able to do. Sometimes, all some people can do is move an arm or a leg and many of them need many repetitions.
Zumba Gold Instructors, whose classes consist primarily of people in wheelchairs or walkers, have to put more energy into what we do with them than we would if we were teaching healthy, strong, active Zumba Goldies. Note: I do teach some regular Zumba Gold classes other than chair and it charges my battery.
Sometimes our physically/neurologically challenged participants fall asleep in their wheelchairs during the class This is not something I take lightly. I usually dance over to them, pick up their hands and dance with them to awaken them. It's not healthy for them to sleep all the time and I work very hard to keeping them awake and involved. Sometimes, they forget where their shoulders are or how they used to clap their hands. I often dance up to them, make eye contact and with hands-on, help them remember. Amazingly, once I do the movement with them while making eye contact and suggest they continue to do it, they do.
However, by the time I get home from teaching 2-3 classes a day like this, I'm ready for a nap or a walk at the beach. I love the residents and love watching their faces change from unresponsive or sleeping to alive and expressive. I derive so much pleasure from working with the most difficult cases, because I know they will eventually return to this moment and dance with us the best way they can.
I plan to continue teaching Zumba Gold Chair classes to the elderly as long as I live, to points north, east, south and west.. There's no other population I'd rather be teaching.. #loveteachingzumbagold
January 30, 2012
People often ask me how and why I began teaching Zumba Fitness to the Elder (Senior ) population. This is my story about how this evolved.
I was living in Rio Rancho, NM when I saw a TV commercial with Beto Perez, my former Latin Aerobics instructor at The Williams Island Spa, Aventura FL. I bought the Zumba Fitness DVDs and I knew immediately, I would become a Zumba Fitness instructor.
I was concerned that I would be 'the oldest Zumba Fitness Instructor in the world", since most of the dancers on the DVD looked like they were in their 20's and 30's. Eventually, I moved back to Florida and signed up to take the Zumba Fitness Instructor training in Miami, FL.
I became Licensed and Certified in Miami in 2005 by Beto, at a training with hundreds of very young, sexy, beautiful instructors from all over the world. I felt like "the oldest Zumba Fitness instructor in the world" that day.
After the training, I continued to take classes every week with Beto and the very young Latino male/female participants in Aventura, FL. I looked around during the class and didn't see any 'older adults' who could maintain the pace of the class. The music was very, very fast, many different steps, with jumping and twisting. The seniors were doing the class in their own rhythm at their own pace. Many of whom looked as if they were in a different class entirely, as what they did didn't resemble steps we were doing. They looked frustrated because they couldn't keep up.
This is when I decided that I would create a Zumba Fitness class for Seniors at a slower pace, fewer steps, low impact, no jumping and with clear instructions.
Most Zumba Fitness instructors do not teach any dance steps before the class begins. The instructor does not talk about the steps before or during the dance. The students watch the instructor and do what he/she does. Hopefully you can follow. In my Zumba Gold class, I planned to give instructions to each dance and verbal cues during the song.
I am an experienced Latin dancer who danced in competitions. Yet, there were days when I took an advanced Zumba class, fast, fast, fast rhythm and many, many steps...that I couldn't follow.
I was frustrated. I couldn't believe that I, who danced all my life, couldn't keep up. My body, my feet and arms weren't moving as fast as my brain wanted it to. I felt very uncoordinated. I couldn't keep the pace with the Instructor nor the younger students. I couldn't dance fast enough to adjust to the abrupt change in steps or rhythm.
I felt old, really old. I felt awkward. I felt clumsy, although I've been an accomplished Latin dancer all my life- Cha Cha, Merengue, Salsa, Mambo, Tango, Rhumba, Samba, Flamenco. I danced throughout high school. I danced throughout college and even appeared on The Dick Clark Bandstand when I was single. I danced with my husband and dance partner for more than 17 years. With all my experience as a dancer, I had a hard time maintaining and keeping up the pace with the instructor and all the 'younger' students.
When I was in my dancing prime, I'd rather dance than eat. Dancing had always been a huge part of my life. Divorced in 1977, I no longer had my husband/dance partner. Dancing wasn't fun anymore. I was not only divorcing my husband and dance partner, but also losing another important part of my life- my love for dance.
In my later years, frustrated at singles dances, either standing and watching people dance or dancing with men who couldn't dance, I stopped dancing. This was not a healthy decision for me because I derived so much joy and satisfaction from this form of exercise- it was my healing art. I became very sad and somewhat depressed about not dancing. I longed to dance. My body, mind and spirit ached to be dance, to be both stimulated and soothed by the music and the rhythms. Dancing made me feel alive, energetic, youthful and balanced,
When I found Zumba Fitness, I discovered that I could satisfy my dance craving and didn't need to subject myself to singles dances or to men who couldn't dance. I was happy again that Latin dancing and Latin music was once again in my life. I didn't need a dance partner. I could dance by myself or with others.
As I continued to teach and take Zumba Fitness classes with much younger male and female instructors, I realized that I would never teach the way they do. I compared my skills at 65yrs old with the skills of a 20-40yr old and they didn't match up. Yes! I could be part of their class and dance with them, jump, bend, twist and do fast dance steps, but I could never teach like them.
I was very upset and frustrated and considered resigning as an Instructor many, many times. I have always set very high standards for myself and I was convinced that I wasn't good enough to teach. Although students always loved my classes, I wasn't satisfied with my Zumba Fitness skills.
I have been a high achiever all my life and I didn't like being mediocre in anything I pursued. I felt like a mediocre Zumba Instructor. I wanted to be the best, yet compared to the younger instructors, I was not the best. I was competing with instructors who were either group fitness instructors, personal trainers or professional dancers with years of choreographing experience .
I was none of these. I was a 65 yr old woman who loved to dance, who loved to teach, who loved seeing aliveness in people's eyes and joy on people's faces, who loved knowing that dancing was keeping them healthy, mentally, physically and emotionally.
I didn't have a clue about choreographing a song. I didn't have the technical skills of a personal trainer. I was not a group fitness instructor. I was a dancer who loved to dance. I just loved to dance; I was an enthusiastic, energetic and passionate instructor and wanted to turn other people on to this amazing exercise program. Yet, I convinced myself that I was a failure as a Zumba Fitness Instructor and told my family that I would never teach Zumba Fitness again. I'll just take classes and dance.
Several months passed and I stopped teaching. Yet, I'm a great teacher in so many other areas: I teach motivational classes, workshops and seminars on Health and Fitness. I inspire people to keep their eye on their goal, not to quit when the going gets rough. Yet I wasn't following my own advice. I quit without seeking a solution to the problem.
I was struggling with the idea of desperately wanting to teach and not feeling like an expert Zumba Fitness Instructor. I was determined to find a solution and I would find another population to teach.
Fortunately, a spark ignited deep inside me driving me towards a more comfortable teaching style. I became Licensed as a Zumba Gold Instructor and began teaching Seniors and beginners to Zumba. I used the same music that I received every month from the Zumba Instructor Network. I wrote down the steps. I practiced the DVDs, transferred the songs to my Ipod and regained my confidence to teach. I knew that if a person loved something so much, we just cannot suppress that passion. That was it!! I was passionate about Zumba and passionate to start teaching again, my way.
I accepted the fact that I am almost 40 yrs older than most instructors; that I can't teach or move the way they do; that although I look youthful, my body and mind are not as sharp as they used to be. There had to be a market where I would derive great satisfaction and confidence in myself as a Zumba Gold Fitness instructor. I was determined to find that niche where few dared to go.
I promised myself I would thrive and be successful and comfortable as a Zumba Gold Fitness instructor, teaching 'my way' and utilizing 'my talents' and passion. I am gifted with the skill of being able to change the steps, increase/decrease the number of repetitions, reduce the speed of the dance instantly, based on the type/skill level of the participants.
I searched endlessly to find a community to share my joy and enthusiasm for Zumba Fitness as dance therapy. With so many Basic and Advanced Zumba Fitness instructors around the world now, I often asked myself, "what makes me different from the rest? Why would someone take my class over another's?" I didn't have the answer yet, but I would continue to search to find the answer and find my unique market.
I prayed daily for spirit to guide me to the right people and the right places to share my talents, passion and love for music and dance, for healing people.
2012- I am now 72yrs old and licensed to teach Zumba Gold, Aqua Zumba, ZumbAtomic and Basic Zumba.
I found my niche. I have been in the Holistic Health field for more than 50 years, constantly fine tuning my focus to meet the needs of the times. I am a Life Coach, specializing in Geriatric Health and Wellness. Zumba Gold/Chair Zumba is part of my program.
Lighthouse Point Assisted Living Facility
I joined The Virginia Beach Task Force on Aging, as well as The Norfolk and Chesapeake Task Forces on Aging, comprised of people focusing on senior care. I have met many wonderful people involved with Assisted Living, Independent Living and Memory Care Communities, who have invited me to teach Zumba Gold/Chair Zumba.
I teach Zumba Gold and Chair Zumba because I know that within every person is a dancer, a lover of music, that music and dance brings aliveness and energy and joy into people's hearts and minds.
I love seeing their happy faces lit up and smiling.
I love hearing them hooting and howling to the Latin sounds.
I love seeing people moving and having fun in a Zumba class.
I love seeing those with Alzheimer's remembering how much they loved music and dance.
I love wrapping belly dancing scarves around the dancers and watching their faces as they jingle and jangle.
I love seeing the faces of those with Parkinson's Disease when they're moving to the dynamic Latin rhythms.
Endorphins are releasing in their brains. Pain is subsiding. Happy hormones are flowing.
The stress hormone cortisol is reduced from dancing and laughing and being with other dancers.
I love holding the hands of seniors with Dementia, when they're not responding, and then they begin to tap their feet, clap their hands to the music.
They cannot stay depressed or angry when they're dancing .
This is why I teach Zumba Gold and Chair Zumba and why I specialize in Geriatric Health and Wellness. This is why although I may be 'the oldest Zumba Gold Instructor in the World", I'm thrilled at the idea.
To Schedule a Class in Your Area:
Contact me at: www.facebook.com/grandmashellieteacheszumba
Email: [email protected]
My prayers were answered. I found my niche. I am no longer trying to compete with 20 or 30 yr olds. I am a 73 year old senior supporting and empowering other seniors to live a healther, longer life filled with love, passion and a reason to wake up every morning.
I believe that we, who teach #ZumbaGoldChair to the elderly and infirmed in Assisted Living, Adult Day Care, Memory Care and Skilled Living facilities, are an unusual and special group of instructors.
I never thought I could do this. In my first first few weeks teaching Zumba Gold Chair classes to people with Dementia, Alzheimer's, some in wheelchairs and walkers, I thought about my own mortality and I was scared. I could not imagine what it must be like for them to live the rest of their lives sick or in a wheelchair or suffer with a degenerative neurological condition. I also thought how wonderful it could be if I could bring them some fun and excitement through Zumba Gold Fitness movements. I could help them remember the joy of music and exercise.
We, Zumba Gold Instructors, may not be the best dancers, with the best choreography, but we have something special to share that's just as important..our love, our enthusiasm, our passion. It's all about our participants and making sure that they are all involved, People will often hear me say, "No sleeping in my class. We're here to have fun, dance and move. If you don't use it, you'll lose it. So let's shake it." We know we're making a difference for them today. Many of my participants have kissed my hands, hugged me and thanked me for "keeping them alive" today. SOme of them have told me I'm doing God's work, that I'm one of God's angels here on earth. Never have I received so much appreciation and gratitude for what I do. We, instructors, who continue to work with geriatrics, have something deep within us that calls us to keep going back.
Many of my participants are in the last stages of their lives. Many of them will never leave their facility alive. My role is to impart my love of music and movement as a healing tool to the participants. Besides loving the music and loving to teach, we Zumba Gold Instructors have to be extremely devoted and passionate about what we do with this population.. We have to be because It's very difficult emotional and physical work. I'm not speaking about the dancing aspect of the class. It's how we have to generate ourselves to be to be able to encourage their participation. I don't do choreography . I gear the movements to whatever the individuals are able to do. Sometimes, all some people can do is move an arm or a leg and many of them need many repetitions.
Zumba Gold Instructors, whose classes consist primarily of people in wheelchairs or walkers, have to put more energy into what we do with them than we would if we were teaching healthy, strong, active Zumba Goldies. Note: I do teach some regular Zumba Gold classes other than chair and it charges my battery.
Sometimes our physically/neurologically challenged participants fall asleep in their wheelchairs during the class This is not something I take lightly. I usually dance over to them, pick up their hands and dance with them to awaken them. It's not healthy for them to sleep all the time and I work very hard to keeping them awake and involved. Sometimes, they forget where their shoulders are or how they used to clap their hands. I often dance up to them, make eye contact and with hands-on, help them remember. Amazingly, once I do the movement with them while making eye contact and suggest they continue to do it, they do.
However, by the time I get home from teaching 2-3 classes a day like this, I'm ready for a nap or a walk at the beach. I love the residents and love watching their faces change from unresponsive or sleeping to alive and expressive. I derive so much pleasure from working with the most difficult cases, because I know they will eventually return to this moment and dance with us the best way they can.
I plan to continue teaching Zumba Gold Chair classes to the elderly as long as I live, to points north, east, south and west.. There's no other population I'd rather be teaching.. #loveteachingzumbagold
January 30, 2012
People often ask me how and why I began teaching Zumba Fitness to the Elder (Senior ) population. This is my story about how this evolved.
I was living in Rio Rancho, NM when I saw a TV commercial with Beto Perez, my former Latin Aerobics instructor at The Williams Island Spa, Aventura FL. I bought the Zumba Fitness DVDs and I knew immediately, I would become a Zumba Fitness instructor.
I was concerned that I would be 'the oldest Zumba Fitness Instructor in the world", since most of the dancers on the DVD looked like they were in their 20's and 30's. Eventually, I moved back to Florida and signed up to take the Zumba Fitness Instructor training in Miami, FL.
I became Licensed and Certified in Miami in 2005 by Beto, at a training with hundreds of very young, sexy, beautiful instructors from all over the world. I felt like "the oldest Zumba Fitness instructor in the world" that day.
After the training, I continued to take classes every week with Beto and the very young Latino male/female participants in Aventura, FL. I looked around during the class and didn't see any 'older adults' who could maintain the pace of the class. The music was very, very fast, many different steps, with jumping and twisting. The seniors were doing the class in their own rhythm at their own pace. Many of whom looked as if they were in a different class entirely, as what they did didn't resemble steps we were doing. They looked frustrated because they couldn't keep up.
This is when I decided that I would create a Zumba Fitness class for Seniors at a slower pace, fewer steps, low impact, no jumping and with clear instructions.
Most Zumba Fitness instructors do not teach any dance steps before the class begins. The instructor does not talk about the steps before or during the dance. The students watch the instructor and do what he/she does. Hopefully you can follow. In my Zumba Gold class, I planned to give instructions to each dance and verbal cues during the song.
I am an experienced Latin dancer who danced in competitions. Yet, there were days when I took an advanced Zumba class, fast, fast, fast rhythm and many, many steps...that I couldn't follow.
I was frustrated. I couldn't believe that I, who danced all my life, couldn't keep up. My body, my feet and arms weren't moving as fast as my brain wanted it to. I felt very uncoordinated. I couldn't keep the pace with the Instructor nor the younger students. I couldn't dance fast enough to adjust to the abrupt change in steps or rhythm.
I felt old, really old. I felt awkward. I felt clumsy, although I've been an accomplished Latin dancer all my life- Cha Cha, Merengue, Salsa, Mambo, Tango, Rhumba, Samba, Flamenco. I danced throughout high school. I danced throughout college and even appeared on The Dick Clark Bandstand when I was single. I danced with my husband and dance partner for more than 17 years. With all my experience as a dancer, I had a hard time maintaining and keeping up the pace with the instructor and all the 'younger' students.
When I was in my dancing prime, I'd rather dance than eat. Dancing had always been a huge part of my life. Divorced in 1977, I no longer had my husband/dance partner. Dancing wasn't fun anymore. I was not only divorcing my husband and dance partner, but also losing another important part of my life- my love for dance.
In my later years, frustrated at singles dances, either standing and watching people dance or dancing with men who couldn't dance, I stopped dancing. This was not a healthy decision for me because I derived so much joy and satisfaction from this form of exercise- it was my healing art. I became very sad and somewhat depressed about not dancing. I longed to dance. My body, mind and spirit ached to be dance, to be both stimulated and soothed by the music and the rhythms. Dancing made me feel alive, energetic, youthful and balanced,
When I found Zumba Fitness, I discovered that I could satisfy my dance craving and didn't need to subject myself to singles dances or to men who couldn't dance. I was happy again that Latin dancing and Latin music was once again in my life. I didn't need a dance partner. I could dance by myself or with others.
As I continued to teach and take Zumba Fitness classes with much younger male and female instructors, I realized that I would never teach the way they do. I compared my skills at 65yrs old with the skills of a 20-40yr old and they didn't match up. Yes! I could be part of their class and dance with them, jump, bend, twist and do fast dance steps, but I could never teach like them.
I was very upset and frustrated and considered resigning as an Instructor many, many times. I have always set very high standards for myself and I was convinced that I wasn't good enough to teach. Although students always loved my classes, I wasn't satisfied with my Zumba Fitness skills.
I have been a high achiever all my life and I didn't like being mediocre in anything I pursued. I felt like a mediocre Zumba Instructor. I wanted to be the best, yet compared to the younger instructors, I was not the best. I was competing with instructors who were either group fitness instructors, personal trainers or professional dancers with years of choreographing experience .
I was none of these. I was a 65 yr old woman who loved to dance, who loved to teach, who loved seeing aliveness in people's eyes and joy on people's faces, who loved knowing that dancing was keeping them healthy, mentally, physically and emotionally.
I didn't have a clue about choreographing a song. I didn't have the technical skills of a personal trainer. I was not a group fitness instructor. I was a dancer who loved to dance. I just loved to dance; I was an enthusiastic, energetic and passionate instructor and wanted to turn other people on to this amazing exercise program. Yet, I convinced myself that I was a failure as a Zumba Fitness Instructor and told my family that I would never teach Zumba Fitness again. I'll just take classes and dance.
Several months passed and I stopped teaching. Yet, I'm a great teacher in so many other areas: I teach motivational classes, workshops and seminars on Health and Fitness. I inspire people to keep their eye on their goal, not to quit when the going gets rough. Yet I wasn't following my own advice. I quit without seeking a solution to the problem.
I was struggling with the idea of desperately wanting to teach and not feeling like an expert Zumba Fitness Instructor. I was determined to find a solution and I would find another population to teach.
Fortunately, a spark ignited deep inside me driving me towards a more comfortable teaching style. I became Licensed as a Zumba Gold Instructor and began teaching Seniors and beginners to Zumba. I used the same music that I received every month from the Zumba Instructor Network. I wrote down the steps. I practiced the DVDs, transferred the songs to my Ipod and regained my confidence to teach. I knew that if a person loved something so much, we just cannot suppress that passion. That was it!! I was passionate about Zumba and passionate to start teaching again, my way.
I accepted the fact that I am almost 40 yrs older than most instructors; that I can't teach or move the way they do; that although I look youthful, my body and mind are not as sharp as they used to be. There had to be a market where I would derive great satisfaction and confidence in myself as a Zumba Gold Fitness instructor. I was determined to find that niche where few dared to go.
I promised myself I would thrive and be successful and comfortable as a Zumba Gold Fitness instructor, teaching 'my way' and utilizing 'my talents' and passion. I am gifted with the skill of being able to change the steps, increase/decrease the number of repetitions, reduce the speed of the dance instantly, based on the type/skill level of the participants.
I searched endlessly to find a community to share my joy and enthusiasm for Zumba Fitness as dance therapy. With so many Basic and Advanced Zumba Fitness instructors around the world now, I often asked myself, "what makes me different from the rest? Why would someone take my class over another's?" I didn't have the answer yet, but I would continue to search to find the answer and find my unique market.
I prayed daily for spirit to guide me to the right people and the right places to share my talents, passion and love for music and dance, for healing people.
2012- I am now 72yrs old and licensed to teach Zumba Gold, Aqua Zumba, ZumbAtomic and Basic Zumba.
I found my niche. I have been in the Holistic Health field for more than 50 years, constantly fine tuning my focus to meet the needs of the times. I am a Life Coach, specializing in Geriatric Health and Wellness. Zumba Gold/Chair Zumba is part of my program.
Lighthouse Point Assisted Living Facility
I joined The Virginia Beach Task Force on Aging, as well as The Norfolk and Chesapeake Task Forces on Aging, comprised of people focusing on senior care. I have met many wonderful people involved with Assisted Living, Independent Living and Memory Care Communities, who have invited me to teach Zumba Gold/Chair Zumba.
I teach Zumba Gold and Chair Zumba because I know that within every person is a dancer, a lover of music, that music and dance brings aliveness and energy and joy into people's hearts and minds.
I love seeing their happy faces lit up and smiling.
I love hearing them hooting and howling to the Latin sounds.
I love seeing people moving and having fun in a Zumba class.
I love seeing those with Alzheimer's remembering how much they loved music and dance.
I love wrapping belly dancing scarves around the dancers and watching their faces as they jingle and jangle.
I love seeing the faces of those with Parkinson's Disease when they're moving to the dynamic Latin rhythms.
Endorphins are releasing in their brains. Pain is subsiding. Happy hormones are flowing.
The stress hormone cortisol is reduced from dancing and laughing and being with other dancers.
I love holding the hands of seniors with Dementia, when they're not responding, and then they begin to tap their feet, clap their hands to the music.
They cannot stay depressed or angry when they're dancing .
This is why I teach Zumba Gold and Chair Zumba and why I specialize in Geriatric Health and Wellness. This is why although I may be 'the oldest Zumba Gold Instructor in the World", I'm thrilled at the idea.
To Schedule a Class in Your Area:
Contact me at: www.facebook.com/grandmashellieteacheszumba
Email: [email protected]
My prayers were answered. I found my niche. I am no longer trying to compete with 20 or 30 yr olds. I am a 73 year old senior supporting and empowering other seniors to live a healther, longer life filled with love, passion and a reason to wake up every morning.