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As I drive down the road leading to Kendal at Oberlin, a not-for-profit continuing care retirement community (CCRC) in the small college town of Oberlin, Ohio, I observe that the campus is bustling with activity. A couple works in the garden outside their cottage; clusters of people are walking, talking, laughing, coming, going. It brings to mind a college campus, except that most of the "students" here have white hair.

As I enter Kendal's main building, the Community Center, I spot a jigsaw puzzle spread across a table near the grand piano in the living room, ready for someone to come along and add another piece to the psychedelic poink-an-green paisley pattern that is taking shape.

I see a man woman, he in white shorts and she in a white tennis dress, heading off to the tennis court for what I learn is their daily game. Someone tells me he's in his 90s.

Down a hall from the living room, a group of residents--Darlene Krato, chair of Kendal's Art Committee and four friends from the art club--are busy hanging a new exhibit across from the in house bank and beauty salon. It's one of Kendal's many art displays scattered throughout the building; some are on loan from local galleries and schools, and some are permanent exhibits.

The laughter of the art club group catches the attention of a woman who's guiding her motorized scooter in their direction on her way to an appointment. She jokes that she has five minutes to "waste" and says she might as well spend it with them, since they seem to be having so much fun.

On the other side of the Community Center, a woman sits in the library, quietly enjoying the morning newspaper and the morning sun streaming in through the large windows behind her.

It's a typical day at Kendal at Oberlin.

The nonprofit Kendal Corporation's approach to providing a home for older people is rooted in the principles of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), with emphasis on respect, independence and choice. This is one of nine Kendal communities. The first opened in 1973 near Philadelphia, with eight more following in Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York and Virginia. Two additional Kendal communities are currently in development.

Kendal came to Oberlin when a group of retirement-age Oberlin College alumni, searching the country for a retirement community to move into, visited a Kendal community near Philadelphia. They liked it so much that they asked if the Kendal Corporation would build one in Oberlin. The representatives of the Kendal Corporation weren't sure the market would support a new CCRC here, so they told the alumni that if they could get enough commitments to ensure two-thirds' occupancy, one would be built. They did, and it was.

Kendal's philosophy is that "retirement and growing older can usher in new opportunities for growth and development, even if emerging limitations or infirmities necessitate a degree of dependency." A Kendal brochure expands on this philosophy: "The lifestyle offered in our communities seeks to make the later years independent, productive, and stimulating while providing security, assurance of quality health care, and relief from many of the burdens of day-to-day life in environments not designed for older people. Such a community contributes to life enrichment, as residents have the opportunity to explore new experiences and new relationships and to cultivate lifelong concerns and interests."

And explore they do. Whether a resident prefers watching birds at the natural wetlands across from Kendal's Community Center or at one of its ponds, enjoying a rousing game of bridge, attending a concert or class or lecture at nearby Oberlin College, participating in a science discussion, going for a refreshing swim, playing in a croquet or pingpong tournament--or participating in any of the dozens of other cultural and recreational activities--there seems to be something for everyone here.

Again, it's all about choice.

Whether residents live in one of Kendal's independent living apartments or cottages, or one of its private or semiprivate rooms in the personal care (assisted living) or health center (skilled nursing) wings, they are free to participate in any activity they're capable of enjoying, according to Director of Admissions Maggie Stark.

She explains that the only staff-planned activities for residents take place in the health center. All other activities, both on and off the Kendal campus, are planned by the residents themselves, through the Residents' Association and its committees. They come up with the ideas, do the organizing and implementing of programs, and oversee the use of many of the campus's common areas, such as the auditorium, craft rooms, library and gift shop. If a desired program requires funding, such as the recently opened putting green, residents raise the funds themselves.

The activity choices available to Kendal's residents aren't, by any means, entirely recreational. Through the efforts of Kendal's Volunteer Clearinghouse, started six years ago by residents Joe and Betty Verlie, Kendal residents can opt to volunteer--either for one (or more) of some 80 area agencies or within Kendal itself. Of 300 residents, more than 200 of them, including several from the health center, serve as volunteers.

Stark points out that the volunteer opportunities help new residents find their niche within the community when they first move here. She says that although about 40% of the residents are alumni of Oberlin College--a connection reflected in the fact that residents have moved to Kendal (and back to Oberlin) from 26 other states--the remainder are new to Oberlin.

Mrs. Verlie says, "It's important for people to be connected to their world and to continue contributing. When I first came here, I didn't know anyone and I didn't know where I'd fit in. I thought, 'If I feel that way, I'll bet the other 60% of residents who aren't from Oberlin might feel the same way.' I'd been a volunteer for many years and saw an opportunity." She and her husband formed a committee, and out of it the Volunteer Clearinghouse was born.

The Clearinghouse matches residents' interests and abilities as closely as possible with agencies' needs for volunteers, and helps to arrange transportation when needed.

Mrs. Verlie explains that transportation has been one of the biggest challenges, but that it "always works out." For example, some agencies bring the supplies to residents who stuff envelopes for them, so that residents can perform the service without leaving home.

The variety of volunteer spots residents fill is almost mindboggling. Some serve as docents, conducting tours at a local historical society's three museum buildings or at Oberlin College's Allen Art Museum. Some ring the familiar Salvation Army bells during the holidays, and some make book bags every year for underprivileged schoolchildren. Kendal's residents tutor, counsel, make phone calls, deliver Meals on Wheels, record books on tape for the visually impaired, look after staff members' children when school is canceled on snow days, serve as hospital volunteers and help out at the college and local public schools. One resident even serves as the chairman of Oberlin's city council, and two others serve on city commissions.

Then there's the Neighbors Together program, which is a partnership between Kendal residents and another local group, Oberlin Seniors. The partner organization screens community-dwelling seniors to determine their need, and Kendal volunteers provide the manpower to perform minor home repairs for them free of charge.

Resident volunteers who lend a hand on the Kendal campus help with such tasks as watering plants or working in the officer; some of them assist health center residents or volunteer in the children's daycare center that is located in the Community Center.

"There is a 90-year-old woman who comes in and helps with the filing in our office every Friday," says Stark. "She's dedicated and does a great job. It really keeps her going. She says it's away for her to 'give back."'

According to Mrs. Verlie, residents' offers to volunteer in the community-at-large met with mild resistance at first. "People tended to be skeptical and a little territorial," she says with a smile. "We just sent out letters offering our help and asking what we could do." Although she recalls that the response was light in the beginning, the resistance obviously didn't last. An article appearing last year in Kendal's newsletter (written by residents, of course!) states that Kendal volunteers gave a whopping 37,430 hours in the year 2000--19,883 of them within the Kendal community and 17,547 in the broader community.

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