Why Dance Makes Brains Better
Spirituality & Health|May/Jun 2023
How an effort to help people with Parkinson's disease now helps everyone keep a healthier brain, mind, and body
By Peggy La Cerra
Why Dance Makes Brains Better

Bathed in a romantic palette of light, shimmering tree branches rhythmically sway to a vibrant movement of Handel's L'Allegro, mesmerizing the audience at the Luminato Festival in Toronto. The branches are, in fact, the outstretched limbs of fifth and sixth graders from the Nelson Mandela Park Public School and Winchester Public School intertwined with the limbs of elder members of Dancing with Parkinson's Canada. The combined troupe is known as L'Allegro Movement Project.

One of the elderly dancers describes herself as “old and cranky and creaky—and all the rest of it [that goes with Parkinson’s],” but she says this while grinning from ear to ear. Another elderly dancer recounts the “number of times I have this kind of epiphany where, at the end of the class, I catch myself doing something that I didn’t think I could really do. And yet, just the shared experience of other people moving around—and, I think, primarily the music—just makes things possible that were difficult just ten minutes before.”

These 50 dancers have come together to express John Milton’s poetic masterwork in movement—and the result is beautiful. It also turns out to be a powerful demonstration of the ability of dance to improve not just movement, but also memory and the ability to learn in both young and old.

THE START OF A MOVEMENT

This story is from the May/Jun 2023 edition of Spirituality & Health.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the May/Jun 2023 edition of Spirituality & Health.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM SPIRITUALITY & HEALTHView All
ONE WORD TO BEAT WINTER BLUES: BIOMIMICRY
Spirituality & Health

ONE WORD TO BEAT WINTER BLUES: BIOMIMICRY

CREATURELY REFLECTIONS

time-read
4 mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
THINKING ABOUT RESTITUTION
Spirituality & Health

THINKING ABOUT RESTITUTION

THE HEART OF HAPPINESS

time-read
5 mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
WAITING IN LINE
Spirituality & Health

WAITING IN LINE

OUR WALK IN THE WORLD

time-read
2 mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
ENTER THE SAUNA
Spirituality & Health

ENTER THE SAUNA

Journalist Emily O’Kelly shares some uplifting research on the benefits of sweat bathing, a global healing practice not just limited to Northern climes.

time-read
2 mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
the trail of ATONEMENT
Spirituality & Health

the trail of ATONEMENT

One Ashkenazi Jewish family escaped pogroms in Russia and then flourished in South Dakota, but the “free land” of their new homestead had been unfairly taken from the Lakota by the United States. Generations later, a celebrated investigative journalist set out to tell the truth of the Lakota and her family, calculate The Cost of Free Land—and pay it back.

time-read
10+ mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
STALKING YOUR Mind
Spirituality & Health

STALKING YOUR Mind

Stalking the Mind is part of an ancient Indigenous American Medicine Way to tame your guilt, fears, and shame. What we’re “stalking” are our thought patterns and beliefs that seem to create the opposite of happiness and wellbeing. It’s a powerful psychotherapeutic journey of healing without the diagnosis or labels.

time-read
10+ mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
LEAVING MESA VERDE
Spirituality & Health

LEAVING MESA VERDE

After 21 years of service at Mesa Verde National Park, RANGER DAVID FRANKS recently guided his last tour of the pueblos and cliff dwellings. He says he was fortunate to assist the archeologists with a variety of work and never lost his amazement with their ability to figure out how and when things happened. The question he still wrestles with is much deeper: Why they left?

time-read
5 mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
BECOMING YOUR OWN LEAD RESEARCHER IN HEALTHCARE
Spirituality & Health

BECOMING YOUR OWN LEAD RESEARCHER IN HEALTHCARE

PEGGY LA CERRA, PHD, downloaded a health app to aggregate her medical records and was stunned to see the phrase \"aortic atherosclerosis.\" What she did next is a helpful model for all of us.

time-read
6 mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
ARCHETYPAL ASTROLOGY
Spirituality & Health

ARCHETYPAL ASTROLOGY

\"Is astrology true?\" is the wrong question, writes RABBI RAMI SHAPIRO. He suggests that the truth is out there, but out there is really in here.

time-read
6 mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023
WELLNESS IN THE WILD
Spirituality & Health

WELLNESS IN THE WILD

Spa aficionado MARY BEMIS takes the [cold] plunge at Mohonk Mountain House.

time-read
3 mins  |
Sep/Oct 2023