There are moments in life that stay lit inside us—quiet embers that continue to glow long after we expect them to fade. One of those moments for me began not in a sanctuary or a family gathering, but in the marble halls of the Ohio Statehouse during Memory Day—a sacred annual rhythm where caregivers, advocates, and loved ones gather to honor the dignity and worth of those living with Alzheimer’s and dementia. It is a day where stories are offered like prayers, where grief and hope sit side by side, and where the power of human connection feels unmistakably holy.
It was there that I first met Henry—not in person, but through the well-known Music & Memory video. A caregiver gently placed headphones over Henry’s ears. At first, nothing changed. But then his eyes lifted. His face awakened. Recognition surged through him like dawn breaking across a dark horizon. And then—he began to sing.
It was resurrection on a screen.
Music had reached a place words could no longer go.
Something shifted in me that day. Because my grandmother—our Grams—had been giving us the medicine of music our entire lives. Her refrain was constant, woven into every stage of our growing up:
“Put a smile on your face and a song in your heart.”
She said it when we were upset, when we were joyful, when we doubted ourselves, and when we didn’t know what came next. She tucked it into birthday cards using a secret family acronym. She spoke it over us the way some people speak blessings.
Looking back with what I now understand about dementia, I realize that by 2015—two years after her diagnosis but likely over a decade into her true journey—those words had begun to hold an even deeper purpose. She was giving us a map. A way back to her.
And after seeing Henry awaken through music, I understood exactly what we needed to do.
I called my cousin Nick before I even left the parking garage.
“Nick—we need to put her motto to music.”
He didn’t hesitate. We began writing the song from two different states—me in Ohio, Nick in Colorado—trading voice memos, text messages, and late-night lyric edits. We wrote about the house on Nottingham, about childhood memories, about the wisdom she embodied.
Once the lyrics felt right, Nick’s friend Troy created a gentle, nostalgic keyboard melody with enough emotional gravitas to slip through the fog of dementia.
This song wasn’t just a gift.
It needed to be strong enough to find her.
During our family’s first-weekend-of-December celebration, Grams had one of the clearest nights we’d seen in a long time—laughing, engaged, fully herself. The next day, she was too weak to join the festivities. So we changed our plans.
Originally, we had planned to unveil the song during Sunday’s gathering at my parents’ home. But by early afternoon it was clear Grams was too weak to leave her care community. In an instant, our plans shifted. If she could not come to us, then we would bring the song—and the family—to her.
After all, she had created Christmas magic for us more times than we could ever count; now it was our turn to bring Christmas magic to her.
So nearly thirty of us caravanned across town as dusk settled around us, carrying not gifts or casseroles this time, but a song stitched from her own words, her own legacy, her own love.
When we arrived, we saw immediately how deep the fog had settled around her. She sat quiet and folded inward, her eyes barely open. The contrast from the night before was almost unbearable.
Still, we sang.
Voices trembled. Tears slipped down cheeks. Some cousins whispered the lyrics because singing them aloud hurt too much; others pushed through every line with shaking determination. We sang her own words back to her with all the hope we had.
When the last note faded, the silence that followed was devastating.
She did not wake.
She did not stir.
She did not look up.
We left heartbroken.
But I wasn’t ready to let the story end there.
In the days that followed, I gathered individual recordings from each family member—messy, tender, imperfect fragments of love—and layered them into a single chorus over Troy’s melody. A homemade harmony. A family tapestry.
On Christmas Eve, we brought dinner to Grams and Gramps—my parents, my brother, my husband Tyler, and me. Her room carried the unmistakable feel of a healthcare setting, but on her bedside table glowed a small Christmas tree I had decorated for her, casting soft light into the space.
After dinner, when the room fell quiet, I knelt beside her and pressed play.
The opening notes drifted out.
Her breathing shifted.
Her eyebrows lifted.
Something inside her flickered and rose.
And then, as the chorus approached—
the very words she had spoken into our lives for decades—
her eyes opened wide.
With stunning clarity and a spark of joy that felt like watching light return to a room, she exclaimed:
“THAT’S MY SONG!”
Not whispered.
Not faint.
Declared—with recognition, pride, and a fierce aliveness that took our breath away.
We played the song again.
And again.
And again.
For months afterward, caregivers played it often.
Sometimes it grounded her.
Sometimes it lifted her spirit.
Sometimes it simply reminded her she was loved.
Just like Henry.
She, too, was alive inside.
That moment taught me something essential:
Creativity is one of aging’s greatest superpowers.
It does not erase dementia.
It does not fix what is changing.
But it can bridge the spaces where words fail.
It can strengthen relationships when familiar pathways fade.
It can help us remember who we are to one another.
A Reflection for You
As you read this story, I invite you to reflect gently on your own life. What memories, songs, phrases, or rituals have shaped you? What creative expressions—old or new—might offer connection to someone you love? Is there a melody from your childhood that still stirs something in you? A phrase a loved one repeated that carries meaning you didn’t recognize before? A sensory thread that might reconnect you to someone who seems far away? And where might creativity—your creativity—become a quiet bridge of meaning, comfort, or recognition in a moment that feels tender or challenging?
Creativity doesn’t cure dementia.
But sometimes, it opens a door.
Sometimes, it brings someone home—
even for a moment.
And sometimes, that moment changes everything.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymsP8Nv4tZ8&list=RDymsP8Nv4tZ8&start_radio=1