YM&워싱턴 하이츠의 YWHA & 인우드

New York Daily News Praises The Y!

ByMayara GuimaraesNEW YORK DAILY NEWS

수요일, 1월 30, 2013, 8:57 오후

No illusion: magic class is just one of hundreds of offerings that have seniors entranced by programs at the YM/YWHA

Center counts nearly 260 activities from yoga to ballroom dancing and magic. Any Manhattan resident who is at least 60 is welcome. Classes are free, thanks to funding from the city Department for the Aging

Mastering magic tricks can help develop dexterity, coordination and focus, as well as boost confidence. It’s also a heckuva lot of fun, participants say.

On a recent weekday morning at the YM/YWHA Center on Nagle Ave., 15 students — each at least 60 years old — are busily showing their teacher that they’ve mastered the art of making a handkerchief disappear into thin air.

The teacher, magician Gary Dreifus, says that magic is “all about one thing: misconception.” Putting that into practice, he tells his charges, will give them a kind of power they probably never knew they had.

But the one thing the pupils say they have taken from these classes is happiness. And that’s no misconception.

“I come here to have fun,” said Susan Obermayer, a Washington Heights resident for more than 60 연령. “I like showing it to my grandkids, but honestly I come because it is so much fun,” she says.

Milady Nunez, an Inwood resident all her life, agrees.

“Gary is so funny,” she says. “I come to get some good laughs out of me.”

It makes sense: Who wouldn’t want to crack wise and socialize while learning a new hobby?

Magic is one of dozens of offerings for adults introduced by Patricia Cipora Harte, the director of the Center for Adults Living Well at the “Y” since January 2012.

The center now counts nearly 260 activities — an average of 10 ...에 12 per day — from yoga to ballroom dancing and magic. Any Manhattan resident who is at least 60 is welcome. Classes are free, thanks to funding from the city Department for the Aging, and the center provides breakfast two days each week.

A group of nurses, occupational therapists, social workers and other volunteers keep the center coursing with action from 9 오전. ...에 5 오후, Sundays through Fridays.

Harte, 61, who worked for the JCC Association before she came to the “Y,” said she was eager to get Dreifus to make uptown his next destination.

After attending a presentation by the magician in which he described the benefits of his class, she decided that it would be a good fit.

“That is how my mind works,” Harte says. “I am a programmer, a social worker. I think you can never rest on what you have done in the past. You always have to stretch yourself and think about how you can make it new and fresh.

“I am always thinking different classes and activities to offer,” adds Harte, noting that she recently wrote a grant to introduce English as a Second Language classes in combination with citizenship seminars. The program will begin in March.

Dreifus, 59, an award-winning magician who has been practicing and performing since his days at James Madison High School in Brooklyn, says his classes can improve students’ coordination and focus, among other benefits.

“Teaching magic tricks . . . can allow mature adults to experience success as well as change the way they believe others perceive them, and help them with social acceptance,” he says.

One student, Rise Klein, recounts a family dinner in which she was the center of attention, demonstrating that the magician’s claims are more than mere illusion.

“Everybody was impressed and trying to figure out my tricks,” Klein says. “I had so much fun.”


Read morehttp://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/uptown/magic-ym-ywha-article-1.1251723#ixzz2JZMN9Xu0

Y에 대해
설립 1917, YM&워싱턴 하이츠의 YWHA & 인우드 (그들) 북부 맨해튼 최고의 유대인 커뮤니티 센터로 인종 및 사회경제적으로 다양한 유권자에게 서비스를 제공하며 중요한 사회 서비스와 혁신적인 건강 프로그램을 통해 모든 연령대의 사람들의 삶의 질을 향상시킵니다., 웰빙, 교육, 사회 정의, 다양성과 포용을 촉진하면서, 그리고 도움이 필요한 사람들을 돌보는.

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