'It takes me back': How VR is helping some N.W.T. elders reconnect with tradition - Action News
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'It takes me back': How VR is helping some N.W.T. elders reconnect with tradition

A virtual reality project from the Tch Government in the N.W.T. allows seniors to travel to cultural sites like the What Falls, drum dances or a hide camp. It's a chance for seniors with mobility challenges to travel virtually and also teach youth about the sites.

Virtual reality headsets allow elders to mentally travel to traditional sites or cultural events

How VR is helping some N.W.T. elders reconnect with tradition

3 days ago
Duration 2:35
A new project from the Tch government is marrying modern technology with tradition, using virtual reality to bring elders back out on the land. Natalie Pressman has the story.

The drumming and chanting of hand games is a familiar sound for Noel Drybones.

But on this October day, there's no tournament in town. The sounds are coming from a set of virtual reality (VR) goggles Drybones is wearing. When the 81-year-old removes the headset, he'sback in the quiet TV room of the seniorscentre in Behchok, N.W.T.

The headset is part of a VR project marrying modern technology with tradition. It allows elders, and others who struggle with mobility, to travel to the land without ever leaving home.

"It takes me back," Drybones said. "Helps my memories."

The Tch Government started the project during the COVID-19 pandemic as a way of bringing the land to residents during lockdown. Users can put on the VR goggles and choose from a list of 10 locations includinggravesites, the What falls, a drum dance orhide-tanning camp.

White headsets on a table.
The VR headsets allow users to see 360 degrees of their chosen site and hear the sounds of things like hide-scraping, fishing, or drum dancing. (Natalie Pressman)

The project came to fruition this past summer andtwoheadsets now live in the seniors home in Behchok. Staff there say that connecting elders some of whom areliving with dementia or restricted physical mobility with their culturesparks happy memories.

"This is a way to kind of help bring that back to them as best as we can so they don't feel so much sense of loss from coming to live in a home," said Sarah Power, a nurse at the home.

Tool to teachyouth

Johnny Simpson, 66, hopes it can expand as a tool to help teach youth.

Simpson isalso a resident at the Behchok home andused to work with the school in What, N.W.T., taking students on the land.

In the headset, he travels to a fishing boat. He says it reminds him of taking students to pull fishing nets. He says it's not as good as really being there, touching the fish and being on the water, but it could be a good way to share knowledge with a group especially if the elder, or the students, aren't able to travel.

"If I'm going to talk to the kids, they can see what we're looking at in here," Simpson said, pointing to the headset.

Man sits on coach wearing virtual reality headset.
Johnny Simpson, a resident at the Behchok seniors home, says he hopes the technology will be used to help teach youth about different cultural sites. He says it's a good alternative to teaching on the land if elders or students can't travel. (Natalie Pressman/CBC)

Paul Cressman, the project manager with the Tch Government, said that's an aspect of the technology they plan to explore.

He imaginesworkshops wherestudents might be wearing the headset with an elder sitting beside them telling the story of that place and its significance.

He also talked about potential for environmental monitoring where VR technology is usedto record sites, bring back the footage and have elders offer comments on how the environment has changed.

Cressman stressed thatthere is no substitutefor actually being on the land.

"But it's just a recognition that sometimes it's not possible and so here are some alternative ways using technology to bring those experiences into the community," he said.

'Form of mental time travel'

Steve Lindsay, a psychology professor at the University of Victoria, studies cognitive psychology,orhow the mind works.

He called the project a kind of memory therapy where the user is able to remember an earlier experience and bring themselves back to that time.

"A form of mental time travel," he said.

He said it's not likely for that to have lasting effects, especially for those experiencing age-related memory loss.

"But," he said, "if you can enable people to have a nice time, that's a good thing to do."

Woman in purple cardigan with staff tag sits, looks at camera.
Julia Naedzo, the facility coordinator at the Behchok home, says using the headsets makes the residents happy. (Natalie Pressman/CBC)

Julia Naedzo, the facility coordinator at the Behchok home, said many of the elders don't remember using the headset days after the fact but that it makes them happy when they do.

She says it also helps that the VR is in the Tch language.

"I think it takes them back to when they were kids. And you see their smile and their laughter when we were showing it to them," Naedzo said.

Drybones, the elder transported to hand games through the headset, said he likes it very much especially the drumming.

"Everybody should be dancing," he said, "why are you hanging around?"