NORWAY — It was a natural progression for Sherri Otterson to be hired as the Cancer Resource Center of Western Maine’s first employee, She spends a lot of her free time volunteering at the center, helping clients and organizing programming.

In September, the Norway nonprofit’s board of directors voted to hire Otterson as center supervisor. She’s working between 13 and 15 hours a week, unless there’s a special event that requires more of her time.

“I think they just felt since I was here and I started as the only volunteer and then the volunteer coordinator and more or less the supervisor, I guess they decided to give a little bonus,” Otterson said laughing. 

The center, located behind Stephens Memorial Hospital’s oncology, cardiology and urology clinics at 199 Main St., is a place for cancer patients, caregivers and survivors to relax, find support and enjoy a variety of activities.

Otterson began volunteering two years ago after she and her husband returned to the U.S. from teaching overseas for 28 years. She started volunteering with Stephens Memorial Hospital in its thrift store, and moved over to the center when that blossomed, first under the hospital, now as its own nonprofit.

“It is just a real positive feeling knowing that I am here and some days no one stops by. All it takes is one person to come in and you help them,” Otterson said. “This place is really nice. People feel like it’s theirs. They know there’s food up in the cabinet. They will go over and get food … if they’re hungry. It’s their safe place. That’s what we try to make it.”

Advertisement

Otterson started the lending library, and now there are other books for adult coloring and Zentangles. There are also wigs donated from the American Cancer Society, hats and scarves for men and women and other comfort items created by volunteers.

Not to be missed is the origami crane tree donated by a client who folded more than 1,000 paper birds and spread them among the center, the infusion room in the hospital and internal medicine office to bring hope and good luck to those battling various ailments.

Otterson and her volunteers listen to their clients and are open to suggestions for activities they’d like to see at the center or have available to them.

Activities are on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, and range from reiki to knitting to yoga to guided meditation.

A new Yoga Warriors session started recently at Posabilities in Norway and will run the rest of the month. It was created for cancer patients, caregivers and survivors.

“It’s just a class for them so they feel comfortable if they’re not quite up to where they were before (they got sick),” Otterson said. “This way the instructors will adapt to them and make it their group.”

Advertisement

After the session is done, she will survey clients to see if it’s a program they’d like to bring back.

Otterson’s husband’s family has been affected by cancer and her mother died from lung cancer. She knows what it’s like to have to drive far away for doctor’s appointments and treatments. That’s why she’s happy the center is in Norway and is available for people not only in the immediate area, but Bethel, other parts of Oxford Hills and patients who travel to Bridgton and Lewiston-Auburn.

“I think it’s just nice that we’re here to help the people in the area,” she said.

The center recently received a $2,500 donation for the new wellness program, which Otterson said is an area the center was lacking in programming.

“It has the stipulation that is has to be used for yoga, reiki, massage, reflexology — anything that will be a hands-on for the client for wellness,” she said. The hope is other donations will be made so the program can continue.

Next year, the center will hand out coupons, similar to Lewiston’s Dempsey Center, for reiki. It will include brochures of reiki practitioners who will participate in the program. The reiki is for current cancer patients and their caregivers.

Advertisement

“That will be nice, then they can go together,” Otterson said. Once the reiki coupons take off, the plan is to do the same for massage and reflexology.

While Otterson is the center supervisor, volunteers are needed to keep the center running. She has eight now but is looking to add more. The center would like a men’s facilitator to help guide men’s groups.

“We’re just finding out men are really different. It is just recently with the nurses coming over (and) they’re saying, ‘Men are being more affected right now (by cancer).’ They just need their time, their way of doing it,” she said about dealing with the disease.

Volunteers would free up Otterson from always manning the afternoon shifts, so she could run errands that help keep things going on behind the scenes.

“There is lots of things people can do. The first thing is just being here so the center is open and people can come in,” she said. “Then it’s a benefit if you like doing arts and crafts or chair yoga or something like that. … Even if you like to do yoga, you could be the person who is always at the yoga class.”

Anyone interested in volunteering can contact Otterson at 207-890-7063. For more information, visit www.crcofwm.org.

eplace@sunmediagroup.net


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.