In Pleasanton, an ancient Japanese tradition points a way to healthier aging

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Every week, a small group of older women gathers in a little room next to the courtyard of a senior living center in Pleasanton to practice the centuries-old Japanese craft of arranging flowers.

The ikebana stylists, ranging from 75 to 95 years old, have been meeting for years. They come together for an hour on Tuesdays to work with yellow daffodils and flowering purple veronica, creating beautiful, delicate, and impermanent arrangements they will enjoy in their homes until the next week comes.

Ikebana follows strict rules that dictate style and form. Flower stems must be a precise length and lean at a precise angle. The second stem should be three-quarters the length of the first stem; the third, half the length of the second. The result is a colorful tapestry of flowers that are mathematically identical to one another, but completely unique in style.

“Before I retired, I was a CPA,” said Alice Huang, the group’s instructor. “But every day I wanted to look at flowers.”

Huang grew up in Taiwan and studied ikebana for over a decade. But many of the women in her class, who are also her neighbors, are novices, joining the class not to begin their journey toward master craftsmanship, but rather to bond over a shared activity.

Irene Tang, of Stoneridge Creek, left, teaches Lucille Liu, of Stoneridge Creek, right, about Ikebana during a class at Stoneridge Creek retirement homes in Pleasanton, Calif., Tuesday, April 25, 2023. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group)
Irene Tang, left, teaches Lucille Liu, both residents of Stoneridge Creek about the Japanese ancient art of flower arranging during an ikebana class at Stoneridge Creek retirement homes in Pleasanton. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) 

“It’s hard to be upset when you’re around flowers,” said Irene Tang, the group’s founder.

The class, an hour a week, is a small ritual. But as the Bay Area works to implement a plan for an aging population, informal groups like this one are filling the gaps. According to experts, it’s exactly the type of life-affirming activity that can help seniors age actively, and healthily.

“These seemingly simple things are so meaningful,” said Ashwin Kotwal, an assistant professor of geriatrics at the University of California San Francisco. “Having that weekly opportunity to get together and discuss a very specific skill is just incredibly valuable.”

Flowers rest on a book about Ikebana during a class at Stoneridge Creek retirement homes in Pleasanton, Calif., Tuesday, April 25, 2023. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group)
Flowers rest on a book about ikebana, the Japanese art of flower arranging, during a class at Stoneridge Creek retirement homes in Pleasanton. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) 

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