Wherever "Chaplain Ann" Bergstrom strolls, heads pop up and smiles break out.
Nice as she is, the warm welcome is aimed mostly at the small, rounded stringed instrument she's plucking. The reverie harp, developed in Stillwater, is making a difference in places such as Walker Elder Suites in Edina.
The chaplain sets it down opposite Donna Steele and they play a "duet" together. "This is fun," Steele says.
She strums it for Charlotte Scarlett, who can't speak but shows her appreciation with a huge grin.
She puts it on the lap of Mayme Larson, who initially balks, "I don't have any talent at all." Eventually though, she plays and then she beams and says: "It's soothing. It's heavenly."
Designed for caregivers who lack musical experience and patients who don't always have full use of their fingers, the reverie harp is goof-proof. Its 22 strings are tuned in such a way -- the technical term is "open modal chord" -- that no matter how they are played, they produce a gentle tone.
"Each string complements the sound of another string," said Bergstrom. "There are no wrong notes. People who have physical limits can play this and feel successful, they can feel good about themselves, which is very important around here."
Don't mistake this for music therapy, she warned. "I'm not a musical therapist. They are highly skilled, highly trained professionals. I'm just a pastor who walks around noodling on a reverie harp. I'm something of a strolling minstrel."