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Submit Review“On any day there are 20 different things that I could do, but I look forward to coming in and helping with Chorus because it's a delight,” says Bill with a smile.
Bill, 78, is a retired teacher of 36 years and now volunteers with Chorus, teaching English at the Chorus Bull Creek Activity Centre.
Some of the students have lived in Australia for 20 years or more and speak very little English. Bill explores innovative teaching methods.
“I pursue everything that works and I step back from things that don't work,” he adds.
Bill starts the lesson by looking at the front page of the West Australian and uses words like ‘happy’ and ‘sad’ to describe the photo of the Megan and Harry interview from the previous night.
Bill also runs the Memory Café for people living with dementia.
People with dementia tend to be like people with no English,” says Bill. “They're there, but no one sees them, no one knows them, they're isolated.”
Dan maintains that social relationships and engaging in conversation can lessen the effects of dementia.
We reflect on episodes from the back catalogue where Louise had explored some of these themes in a two-part series on dementia and three-part series on loneliness.
“It's not an us and them or those with dementia and without, it's part of living,” recalls Lou of her interview with Sarah and Blanche.
“Social connection, connections to others and if we haven't got that, loneliness plays such a big part on our mental wellbeing, whether we've got dementia or not,” says Lou.
Lou is leaving Chorus and for now, we will be taking a break from Chorus Voices.
“We've dipped back into their back catalogue which has just reminded us and reminded me, Louise, of the ground that we've covered, the conversations we've had,” says Dan.
“I want to take this opportunity to acknowledge you as not just the co-host of Chorus Voices, but for the leadership and the contribution you've made to the establishment of this organisation, Chorus. We've seen that through the lens of Chorus Voices today.”
So that’s a wrap – for now! This is our special 54th episode – please enjoy it and see you when we’re back from our break.
Podcast Hosts: Dan Minchin and Louise Forster
Opening Voiceover: Ryan Burke
Opening Music: “Wattlebird” by Dylan Hatton Music
Interviewees: Bill Green and Andy Lau
Producer/Editor: Judith Hatton
Executive Producer: Meaghan Ferries
Audio editing: Matthew Clark
Artwork: Maddie Bull
Mentioned in this episode:
Chorus is undergoing some exciting changes to work more locally - to become less of a service provider and more of a facilitator in the community. In this episode we talk to Elli Moody, facilitator of inclusive art programs at Chorus, about the inspiring community engagement that is going on locally in Mandurah.
“We try and have an annual exhibition each year, which is really about showcasing what our guys have been producing and getting it out there in the community,” says Elli.
Elli and the Ability Arts team got involved in the Selfie Portrait Exhibition last year. They sent out a kit with a canvas, paints and paint brushes to various groups in the Mandurah community.
“We could have done it just in-house with our customers, but we thought we'd throw it out to the wider community,” Elli explains. “It's really good for building some connections within the community. We had about 25 students from John Tonkin Ed Support Centre take part.”
The team has a strong relationship with the City of Mandurah and have taken part in other community art projects, like painting the signage for the beach access equipment shed at Keith Holmes Reserve in Mandurah.
“Our artists got together and started drawing beach sort of inspired illustrations, which we then put together into a design, which is now on the shed,” says Elli.
Eight artists from Ability Arts took part in state-wide As We Are art exhibition last year. Potter Kylie Graham from the group won the won the sculpture award with her entry of Cinderella and Prince Charming.
“She was just so excited and she actually received the award from Stephen Dawson, who is the Minister for Disability Services,’ adds Elli.
It’s not all about art down at Ability Arts (although it mostly is!) The group love going on social outings too and last year funded some of their activities by signing up for Containers for Change.
“When Containers for Change came out, we thought that would be a great opportunity to make some extra money,” adds Elli.
“I think the Ability Arts really speaks to the multiple connections and how we really connect with the community down there,” says Louise.
Dan agrees.
“What we're trying to do in the Peel area and then beyond is replicate the sort of local way of working that we've heard about today in other places. And that's really the plan,” says Dan.
Credits:
Podcast Hosts: Dan Minchin and Louise Forster
Opening Voiceover: Ryan Burke
Opening Music: “Wattlebird” by Dylan Hatton Music
Interviewee: Elli Moody, Facilitator Social Support Group, Chorus Ability Arts, Mandurah
Producer/Editor: Judith Hatton
Executive Producer: Meaghan Ferries
Audio editing: Matthew Clark
Artwork: Maddie Bull
Mentioned in this episode:
We look back on what was memorable in 2020: taking the plunge to get in the pool; leaving the house to pursue fashion design; and staying connected with the community after a paratrooper accident. We reflect on how it felt to save a life through a simple gesture of a meal delivery. At the end of 2020 we also welcomed a new family members from disability provider Kira.
In a year dominated by COVID, it was a time of adaptation and growth as we were challenged and inspired to stay connected and work safely.
“Customers were getting a bit scared of coming in. So, the team came to me and said, look, we need to look at a different way of working,” says Mandy.
“Make a plan on the Friday; change it on the Monday. That was exactly how we were working.”
We also talked to people across the Chorus community about what was memorable for them in 2020. Overwhelmingly it’s been a year of caring for each other.
“I’ve learnt compassion and understanding like I never have before,” says Susan.
“And so we've gone into this process of really major change to our organisation to make it more local, simpler to operate in, spend more time with customers, which is ultimately what our mission is all about,” says Dan.
We wish everyone the best for the festive season and next year. Enjoy the Christmas podcast and see you in 2021 on Chorus Voices.
Special thanks to our 2020 Chorus Voices:
Brian and the Ability Arts singers
Susan Cottrill
Andries Pretorius
Mary
Kathleen
Paula Cronin
Simon Humphries
Marija Babic
Tina Newman
Brian and the Ability Arts singers
Credits
Podcast Hosts: Dan Minchin and Louise Forster
Opening Voiceover: Ryan Burke
Opening Music: “Wattlebird” by Dylan Hatton Music
Producer/Editor: Judith Hatton
Audio editing: Matthew Clark
Artwork: Maddie Bull
We hit the gardening trail with Chorus gardeners John and Paul to see what it was like helping people in their gardens. While gardening is at the heart of what they do, it is so much more than that.
“We have lovely connections with our customers,” says John.
“It makes us all, as our gardening team goes, dig in and it doesn't feel like a job when you're doing that.”
John and Paul agree that they enjoy having a chat with customers and seeing the customers come alive when they talk about their earlier lives.
“I've even been sitting down in the shopping centre and the client's walked up and sat down and we’ve had a chat,” adds Paul.
When volunteers join in with the crew it’s particularly special.
“They come out, gain some skills, and we all have a good time. They look out for us, we look out for them,” says Paul.
Earlier in the month John did some work with volunteers from Cannington ESC for now retired volunteers Jim and Wanda (who talked on Ep 50: 50 years in the community).
“Wanda came out and gave, very generously, a whole tray of lollies and the kids were over the moon about that,” adds John.
Customers Margaret and Audrey are full of praise for John and Paul’s work in their garden.
Margaret’s neighbour saw Margaret struggling in the garden one day and suggested she give Chorus (then Volunteer Task Force) a call.
I think they're brilliant,” says Margaret.
At Audrey’s house Paul gets stuck into the front garden – weeding between the vincas, roses and geraniums– and John fires up the leaf blower out the back.
Audrey has been in her home for an amazing 70 years and built up great community connections over the years, particularly through sporting activities.
“When the weather's nice I'll sit out the back here quite a lot and then I'll go for walks around the garden,” she says.
“I loved hearing from Audrey and Margaret and how their hospitality, when Judith went out, was just that to me speaks of community,” says Louise.
“Gardening is work - it's manual work - but it was something a lot richer than that going on in the way that you could hear the guys talking about their day,“ says Dan.
“People have a smaller footprint that they work on. A smaller group of people that they get to know. And those connections that spring up when you work locally.”
Credits
Podcast Hosts: Dan Minchin and Louise Forster
Opening Voiceover: Ryan Burke
Opening Music: “Wattlebird” by Dylan Hatton Music
Interviewees:
John Hatton – Support worker gardening and home maintenance
Paul Forster - Support worker gardening and home maintenance
Margaret
Audrey
Jane Wittenoom – Company Secretary
Producer/Interviewer: Judith Hatton
Audio editing: Matthew Clark
Special thanks: Maddie Bull
Mentioned in this episode
Episode 50 of Chorus Voices celebrates 50 years of Chorus in the community and, as it turns out, it’s our 50th episode!
“Our longest ancestor train traces our lineage back to 1970 when Volunteer Task Force was founded by John and Sandra Penrose," says Dan Minchin.
Volunteer Task Force and then Chorus volunteers Jim and Wanda Bennett contributed an extraordinary 18 years to their community. They met Jeannette Olsen in their first year and the three have remained close friends.
One day Wanda sat with a customer instead of doing her gardening. The customer’s husband had just died. “It wasn't just about the gardening. It was interacting with the people,” says Wanda.
Jim recalls an emotional moment when a man in his 90s asked for help for the first time.
There was much food to be shared on a day out gardening, and it was fun, too. Jeannette remembers Wanda unloading a lawnmower one day. “I turned around to look for her lawnmower and it was racing down the hill.”
Ina Hart has been with the Albany Senior Citizens Centre and then Chorus for about the same amount of time. She works in the office at the centre and started off cooking for the Meals on Wheels service there.
“It was really hectic because I had to learn how to cook bulk amounts of food. And I'd never done that before. And somebody had said to me, 'Oh, come on, Ina. Your mum and dad had 16 children. You should know how to cook for lots of people,'” she says.
Narelle Roberts started as a Support Worker for Community First, now Chorus in 2009, supporting people living with disability. She is also a customer and enjoys taking part in the Ability Arts program.
“It was just pure heaven that I got to know how to look after myself and then take better care of myself from being here at Chorus and Community First,” says Narelle.
“There's just a never-ending array of those sorts of stories that pop out of the work of Chorus,” says Dan.
“And I guess that also is reflective of the sort of rich tapestry that Chorus is; it's made up of these multiple parts, groups, organisations that over the 50 years have come together.”
Credits
Podcast Hosts: Dan Minchin and Louise Forster
Opening Voiceover: Ryan Burke
Opening Music: “Wattlebird” by Dylan Hatton Music
Interviewees:
Jim Bennett
Wanda Bennet
Jeannette Olsen
Ina Hart
Narelle Roberts
Producer/Interviewer: Judith Hatton
Audio Editing: Matthew Clark
Artwork/video: Maddie Bull
Chorus is a team of kind, caring people. In this episode Dan Minchin and Nikki Drury explore the relationship between teamwork and kindness.
Nikki Drury, Co-designer for the Chorus Fresh Approach project, has looked at how we can be kind and relational at work. Building supportive teams that can share ideas, work through challenges and have difficult conversations helps teams flourish.
But there are barriers to relational work such as time as funding.
“Sometimes having a cup of tea and a chat is much more valuable to a person than making sure the bed linen is changed,” says Nikki.
Support workers in the community can be quite isolated and Nikki outlines the importance of debriefing with their team. Getting together. Having a laugh. Sharing the challenging moments.
“Even, on paper, a fairly simple task like helping someone with the shower, if their context is so really difficult, that could be a really tough day for a Chorus support worker,” says Dan.
The Fresh Approach team ran experiments by creating “huddles” – virtual and real – to support strong relationships.
“Some people might be a little more shy and fall through the cracks in bigger groups of people,” said Nikki. “Having that contact with their peers was a really big win for a lot of people.”
Some of the people in the huddle experiment share their experiences.
“The hypothesis is that if we could make this a really routine way of working… customers’ experience and support would be enhanced, and that's probably something we need to get into thinking about,” says Dan.
Chorus is working towards making relational work commonplace - being kind, not saying yes to everything and managing boundaries.
“It's really brave of Chorus and us as a collective to make that decision that actually we want to shift back to the reason why we love to do this work and the reason why customers love us to be doing it,” says Nikki.
Credits
Podcast Hosts: Dan Minchin and Nikki Drury
Opening Voiceover: Ryan Burke
Opening Music: “Wattlebird” by Dylan Hatton Music
Producer: Judith Hatton
Audio editing: Matthew Clark
Special Thanks To:
Julie Briggs - Customer Contact administration
Angela Johns - NDIS Support Co-Ordinator
Stephen Hill – Support Worker Gardening and Home Maintenance
Coffee Cart Host
Jane Wittenoom - Fresh Approach Co-Lead
Jethro Sercombe - Fresh Approach Design Facilitator
In this episode we learn about the journey and joy of supported independent living.
Krystyna lives with disability and been on a long journey to find a supported living arrangement. Krystyna, Krystyna’s mum Caroline and Angela from Chorus tell us about what it’s like to be independent and supported in your own home.
Angela helped Krystyna to find an Individualised Living Option (ILO), an NDIS package that funds people to live independently.
Through Support Coordination Krystyna now lives with a friend and has drop-in supports. She has more freedom and independence. It’s all about capacity building.
“You pay your own rent, your own bills, you organise your grocery shopping, plan your meals.” says Angela.
Krystyna has a lovely home and garden where she is growing vegetables out the back. She loves art, dancing and going out with her friends. Her mum has taught her how to cook and Krystyna is quite the chef!
“What's different is I want to move forward... be a good friend to Jess and a housemate,” says Krystyna.
“And I'm going to keep on going forward. Don't go backwards anymore.”
Credits
Podcast Hosts: Louise Forster and Dan Minchin
Opening Voiceover: Ryan Burke
Opening Music: “Wattlebird” by Dylan Hatton Music
Interviewer/Producer: Judith Hatton
Post Production: Matthew Clark
Special Thanks To:
Krystyna
Caroline
Jess
Emma
Angela Johns
Maddie Bull
In part two of Lex’s mental health journey we learn a thing or two about designing clothes for musicals as Lex takes the next step towards realising the dream of becoming a fashion designer.
After an accident, professional cyclist Chek stopped eating and wanted to give up on life. One day he reached out and turned his life around.
During National Volunteer Week 2020 five Chorus volunteers take centre stage and talk about what volunteering means to them and the Chorus community.
“The only thing that I can do is just give them a bit of time,” says Gary.
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