AUS, Bericht einer Grey Pflegestelle
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From www.theage.com.au
When putting others first becomes second nature
Peter Munro, Melissa Kent
May 13, 2012
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... tedImage=0> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.Click for more
photos
Volunteers - the people putting others first
Don and Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds.
Don and jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds. Photo:
Meredith O'Shea
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=0> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=1> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=2> Description: Photograph
Meredith O'Shea. 100512.The Sunday Age. Photograph shows. L to R Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=3> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=4> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=5> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=6> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
There are more than 6 million Australians who volunteer, tallying some 700
million hours of unpaid community service a year. Many will tell you they
don't do it for the praise. They shrug their shoulders and say, ''It's just
something I do,'' giving their time, hearts and in some cases homes to
others. To mark the start of National Volunteer Week, The Sunday Age spoke
to people who are devoted to helping others in little-heralded ways, from
the couple fostering ex-racing greyhounds to the Paralympic champion
teaching the disabled to ski. Then there's Avi Susskind, who voluntarily
prepares bodies for burial, combing their hair and clipping their nails as a
final show of respect.
Home is where the dog is
SPREAD across the living room floor are dog beds, occupying every spare
patch of lino. ''Home is where the dog is,'' reads a plaque on Don and Jenny
Graham's mantelpiece. Their seven greyhounds crowd visitors at the front
door of their home in Carrum Downs.
Prinny (short for Princess), a white-and-brindle hound, jumps up sharply as
I walk in one night. ''She is still going through the ropes, learning to be
a pet,'' says Mr Graham, 64. He and his wife, 62, are volunteer
foster-carers for former racing greyhounds, helping them adjust to life off
the track. They have cared for more than 100 dogs over 11 years through the
Greyhound Adoption Program.
''The only thing they have to do in their life is run, it's the only thing
they are taught to do,'' Mr Graham says. ''They've never seen a television,
they've never seen a glass door or mirror, they've never heard a microwave
beep or walked up stairs.''
The couple help acclimatise the dogs to domestic life, until they are ready
for new owners. They have also adopted 13 dogs over the years, among them
Kobi, a big red-fawn hound who nudges my hand for attention. Mrs Graham
calls him Velcro (''He wants to stick to you all day'').
Mr Graham sits against the wall and strokes the toes of Toby, who had 25
promising starts before tearing a leg muscle. ''Years ago these guys were
euthanised,'' he says. ''We give them some sort of normal life. People say
how lucky these guys are to be saved but until you own a greyhound you will
never know who the lucky one is.''
The dogs enjoy napping inside or on the verandah. ''They have no stamina,''
Mr Graham says. ''If you're a brisk walker, after half an hour you'll be
carrying them.'' It's late now and he coos at them to go to bed. ''Good
kids, lie down,'' he says.
Mentor on the slopes
AFTER severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident eight years ago,
Mark Soyer yearned for just one moment when he felt normal again.
Surprisingly, he found it on the slopes.
''When you're skiing it doesn't make any difference whether you have a
disability or not,'' he says. ''I can't play ball sports against someone who
isn't in a wheelchair, but I can ski just as well as them.''
Actually, Soyer, 34, is far better than most able-bodied skiers. A
competitive athlete before his 2004 accident, Soyer rapidly mastered the art
of sit-skiing, or mono-skiing, during his rehabilitation. Now, six years on,
he is the Australian champion and a member of the Paralympic ski team,
striving to qualify for the 2014 Winter Olympics.
''I picked it up reasonably fast. I mean, I could make my way down a hill
without killing myself or anybody else,'' he laughs.
Eager to give others that taste of physical freedom, Soyer is a volunteer
ski guide for Disabled WinterSport Australia, assisting people with various
physical or mental disabilities learn how to ski. The national organisation
runs 40 camps for 300 skiers each season using a range of adaptive equipment
that enables skiing, regardless of strength or ability.
When he tells people he is a disabled skier, he says the usual response is
bafflement.
''I think people picture me hurtling down a slope in a wheelchair,'' he
laughs. Soyer, who overcame leukaemia as a child, was 26 when his motorbike
hit a hidden log on his parents' farm, sending him crashing to the ground.
He tried all sorts of sports after the accident, but few appealed.
''None of them really excited me because you want to be back doing
everything you were doing before, as equals,'' he says.
''When you're skiing it doesn't make a difference if you have a disability.
''I wanted to push sports that promote that.''
Dealing with the dead
CLEANSING the dead takes about 50 minutes. Avi Susskind works at a steady
pace and says little, wearing a white gown and purple rubber gloves while
washing the body for burial. This small room with its clean concrete floor
and stainless-steel bed, has the hallmarks of a hospital surgery.
Mr Susskind has volunteered at the Melbourne Chevra Kadisha , or Jewish
burial society, in St Kilda for about 15 years, ''purifying'' hundreds of
bodies. Over the sound of pine coffins being smoothed with a belt sander in
another room, he describes the rituals.
Prayers are said as the body is removed from the large refrigerator and laid
on the bed, covered with a white sheet and washed from the head down. The
body is then immersed three times in the mikvah - a rectangular pool lined
with white tiles.
Fingernails are clipped and scrubbed. The man's body (volunteers assist only
with their own sex) is covered in a white cotton sheet, over which Mr
Susskind, 57, scatters a packet of soil from Israel. He combs the deceased's
hair, depositing any stray strands in the coffin so nothing is left behind.
Mr Susskind, a builder, prepares a body a week on average. He also
volunteers with the Chevra Hatzolah , or Jewish Ambulance Service. ''It's
like giving blood, you want to give something back. Death doesn't frighten
me. There are lots of ways people can die and I have seen them all,'' he
says.
''Each person is different. Sometimes rigor mortis has set in and you have
to ease their joints. Sometimes they have emptied their bowels . I
compartmentalise it and do what I've got to do. If you dwell on things you
start to have nightmares so I just go to sleep when I'm exhausted and don't
dream anything.''
The dead are deserving of respect, he says. ''We are making them tahor, we
are making them pure,'' he says. ''I hope they do the same for me when I die
as I have done for others.''
The club stalwart
''MAXIE, you've changed!'' Max Stone, North Melbourne's long-serving
doorman, fends off a broadside of good-natured ribbing while posing for The
Sunday Age's photographer.
The footballers he guards are enjoying the role reversal. Usually it is they
who endure media interest while Stone stands sentinel.
For 40 years, Stone has been a familiar figure at Arden Street, in various
roles including recruiter and, since 1982, change room gatekeeper.
He guards the rooms on match day, keeping check of ''the people who should
be in and the people who should be out''.
The blue-and-white-clad bouncer, 74, has a reputation for being the most
polite doorman in the game. He also happens to be a former mayor of
Broadmeadows, justice of the peace, the City of Moreland's first Citizen of
the Year, a life member of North Melbourne Football Club and the proud
wearer of an Order of Australia medal.
''It's a love and passion, that's why you do it,'' he says. ''What you get
out of it is self-satisfaction in seeing kids going in the right direction.
That's a big thing, being involved in the community of a football club.''
Stone's association with the club began in 1972, when he was asked to
recruit for North's under-19 side while umpiring in the Essendon and
Districts Football League. A major find was Tony Liberatore, who went on to
win the 1990 Brownlow Medal with Footscray. He was a dogged 16-year-old
playing for Brunswick City when Stone spotted him.
Driven by a strong sense of fairness, he is also chairman of the racial
vilification tribunal at Essendon and Districts to stamp out racism in the
junior grades. ''The situation has improved but the sooner we get rid of it
completely the better,'' he says.
In the drug world
AMANDA Milledge recalls her first visit to a detox clinic, on a busy street
in St Kilda: the mattresses on the floor for recovering heroin addicts,
groaning as they fought their cravings. It was confronting, she says, far
removed from her world as a corporate lawyer.
A decade on she suspects she knows more about illicit drugs than her three
children, aged 17, 24 and 26. Since 2002 she has been on the board of the
non-profit, drug-harm reduction group Anex. Her voluntary position has
taken her from her stately Toorak home to some of the city's dingiest
streets.
Over tea and biscotti, Ms Milledge, 56, explains why she volunteers to help
some of society's most vulnerable. ''You soon realise they are normal people
and they cross all walks of life,'' she says. ''I think there's a stereotype
about drug users that is quite false; a lot of them are white-collar workers
with professional jobs.''
She first met heroin addicts while running the pro bono and community
program at Mallesons law firm. She has since left paid work and volunteers
at least a day a week on causes such as drug-harm reduction and prostate
cancer. ''I was always more attracted to the hard causes where people really
do get treated really badly, where human rights are discarded because there
are these preconceptions that the people involved are not deserving of
support,'' she says.
''Coming from where I come from, and the networks in which I move, I think I
can be quite effective in opening minds to these hard causes.'' She is
acutely aware of how this might sound to the cynic, coming as it does from
this well-dressed woman from Toorak. ''I have plenty of time to enjoy life
and indulge myself, so I am really not holding myself out as a saint. I'm
conscious of the fact that most of the world really battles and some people
are really lucky,'' she says.
''A lot of people donate but if you're lucky enough to be able to give time
I think you get more back, you learn what goes on . I am just a small cog
and I do get out of it as much as I put in. It's important to have some
purpose.''
>From confusion to helping others
LIKE many teenagers, Julian Gurrieri struggled with feelings of confusion
over his sexuality when, at the age of 15, he realised he was a bit
different.
"It was in year 10 and I had my first girlfriend but it didn't feel right,"
he recalls. "I guess it was just the thrill of having a girlfriend, but
after some thinking I realised I wasn't actually attracted to her like I
thought I was meant to be."
Seeking answers, he stumbled across the website of gay and lesbian youth
organisation Minus 18 and immediately connected with others grappling with
similar feelings. "I was quite amazed, because it was exactly what I was
thinking," he says. "I wasn't one freak, I was one of many normal people of
my age. I would have had no idea I was gay before, I just wouldn't have
connected it."
That was two years ago, and Gurrieri, 17, is now a devoted member of the
Minus 18 "crew", helping organise under-age dance parties, workshops and
social events. This year he was the event co-ordinator for the annual Same
Sex Formal, an alternative school dance for gay and lesbian teens. He did
everything from lugging boxes of soft drinks to booking the DJ.
Every year 2500 teenagers attend Minus 18-run events in Victoria.
"I saw it as an amazing organisation which had helped me in a matter of
months, and I thought 'I've got to be part of this'," he says. "It might
sound a little bit cliched, but a lot of my kicks come from seeing other
people smiling, and that's the reason why I do it. I love seeing our
volunteers having a great night and people with a grin ear to ear and know I
helped that."
Gurrieri also does hospitality studies at TAFE. He is also on the City of
Kingston's Australia Day committee and helps organise music events for
Bayside City Council.
From www.theage.com.au
When putting others first becomes second nature
Peter Munro, Melissa Kent
May 13, 2012
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... tedImage=0> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.Click for more
photos
Volunteers - the people putting others first
Don and Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds.
Don and jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds. Photo:
Meredith O'Shea
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=0> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=1> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=2> Description: Photograph
Meredith O'Shea. 100512.The Sunday Age. Photograph shows. L to R Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=3> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=4> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=5> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
*
<http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/n ... ople-putti
ng-others-first-20120511-1yhqt.html?selectedImage=6> Description: Don and
Jenny Graham in their home in Victoria with their pet greyhounds. Don and
jenny volunteer as foster carers for ex-racing greyhounds.
There are more than 6 million Australians who volunteer, tallying some 700
million hours of unpaid community service a year. Many will tell you they
don't do it for the praise. They shrug their shoulders and say, ''It's just
something I do,'' giving their time, hearts and in some cases homes to
others. To mark the start of National Volunteer Week, The Sunday Age spoke
to people who are devoted to helping others in little-heralded ways, from
the couple fostering ex-racing greyhounds to the Paralympic champion
teaching the disabled to ski. Then there's Avi Susskind, who voluntarily
prepares bodies for burial, combing their hair and clipping their nails as a
final show of respect.
Home is where the dog is
SPREAD across the living room floor are dog beds, occupying every spare
patch of lino. ''Home is where the dog is,'' reads a plaque on Don and Jenny
Graham's mantelpiece. Their seven greyhounds crowd visitors at the front
door of their home in Carrum Downs.
Prinny (short for Princess), a white-and-brindle hound, jumps up sharply as
I walk in one night. ''She is still going through the ropes, learning to be
a pet,'' says Mr Graham, 64. He and his wife, 62, are volunteer
foster-carers for former racing greyhounds, helping them adjust to life off
the track. They have cared for more than 100 dogs over 11 years through the
Greyhound Adoption Program.
''The only thing they have to do in their life is run, it's the only thing
they are taught to do,'' Mr Graham says. ''They've never seen a television,
they've never seen a glass door or mirror, they've never heard a microwave
beep or walked up stairs.''
The couple help acclimatise the dogs to domestic life, until they are ready
for new owners. They have also adopted 13 dogs over the years, among them
Kobi, a big red-fawn hound who nudges my hand for attention. Mrs Graham
calls him Velcro (''He wants to stick to you all day'').
Mr Graham sits against the wall and strokes the toes of Toby, who had 25
promising starts before tearing a leg muscle. ''Years ago these guys were
euthanised,'' he says. ''We give them some sort of normal life. People say
how lucky these guys are to be saved but until you own a greyhound you will
never know who the lucky one is.''
The dogs enjoy napping inside or on the verandah. ''They have no stamina,''
Mr Graham says. ''If you're a brisk walker, after half an hour you'll be
carrying them.'' It's late now and he coos at them to go to bed. ''Good
kids, lie down,'' he says.
Mentor on the slopes
AFTER severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident eight years ago,
Mark Soyer yearned for just one moment when he felt normal again.
Surprisingly, he found it on the slopes.
''When you're skiing it doesn't make any difference whether you have a
disability or not,'' he says. ''I can't play ball sports against someone who
isn't in a wheelchair, but I can ski just as well as them.''
Actually, Soyer, 34, is far better than most able-bodied skiers. A
competitive athlete before his 2004 accident, Soyer rapidly mastered the art
of sit-skiing, or mono-skiing, during his rehabilitation. Now, six years on,
he is the Australian champion and a member of the Paralympic ski team,
striving to qualify for the 2014 Winter Olympics.
''I picked it up reasonably fast. I mean, I could make my way down a hill
without killing myself or anybody else,'' he laughs.
Eager to give others that taste of physical freedom, Soyer is a volunteer
ski guide for Disabled WinterSport Australia, assisting people with various
physical or mental disabilities learn how to ski. The national organisation
runs 40 camps for 300 skiers each season using a range of adaptive equipment
that enables skiing, regardless of strength or ability.
When he tells people he is a disabled skier, he says the usual response is
bafflement.
''I think people picture me hurtling down a slope in a wheelchair,'' he
laughs. Soyer, who overcame leukaemia as a child, was 26 when his motorbike
hit a hidden log on his parents' farm, sending him crashing to the ground.
He tried all sorts of sports after the accident, but few appealed.
''None of them really excited me because you want to be back doing
everything you were doing before, as equals,'' he says.
''When you're skiing it doesn't make a difference if you have a disability.
''I wanted to push sports that promote that.''
Dealing with the dead
CLEANSING the dead takes about 50 minutes. Avi Susskind works at a steady
pace and says little, wearing a white gown and purple rubber gloves while
washing the body for burial. This small room with its clean concrete floor
and stainless-steel bed, has the hallmarks of a hospital surgery.
Mr Susskind has volunteered at the Melbourne Chevra Kadisha , or Jewish
burial society, in St Kilda for about 15 years, ''purifying'' hundreds of
bodies. Over the sound of pine coffins being smoothed with a belt sander in
another room, he describes the rituals.
Prayers are said as the body is removed from the large refrigerator and laid
on the bed, covered with a white sheet and washed from the head down. The
body is then immersed three times in the mikvah - a rectangular pool lined
with white tiles.
Fingernails are clipped and scrubbed. The man's body (volunteers assist only
with their own sex) is covered in a white cotton sheet, over which Mr
Susskind, 57, scatters a packet of soil from Israel. He combs the deceased's
hair, depositing any stray strands in the coffin so nothing is left behind.
Mr Susskind, a builder, prepares a body a week on average. He also
volunteers with the Chevra Hatzolah , or Jewish Ambulance Service. ''It's
like giving blood, you want to give something back. Death doesn't frighten
me. There are lots of ways people can die and I have seen them all,'' he
says.
''Each person is different. Sometimes rigor mortis has set in and you have
to ease their joints. Sometimes they have emptied their bowels . I
compartmentalise it and do what I've got to do. If you dwell on things you
start to have nightmares so I just go to sleep when I'm exhausted and don't
dream anything.''
The dead are deserving of respect, he says. ''We are making them tahor, we
are making them pure,'' he says. ''I hope they do the same for me when I die
as I have done for others.''
The club stalwart
''MAXIE, you've changed!'' Max Stone, North Melbourne's long-serving
doorman, fends off a broadside of good-natured ribbing while posing for The
Sunday Age's photographer.
The footballers he guards are enjoying the role reversal. Usually it is they
who endure media interest while Stone stands sentinel.
For 40 years, Stone has been a familiar figure at Arden Street, in various
roles including recruiter and, since 1982, change room gatekeeper.
He guards the rooms on match day, keeping check of ''the people who should
be in and the people who should be out''.
The blue-and-white-clad bouncer, 74, has a reputation for being the most
polite doorman in the game. He also happens to be a former mayor of
Broadmeadows, justice of the peace, the City of Moreland's first Citizen of
the Year, a life member of North Melbourne Football Club and the proud
wearer of an Order of Australia medal.
''It's a love and passion, that's why you do it,'' he says. ''What you get
out of it is self-satisfaction in seeing kids going in the right direction.
That's a big thing, being involved in the community of a football club.''
Stone's association with the club began in 1972, when he was asked to
recruit for North's under-19 side while umpiring in the Essendon and
Districts Football League. A major find was Tony Liberatore, who went on to
win the 1990 Brownlow Medal with Footscray. He was a dogged 16-year-old
playing for Brunswick City when Stone spotted him.
Driven by a strong sense of fairness, he is also chairman of the racial
vilification tribunal at Essendon and Districts to stamp out racism in the
junior grades. ''The situation has improved but the sooner we get rid of it
completely the better,'' he says.
In the drug world
AMANDA Milledge recalls her first visit to a detox clinic, on a busy street
in St Kilda: the mattresses on the floor for recovering heroin addicts,
groaning as they fought their cravings. It was confronting, she says, far
removed from her world as a corporate lawyer.
A decade on she suspects she knows more about illicit drugs than her three
children, aged 17, 24 and 26. Since 2002 she has been on the board of the
non-profit, drug-harm reduction group Anex. Her voluntary position has
taken her from her stately Toorak home to some of the city's dingiest
streets.
Over tea and biscotti, Ms Milledge, 56, explains why she volunteers to help
some of society's most vulnerable. ''You soon realise they are normal people
and they cross all walks of life,'' she says. ''I think there's a stereotype
about drug users that is quite false; a lot of them are white-collar workers
with professional jobs.''
She first met heroin addicts while running the pro bono and community
program at Mallesons law firm. She has since left paid work and volunteers
at least a day a week on causes such as drug-harm reduction and prostate
cancer. ''I was always more attracted to the hard causes where people really
do get treated really badly, where human rights are discarded because there
are these preconceptions that the people involved are not deserving of
support,'' she says.
''Coming from where I come from, and the networks in which I move, I think I
can be quite effective in opening minds to these hard causes.'' She is
acutely aware of how this might sound to the cynic, coming as it does from
this well-dressed woman from Toorak. ''I have plenty of time to enjoy life
and indulge myself, so I am really not holding myself out as a saint. I'm
conscious of the fact that most of the world really battles and some people
are really lucky,'' she says.
''A lot of people donate but if you're lucky enough to be able to give time
I think you get more back, you learn what goes on . I am just a small cog
and I do get out of it as much as I put in. It's important to have some
purpose.''
>From confusion to helping others
LIKE many teenagers, Julian Gurrieri struggled with feelings of confusion
over his sexuality when, at the age of 15, he realised he was a bit
different.
"It was in year 10 and I had my first girlfriend but it didn't feel right,"
he recalls. "I guess it was just the thrill of having a girlfriend, but
after some thinking I realised I wasn't actually attracted to her like I
thought I was meant to be."
Seeking answers, he stumbled across the website of gay and lesbian youth
organisation Minus 18 and immediately connected with others grappling with
similar feelings. "I was quite amazed, because it was exactly what I was
thinking," he says. "I wasn't one freak, I was one of many normal people of
my age. I would have had no idea I was gay before, I just wouldn't have
connected it."
That was two years ago, and Gurrieri, 17, is now a devoted member of the
Minus 18 "crew", helping organise under-age dance parties, workshops and
social events. This year he was the event co-ordinator for the annual Same
Sex Formal, an alternative school dance for gay and lesbian teens. He did
everything from lugging boxes of soft drinks to booking the DJ.
Every year 2500 teenagers attend Minus 18-run events in Victoria.
"I saw it as an amazing organisation which had helped me in a matter of
months, and I thought 'I've got to be part of this'," he says. "It might
sound a little bit cliched, but a lot of my kicks come from seeing other
people smiling, and that's the reason why I do it. I love seeing our
volunteers having a great night and people with a grin ear to ear and know I
helped that."
Gurrieri also does hospitality studies at TAFE. He is also on the City of
Kingston's Australia Day committee and helps organise music events for
Bayside City Council.