Skip to main content
Menu
Community Reporter Network
User account menu
About Us
Log in
Facebook
Twitter
Youtube
Main navigation
Home
Explore
Reporters
Report transcript in: Long Term Volunteering
Please Report the Errrors?
Hello.
Um, would you like to introduce yourself,
right? Well, I'm Alison,
and, um,
I started
Oh, I started volunteering.
Well, I started volunteering quite a long time ago, actually. Back in,
Hm. Now, I gotta think
mid two thousands
And it all started because I saw an advert in the local library
to help with hospital radio,
and I thought,
Oh, that sounds fun.
I hadn't got a clue what it was about, what you needed, what you needed to do.
And I thought,
Well, I can talk, So that must be a start.
Anyway, Eventually,
I went to
be interviewed
and
got
accepted.
And that was a very scary time. My first time on radio
having a mic
and talking to people whom you couldn't see because it was radio.
But you knew everybody was listening.
And I hate the sound of my voice.
So,
um,
uh, I did have somebody else with me
who had already been quite experienced
in doing hospital radio.
And we were right at the top of a very, very old building
in the local hospital,
completely away from all the wards.
So you you went down miles of corridor to actually get to the wards
and the principle was,
as its name implies, hospital radio. You You
went on
a designated ward, so we were told which ward we were able to go to.
I knew. And I put this in inverted commas interviewed the patient.
Now some were chatty,
some were miserable.
Some didn't want to talk to you.
But you gave them a lot of leeway for the simple reason
they were in hospital.
Who wants to be bothered with somebody chattering away to
you when you've had a major operation and you're feeling awful
and you're saying, Oh, please, just let me go to sleep.
But then you, you, you you basically talk to them.
What records would they like to hear? Is there any dedications?
You know, generalities.
And then you totalled off back to the studio, which was very basic
Later, later, much later we had our own designated Stu studio built,
which was all soundproofed and up to the BBC standard.
So it was from one extreme to another.
Anyway, I stopped there for
I think it was
just over 12 years.
And in doing so, I also got involved with,
uh, talking newspapers, which for those who don't understand what it means.
Talking newspapers is a charity that helps the visually uh, sorry,
the hearing impaired.
But it also has an extra added sideline that if you have something like Parkinson's
or an,
um, a disability that makes your hand shake or besides having, um,
impairment of your vision,
talking newspapers can help, because all you do is
hit a button
and you don't do anything else unless you want The volume turned up.
So I used to do
Mondays was hospital radio. Wednesdays was talking newspapers,
and so I used to go to the local newspaper,
get all their local stories, which was just printed out on a four sheets.
It wasn't done in the paper format because we had it
on a Wednesday as the paper came out on a Thursday,
Um,
and then I would edit the stories, um,
put in stories that I thought so you always had hatches, matches and dispatches.
That was the highlight.
Um, and then you had
everything from sport to,
um, local,
um, clubs that were doing things to general news to breaking news,
whatever was in the in the lead
stories,
and then we had a team each week. We had a team of three readers, plus one technician.
And the stories would be divided between the three readers.
And then the technician would knit it all together.
And it used to be very old fashioned because it was on tape to start with.
So, um,
it then went digital. And we had, um
Oh, what do you call the things that you stick in?
UB USB stick.
Thank you. A USB stick.
So we got quite sophisticated a after a while.
Um,
but the post office are brilliant,
and they, as far as I know, still do it.
They freely give the talking newspapers pouches
with
Yes. Yes. Oh,
good.
So
you put the was the tape in.
And, um, one side of the card had
the, um
members address and the other side of the card
had the address to come back to us at talking newspapers.
And I did that for
roughly the same lengths of time.
I didn't quite get to 15 years in either of them, but I did do over 10 for both. Wow. Wow.
So what volunteer role do you do now?
Well, I decided after so many years of doing that,
I wanted something completely different.
I wanted to be more involved with people.
I've got an agricultural background,
although my parents weren't directly farming.
But,
um, my relations on both sides were always farming.
So I basically looked around for a farming charity,
and after three goes, it took me three goes to, um,
apply.
But then I got involved with the local farming charity,
so I then was doing the helpline.
So answering the phone on a designated roter,
I did case work,
um, attended chosen events, but that was easy from my point of view and apologies,
if it sounds big headed.
But that's what I've always done
right from leaving Agricultural College. I've always dealt with the public, so
it didn't really phase me.
And I like that because
I find it's much better
to have a face to face
conversation
because your voice, your body language,
just the engagement between
person to person
is often more rewarding and has more impact
than
maybe on the phone when you have only your ears to
rely on as to how you think that person might be.
And that can be sometimes very difficult. Yeah, lack of cues, isn't it?
Lack of facial cues and body and language and so on.
Yes,
and sometimes
whether it's PC or not. And I know these days one has to be quite careful.
But just to touch on an arm,
a smile A
you know,
a gesture which says I do care.
I do understand.
I am here.
Yeah,
you can't do that. Always on a phone, though.
And that's clearly one of the things that you really like about volunteering.
It's meeting people,
interacting with people and showing that you care.
Yeah,
Yeah.
Oh, definitely. Yes. Because
it's and the range of people as well.
And let's face it, the agricultural industry per se
have has a unique blend of no other industry has that type of people
and the the breath
as well, doesn't it? Yeah.
Oh, yeah,
yeah, yes. You can have banter.
You can have,
uh, serious conversations. You can
empathise sympathise,
get into mild arguments.
But at the end of the day,
you can mostly part with as as friends. Yeah,
yeah,
yeah, that's that's my experience too.
Is there anything that you find challenging or difficult about being a volunteer?
Some of the stories are here. Mm
Mm. Some of them are really traumatic.
Um,
and this again
is significant with regard to whether you're
talking to talking to somebody on the phone
or face to face.
And
if I can get a smile if I'm face to face and
can get a smile out of somebody After listening to a traumatic
story,
I feel as if we've actually crossed a line and they
can cope,
they will cope,
and they will be able to go away
with a different perspective in their head.
Yeah, that that's, um, and that, you know, shows the importance, doesn't it?
Of talking
and people interacting together.
And And, you know,
I guess that's one of the reasons why you volunteer as well as what you like about it.
Well,
yes. And
satisfaction is the wrong word.
Um,
you feel as if you've put a person onto the right
road at the end of the day.
Yes. So he come on to the stand,
and
I basically listened to his story.
We discussed what he could and might do,
and at the end, he actually smiled,
and he was in a stronger position to actually go and do something further
and decide on his future. Yeah,
yeah. So it's It's that
Yeah. Feeling of making a difference, perhaps.
Oh, definitely. I don't know what happened to him.
Um, obviously, because he never became a case as such.
I don't know what happened to him, but I do hope that he managed to find a way through.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Thank you.
So, what would you say to someone thinking about volunteering for the first time?
Find something that you really
like?
Because if your enthusiasm and your passion is there,
you will be able to
understand and help
those that come to the charity or the volunteer
area that you've decided on.
And obviously, you know,
our passions and our knowledge.
10 generally go together, so you'll already have knowledge.
And then you'll gain experience
by expanding that knowledge.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Thank you very much for sharing your insights today. We'll leave that there.
Thank you.
Up-big
Home
Explore
Reporters
About Us
Log in
Facebook
Twitter
Youtube