The Life of the Poverty, homeless, unemployment and the list so on….

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Toward the end of 2017. Many people are struggling to find a home for their family, to find work and to earn income for their family and foods to feed their family, trying to stay away from drugs and booze and the list go further. .Is there any hope for them or not? We don’t know yet because there is no ‘magic ball’ to look at the future.

A long list of experiences where I work with many people and children such as disabled person to a family of a disabled member,  convicted homeless people, gangs, refugee family even disabled refugee persons. Over thirty years, my role as a deaf community worker, a teacher aide/tutor, a Healthcare assistant, an Advocator for all people with disabilities and Deaf including refugee disabled people, I saw their lives with my own eyes and learnt from them.

Looking at our second ‘run down’ house on our property. There were so many lives there, and it tells us stories when we stripped one wall by one wall each day. We found much interesting stuff behind the walls and under the floors. Our second home built before the second war, and it habited for young farm hand men. I learnt about this home because it came from one of my ancestor’s family through my late father’s side family. Looking at Norman Kirk who he was related to my late grandfather’s mother side’s family. One of the comment, he made, was pledged to overcome poverty.

Here is another interesting article…. Mum of three children – poverty

Currently, I am working with one Social Service organisation, and there were so many homeless people, addiction people, financially broke/struggled to live on financial people, mental illness persons and people with disabilities coming and going from our organisation. It does not surprise me at all because I have been down the road before and a lot of people keep telling me about this if they assumed that I don’t know. The truth is yes I know, and I do not need an empathy or feeling pity for this kind of people who struggle for better lives. Sometimes I have been told that there is a lot of melting pot of cultures in one place… I travelled widely around the world and learnt a lot from them since 1981.

mmm so what! Is the question does anyone allow to give something or assist them as equal to other people or not? In Quran, there is an article on the concept of thankfulness in Islam. You need to learn to understand first and respect them who are Mulsim than to ignore them. Never take anything off such as foods off their hands, and this means you insulted them and they won’t take foods back. I have seen someone did this and a few women were not very happy with it. Never oppressed them or empower them in the class, In Spain or South America, it is a custom to give a gift giving from any new family or an officer in dealing with business.

In my earliest days, we have a family-friends for some years, and the father of this family worked and supported many ex-gangs and their families after the prison stays and finding jobs, budgeting courses and other courses. This man worked with two Maori ministers who we remember them very well for a very long time. I listened to their stories for many years and learnt from them. They kept in touch with me, and only one person is retired now.

We grew up with a solo mother with four young children, and our grandparents and great-grandparents gave us lessons such as in money-saving or to grow seeds from fruits and vegetables. To use recycled materials into something useful, cut out many buttons and used for recycling such as cushion button, making a Christmas tree filled in button decorations, learnt to knit and crochet children’s clothes and how to save waste foods into chutney, jams, compost for the garden. I use a lot of cookings from our gardens, and we grow a lot of vegetables and fruits for the people who are in need of food parcels, family when I visited and assisted them in their needs, many organisations who run food banks and for us.

Every Friday, I went to work and to find a few homeless men and women sitting under the tree in the car park. It was their peaceful place and a ‘waiting spot’ for them and when they are ready to walk into our work for their showers, lunch meals, food parcels and courses such as budgeting courses. We do have a Men and Women Shelter home, but it is a limited number of people who can come and stay a couple of nights or one night.

I recalled visiting a couple of homes where a couple can not afford to pay the power bill, and it was so freezing. They were living on benefits – under $500.00 a fortnight and the rent, food prices, phone and power bills were high than the benefit. They were to humiliate to ask for help publicly. We sat down together and talked about the problems. Finally, they admitted to me, and we visited WINZ, GP’s, power company and the landlord. Everything was sorted out by setting up a budget guide list. They set up automatic payments, to grow vegetables in the backyard where the landlord accepted that they could grow anything for foods and some extra assistance costs from WINZ which they have not thought about it due to staff’s failure on advise or suggestion if they need help or not.

The refugee people I came across in the past years (over 20 years), they went through the same situations as everyone else. Same stories for me! But their culture and beliefs are different from us; I learnt a lot from many Muslim people, Chinese people, Pakistani people, Spanish people even Laos people. One family – a Laos family, invited me in return of ‘thank you for assisting, supporting and teaching’ a young Deaf teenager son to their oldest son’s wedding. I was invited to their wedding because this Deaf teenager was no longer at High School. The Pakistanis family who also have an adult Deaf son and they took me as a ‘daughter/friend’ in their family for three years. They were Muslim too. We respected each other a lot and often they gave me some foods to eat and gave me some materials to passed on to another Deaf student. They taught me about their Muslim culture, Koran and beliefs. My gift was to helped their Deaf son to gain a better education and skill in carpentry in Hamilton. We still keep in touch as they were back in Pakistan nearly seven years ago. Today I am supporting and assisting one Muslim Somalian Deaf lady for her needs, and she was pleased to have someone who understands her culture and to communicate in sign language. She is one of these people who struggle with financial needs, foods, personal needs such as clothes and language barrier BUT she is lucky to have a good home with flashing lights for her safety needs and great neighbours to keep an eye on her. Often she gives me something in return in about three months or a year later. That is fine for me.

One Deaf family who have two children and they are struggling daily needs, BUT they learnt something from me six years ago. My skill was to teach them to grow vegetables in the backyard, taught to the Deaf man for his literacy in prison and gave him a job which was successful. He looked for work for a year after his prison stay. I provided them counselling where I refer to one minister who has sign language, a qualified counsellor, worked in prison as a prison chaplain and a teacher back in Africa via England which I met this minister nearly ten years ago. Yes, this family of two children, gave me something back in the way of saying thank you and I told them that they don’t need to give me back last year. They insisted this and keep in touch from time to time when they are in trouble or struggle or just to have a ‘good yarn’ of chat over coffee. My skill in teaching lessons to them had been passed on to their friends where their friends are living in poverty and financial struggle.

Where ever I go anywhere! I give them something like an appreciation, thankfulness or a small token of gifts for the family as equal to everyone. I do not need anything in return from them, JUST a word to say Thank you for helping me, supporting me, encouraging me or a note to say from them if they have no money or gift to return.

 

Eureka – Where is Eureka?

A home, we are living in the rural country outside the city of Hamilton… In the past, I grew up in the city, and my childhood experience was in the country where I spent my school holidays with my grandparents, uncles and aunties at the farms and the beach. Oh, what a memory of my childhood for many years! Being as a deaf person, it does not bother me, and my family members taught me an example of life at the farms and the beach. For example going to duck shooting, killing possums, growing vegetables, swimming at the beach, catching fish and the list so on. I am grateful that I have got the skills from my family members.My partner – James, and I made the decision to move out to the rural country away from the city nearly three years ago. The city of Hamilton is growing than before due to increasing new technologies, and people migrated from Auckland, Wellington to live in Hamilton and no privacy to live. The Hamilton is the fourth most populous city in New Zealand and the Ruakura Research Centre is an agricultural service centre. Our agricultural service centre is the third fastest growing urban behind Pukekohe and Auckland and it is a growing and diverse economy for Waikato.We looked many houses with a good sized section with fenced in for our dogs to run freely and my work travelling to/from Hamilton around Waikato. We travelled to Whatawhata, Tahuna, Te Pahu, Waitetuna, outside Raglan area, Te Kowhai and Eureka. We found three homes that we loved and placed an offer on these three homes. Only one offer was accepted and it was our new home in Eureka now.Where is Eureka? The Eureka-based outside the city of Hamilton and it is 18km north-west of Hamilton. The name – Eureka and where that name came from during in the old days. In the early days, there were many battles around the North Island and in Waikato, and William Steele and his group were looking for a headquarters. William Steele reached the hilltop and he shouted out ‘Eureka’ where he believed to found a good place for a headquarters. Another story about the name – Eureka, came from a group of women’s names. The women’s first or last letters of their name were made up into a name called Eureka. Our home is not far from the hilltop where William Steele found a place for the headquarters and we are surrounding many farms, orchards and one poultry business. For me, it is a home where I feel connected to my ancestors who lived here, the quality of life, relaxing and calming away from the busiest city and freedom. One of my ancestors – my great grand uncle from my grandmother’s side family, married a woman who was born and raised in Eureka for a short time before moving to Ngaruawahia. Her name was, Joy and her families were one of the earliest settlements in Eureka. Today cousins are living close to us, and they are well known for horse shows/breedings and dairy farming for many years.Our home used to belong to one of my cousins in the early 1990s. The previous owners were not related to me, and they bought it from one of my cousins. Our home made up with a large section, another ‘run down’ house, a large barn, a double garage and a double carport. We have got many fruit trees and all sorts of trees like Olive, wattles, Totara, Australian Bottlebrushes, oak. The gardens were fabulous, but some part of the gardens filled with weeds – oops.We did not have any particular equipment to help me around at home, and our dogs are our ‘hearing dogs’ for my deafness and safety when I am alone. What kinds of specialised equipment to help many Deaf people? A flashing light for fire alarm, door bell, phone and fax ringing.The sounds in our home were tractors, cows making noise, birds chirping, traffic noises including sirens, cars passing by, dogs barking or people walking down the road. I can hear these sounds when I wear my hearing aids during the day into evening BUT not at night while we were in bed. These sounds do not bother me even my partner for a long time… We are used to these sounds. Every season passed, I looked out in the windows, or I am in the garden, and I tried to hear the familiar sounds such as wind blowing through leaves, leaves make rustling on the grounds, water trickling down the entrapment stream next to the barn or people walking on the gravel stones. During the rainy season, the rain danced on the roof, and the sound likes drunken teenagers stomping down on the tin roof. But for me, I slept through all night during the rainy season, just like a baby sleeping through all night.Our home and gardens are our retreats where we enjoy our moments of lives away from the city. I spend many hours in the gardens while James is pulling down ‘run down’ home and our dogs run freely under my watchful eyes and James’s ears.Note: Real name is not listed and my story is from Inkitt. It can be found here.https://www.inkitt.com/edit/112126?ref=v_b9d8695a-54b6-4baa-8c17-9c5913c5b474

Source: Eureka – Where is Eureka?

Thinking about the Butterfly

This morning I took a look at the Butterfly – Monarch butterfly sun basking onto the bottlebrush tree in our garden.This butterfly reminded me when I am working with many people/children with disabilities who have struggled or finding hope for their needs. But not just people/children with disabilities, individuals who suffered depression, homeless or mental illness in Waikato.Living in a cocoon for a long time until you find a way to escape and fly away into the sky.Freedom or not? Are you afraid to ask for help or don’t know where to find someone in Waikato?There are approximately 42,000 people with children who are homeless around New Zealand.In 2014 in the city of Hamiton, there were about 80 individuals who were sleeping rough in the central city and one non-profit organisation – The Peoples’ Project placed 78 out of 80 people off the street into homes. The last report in 2016, there were 800 individuals and families into reasonable homes by the People’s Project group.Let say there are 925 disabled people, who are in labour force for adults from 15 years to 65+ in New ZealandTotal employed (disabled people) in New Zealand is 416. These figures came from 2013 Disability Survey: Social and economic outcomes tables. The number of people with disabilities including children is 1,062,000 in 2013. The sensory impairment estimated 484,000 people were limited in their everyday activities such as wearing hearing aids. (Note: Census in 2013)We have a group called Coalition of Deaf Mental Health Professionals. There is about 10% of Deaf people uses the services such as mental health or addiction service but leaving 1% of Deaf people with their first language – New Zealand Sign Language around New Zealand. Many of the services do not know about D/deaf people and their sign language due to lack of information and resources in New Zealand.I have a small number of disabled people visited me from the past to present at work. I listened (lipreading) them and gave the advice to go to the right place where there is an excellent, reasonable service that will help them. My strong advice to book an interpreter and have a support person. I did a lot of referrals for these individuals.I noticed many homeless people do not want to be involved with any organisation because of their troubles and reject by the organisation. I find another way of rejoining them to a different society, and it often works out well.At the end of my work, I received a lot of feedbacks from them and it was nice to know or hear that these people who I helped, are doing well and teaching the same way I taught them. I am a privilege to learn their stories from them. BUT there is still more works with D/deaf people and other people with disabilities to be done around the societies in New Zealand.http://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/health/disabilities/DisabilitySurvey_HOTP2013/Commentary.aspxhttp://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/health/disabilities/disability-housing-2013.aspxhttps://cdmhp.org.nz/about-us/summary/https://www.thepeoplesproject.org.nz/homelessnesshttp://nzccss.org.nz/work/poverty/the-real-housing-affordability-issues/homelessness-the-invisible-housing-problem/http://researchcommons.waikato.ac.nz/handle/10289/3950

Source: Thinking about the Butterfly

A pleasure surprise from work!

A lovely birthday cake for me as my birthday is coming up…. April 9th.Many people celebrate birthdays in many different ways of lives. This birthday cake made by one of the staff who runs the cookery programme for low-income people, people with learning disabilities and to serve homeless/women and men’s shelter home in Hamilton. It was a Friday mid-day 7th April where I was working at the office – Hamilton Methodist City Action/Hamilton Social Services. My work role is a deaf community support worker for people with disabilities and Deaf people including Hearing Impaired and Deafblind.

Source: A pleasure surprise from work!

What a crap way to start with?

– A sore throat at the start of the end of Term One – School holiday in New Zealand.- A second Cyclone is arriving today, and it called Cyclone Cook. The previous Cyclone Debbie came here from Australia last week.- One NZSL class at the library cancelled by myself to the staff because of the people with learning disabilities and their safety by coming to the Central Library at the Hamilton City. It is safer than sorry. – The second job for assisting and supporting an ESOL Deaf lady at the Settlement Resources Centre, I told this Deaf lady to stay at home for her safety and to avoid my throat virus. Tomorrow it is the start of a long weekend – Easter weekend, and I don’t celebrate chocolate Easter eggs. I am a Christian person and believe in faith since my father’s death when I was six years old. I can be a sceptic on anything that falls my path. What I enjoy is to eat hot cross buns, time together with my hearing partner and dogs and to have a long relaxing weekend! So far, with the warning of the Cyclone Cook on the media for many d/Deaf people and Hearing Impaired people by having to broadcast on tv, facebook, twitters and to provide an interpreter during the breaking news. It appeared to be working, BUT I don’t know until after the storm pass. In the past, Media companies and the Government failed to provide interpreters on the news, Facebook, Civil Defence websites. We, the group called Deaf Action wrote out a petition along with many signatures to the Government and media companies. They declined and the lack of awareness for all people with disabilities in the urban and in the rural like me. Sigh, it is a long way to go.

Source: What a crap way to start with?

Oh what! Deluge everywhere

In New Zealand, we are having experience with the wild wet weather – Can not blame Aussie! Due to Cyclone DebbieIn Waikato, we received the huge amount of deluge rain fall everywhere for the last three-two days. In Waikato, it was the worstweather we ever received since 2008 and 2011. The photo above was takenoutside Hamilton City on my way to work this morning. The section was a part of the Waikato Express Motorway construction, and it called Ruakura Interchange.http://www.nzta.govt.nz/assets/projects/hamilton/hamilton-project-update-201702.pdfI slept through nights without hearing aids until I woke up to find puddles everywhere outside the fields from our windows. My partner and dogs did not manage to sleep through nights due to heavy noises on the roof. Sigh! I was the lucky person to sleep through all night because of my deafness and leaving my partner and dogs in despair with noisy. If I wear my hearing aids anytime and I can hear the vibration of the sounds and noise of noises through the roof. Without hearing aids, Deaf people can not listen to the sounds except to feel vibrations by feeling through their feet, body or hands. Today the sun finally came out and hopefully to dry out all the water everywhere especially for the farmers’ crops such as maizes. Recently there is a small town called Edgecumbe, and it is on the East Coast of the North Island. This town suffered severely, and it was under water due to a flood bank breached. Many local people who live in Edgecumbe survived the earthquake in 1987. The township population is 1,638 in 2013 according to the census in New Zealand but on the news, it said there were about 2,000 people living in Edgecumbe. Several roads were cut off in the rural areas eg Port Waikato including the highway road between Nelson, Kaikoura and Christchurch. Of course, we are not the only one to suffered the worst weather. In Colombia, an avalanche of mud and derbies washed down the village called Salgar. This mud slides killed around 50 people in Salgar and around the village.mm, I wonder what kind of winter in Waikato, we will be having.

Source: Oh what! Deluge everywhere

Something to brighten the day!

​Something was really unusually in Morrinsville, Waikato yesterday……We arrived to the Countdown Supermarket – grocery supermarket like the Walmart, Marks & Spencer, in Morrinsville. I noticed something was really funny and to brighten the day up as it was cloudy morning..In the car park across the road from Countdown Supermarkert car park, there was a large tractor parking in the Warehouse car park… Yep! A large tractor parked in the car park..First I saw a mobility scooter parked in the disability car park a couple years ago and I took a photo. Now it was a tractor!Of course, Morrinsville is a farming urban. “A farmer coming to town, a farmer coming to town, a farmer coming to town and finding somewhere to park in the town..”

Source: Something to brighten the day!

What! It is Autumn here in New Zealand.

This month is April and where has the summer gone by…In Eureka, Waikato, we were experienced having a short summer season in the rural country of Waikato. The maize crops were not harvested due to a very long wet Spring season last year. It had been a lot of rainfalls over two and a half months during the Spring season until around December, and the summer finally came through. Many farmers planted maizes around November than September due to wet soil. BUT we did not have plenty of sunny days for another two and a half months until now. There were a lot of humid evenings when we tried to have a good sleep each night.The worst of all was a booming population of rabbits everywhere in the rural country. We receive daily visits of rabbits and their bunnies creeping into our fields and doing sunbathing each day when there was the sunshine. We were not bothered with this pest – rabbits. Most of the times, I enjoyed looking out from the kitchen window and watching this rabbits eating grasses. It reminded me of my childhood when my late grandfather took me out to do rabbits, duck and other pests shooting during the school holiday.Up the road from us, there has been the sound of ‘gun shootings’ in the farmland, and we know that the neighbours were doing rabbit shootings. Other neighbours use baits in the burrows out in the farm land where there were no cows or another kind of animals like dogs and cats. We do not use any baits or obtain a gun here because we have got dogs. Our dogs chase rabbits as it is their exercise each day. One of our ‘English’ neighbours told me off to not use our dogs to chase rabbits when they were walking with their ‘lonely’ dog. Heh – I told this neighbour that it was not their property and it was not their problem and do not bother to call the Pest Control Officer because they (Council staff) know who you are such a nuisance caller.We missed having a long hot summer this year. We have a good crop of tomatoes, and I made into tomatoes sauces. The roses were blooming over a long period of times throughout summer into autumn. I continue to prune dead head many roses until they are about to finish before or after the frost season.Sigh! Let hope we will have a good season of autumn and watching leaves falling down in our fields. A cool month to come, less rain fall and a plenty of sunshines.

Source: What! It is Autumn here in New Zealand.