Happy 70th Birthday to the NHS!

The NHS…. Its 70th Birthday? Well that is something to celebrate, something for our Country to have pride in.
I was fortunate to receive an invitation to attend the service at Westminster Abbey this morning – it was the most beautiful service and must admit that I am still in awe at the pure beauty that Westminster Abbey held. Today was so special, a pure example of the gratitude we hold for having a National Health Service thGroup outside with Simon Stevensat is free at the point of entry.
Testimonials represented the appreciation and highlighted just how much a difference the NHS can make to people. I believe there were elements that resonated with everyone. They certainly resonated with me. I couldn’t have more pride for being invited alongside some incredible staff, volunteers and friends.
The NHS has transformed my life, whether that is with regards to the 21 years as a service user or my personal journey through participation, patient voice and volunteering. That life that I lead now, wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for the NHS. I couldn’t be more grateful for those people who continuously push for patient voice to help the NHS to live to its expectation and to continue to evolve alongside us.

Kath, Lucy and IIIn the Abbey - NHSYFTom, Rowan and I

I pledge to continue to strive to represent and provide a platform for children and young people to have their say, for them to have the opportunity to develop just as I have. Happy 70th Birthday to the NHS!

My Social Identity through Twitter

People create a online social identity of the person they want to portray to the world, an identity that can convey whatever meaning they wish. There are pros and cons to this across many different aspects and I certainly have experienced both. Today it is the positives.

Over the last few weeks it has become more apparent to me that alongside many others, those close to me in the ‘expert patient,’ ‘patient leader,’ ‘advisor’ roles use this far more than people realise.  There are times when we strive to do everything we can to promote patient voice because we are so passionate at reaching out and making a difference. Those stories are the ones we tell, the stories that explain our achievements and often ‘conveniently’ forget a large proportion of the negatives. We may not always acknowledge the challenge nor the wider holistic issues that are continuing around us.

I try to convey the positive message as much as possible, the benefit I have is that my social identity through twitter reminds me of my positive events, the achievements I never believed I would have. The days where I have achieved something and made a real difference. The last few weeks have been testing to say the least but what I can take from that is how I have continued to make more and more achievements, increasing my opportunities and development tenfold.

This evening I take my step into true independence, I was halfway there but needed a nudge to make the full jump – I have to leave Somerset behind for a minimum of a month. I have to take the step to balance my own psychological & physical needs as a priority and I cannot do that without a level of separation – I need to not have the distractions that are based there, I need to take time to grieve the losses I have had this year and to overcome recent challenges. I began this step today in an effort to nurture myself and prioritise self care. It turns out that my first plane journey since I was about 6 years old, taught me the true meaning of putting your own oxygen mask on first. My dog and I

Some personal and some voluntary roles I am taking a short break from (particularly those in the South West). This also means no more photos of my best friend #PoppyDog as I have had to leave her in Somerset for the time being. 

I will always want to make a difference, and this will continue – I hold onto my social identity as portrayed by twitter as it reminds me of the changes I have made as an individual, the memories and the continuous progress. One of my proudest moments this year being, the utter privilege to speak at the HCA Forum in March – seeing just how much of a role there is to improve young adult experience. But also looking at my standing – I stood to give that presentation. This is the first time I have ever managed to deliver a presentation in standing and seeing that photo make me proud – beyond proud. It is an example of the hours that I have had to put into my continuing neuro rehabilitation. The aspects that get me there may not always be shown the photos shown of #NHS1000miles potentially don’t show, the grazed knees, the crawling I still use to navigate the rough terrain on cliffs, the bumshuffling to get down 100s of steps nor the handhold/catching I still need at certain points. I know the effort it takes for me to get there and that is the story I hold in my heart as a reminder, but my social identity that I created via twitter is there for me to remember and celebrate with you the achievements whilst I take time to reflect on the harder moments.

 The moment that will further carve my social identity links to this very special week of #NHS70, it’s a special and means more a lot to me. I am invited for the NHS70 Westminster Abbey service that I am beyond privileged to be able to attend. I am putting in place protective factors, but this upcoming day is special – it is a pinnacle moment for me – something that in months and years to come I can look back at as is stored in my social identity. The identity I feel privileged to share with you.