The Limerick Magazine - May 2018 #Issue30

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B e G r e e n , r e cyc l e

issue 30

MAY 2018

G r a b o n e , i t ' s o n ly â‚Ź 2

06 All together now

10 Minding Frankie

18 Riverfest

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27

Joe Clarke

The Referendum


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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

W elco me T O th e l i mer i c k maga zi n e

No part of this magazine may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher.

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This magazine is designed to provide information to our readers. It is provided with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged to render any type of legal or any other kind of professional advice. The content of each article is the sole expression and opinion of its author, and not necessarily that of the publisher. No warranties or guarantees are expressed or implied by the publisher’s choice to include any of the content in this volume.

Publisher - Fusion Media, Limerick, Ireland

+353 (0) 61 394776

Neither the publisher nor the individual author(s) shall be liable for any physical, psychological, emotional, financial, or commercial damages, including, but not limited to, special, incidental, consequential or other damages. Our views and rights are the same: You are responsible for your own choices, actions, and results.

hello@fusionmedia.ie

www.fusionmedia.ie



T h e l i m e r i ck m aga z i ne

The Limerick Magazine Contact Details

editors notes: Hello Riverfest! kicking of what will hopefully be a fun and sunny Summer, (if not hello Spain) is Riverfest, which is sure to bring droves to the City this bank holiday weekend with plenty of fun for all over the course of the weekend.

Phone - 061-394776

It ’s a festival feast in this edition with details about All Together Now, Ireland ’s newest and most talked about festival and we have LSAD Unwrapped fashion festival taking place through Limerick venues in May.

Editor - michelle@fusionmedia.ie

Joe Clarke chats to us about life in the music industr y and we have plenty of recommendations for things to do in Limerick.

Email - hello@fusionmedia.ie Advertising - jess@fusionmedia.ie Website - www.thelimerickmagazine.com

However, with all this excitement going on, we must not forget about the upcoming referendum on May 25th. We must not be complacent and we must exercise our right to vote. It is our chance, a once in a generation chance to look after future generations of women and our health care. Enjoy the sunshine and please vote on May 25th (Also, I have to send our best wishes and huge congratulations to Paul & Melissa on your upcoming wedding, have an amazing day from all the team)

Editor in chief, Michelle Costello

Each month, The Limerick Magazine showcases all that's happening in Limerick covering entertainment, food, health, business, arts and events. Featuring some of Limerick's most talented people, with their lively interviews and thought-provoking opinions. We delve into the freshest fashion, beauty and interior trends to keep those creative juices flowing. So if you are a guest to Limerick and you find us in your hotel bedroom, welcome to our City or if you are a lifelong Limerick head, we hope you enjoy seeing the best of what Limerick has to offer..

Publisher - Fusion Media, Limerick, Ireland

+353 (0) 61 394776

hello@fusionmedia.ie

www.fusionmedia.ie



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Ge t Re a dy fo r A l l T o g e t h er N ow

FLEET

FOXES

*

UNDERWORLD

*RÓISÍN

MURPHY * MURA MASA * SPECIAL GUESTS VILLAGERS * FIRST AID KIT * MOGWAI * CHAKA KHAN * NILS FRAHM * YASIIN BEY FKA MOS DEF * THE NEW POWER GENERATION PRINCES LEGENDARY BAND * JIMMY CLIFF * KELELA * GROOVE ARMADA (DJ SET) * BOOKA SHADE * DAVID AUGUST LIVE *THE BLACK MADONNA * HOT CHIP (MEGAMIX) * HERCULES & LOVE AFFAIR * MARIBOU STATE * JAPE * GHOSTPOET * TALOS * SAUL WILLIAMS * THE GO! TEAM * ISAAC GRACIE * J COLLERAN * THE LOST BROTHERS * THIS IS THE KIT * HORSE MEAT DISCO * SAINT SISTER * ELDER ISLAND * THE BOOTLEG BEATLES * SHANTI CELESTE * GRANDBROTHERS * WHENYOUNG * OSCAR JEROME * BOOKA BRASS * FISH GO DEEP * BIIG PIIG * MARIA KELLY * DAVID KEENAN * NIALLER9 * Plus many more to be announced across 10 stages of music, theatre, comedy, spoken word and more August Bank Holiday Weekend - 3-5, 2018 Curraghmore Estate, County Waterford

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To say we are excited is an understatement. All Together Now, a brand new festival in a stunning setting steeped in beauty, drama and history will be taken place this August Bank Holiday, from the original crew who set up Electric Picnic. The weekend will be one of freedom and escapism through music, spoken word, comedy, theatre, debate, art and workshops. The fantastic Curraghmore Estate in County Waterford is Ireland’s largest private estate and will play host to 10 stages including an alfresco crystal ballroom, Spiegeltent and a multitude of hidden and quirky gems. The 3000 acre world is home to lakes, fields, tree lined lanes, an intricate shell house, stone circles, crystals, courtyards, streams, fountains, woodlands, lawns - scenery truly befitting an festival of this nature. Music is an integral part of this intimate and special

artist, but also as an actor and activist.

disco sound!

gathering and the team have announced a series of amazing

Having started out as one half of Black Star with fellow

With their fifth album Semicircle released at the start of this

musical acts for their maiden voyage.

hip-hop artist Talib Kweli, they recently announced that

year, Brighton band THE GO! TEAM will be preforming.

after 20 years they’ll be joining forces once again to work

The six-piece produce infectious songs that are jam-packed

Joining many others, 12 more incredible musical talents will

on a new album. In the meantime, we can’t wait to see what

with pop, rock and indie combinations. Famed for their

take to the magical stages of All Together Now.

Bey has in store.

awesome videos, their live shows are a treat - so prepare to dance and smile your way through their set. Expect ‘girl-

VILLAGERS have been prominent on the Irish and

At the beginning of March, DAVID AUGUST released his

group bubblegum, giddy cheers, and peppy drums’ (The

international scene since the release of Becoming A Jackal.

second album, DCXXXIX A.C. This record sees August,

Gaurdian)

The record was nominated for tonnes of awards, including

who's been on hiatus for a year, embracing ambient music.

bagging nominations for the Mercury Prize and Choice

The hour-long release is made up of 24 tracks, mostly

22-year-old British musician ISAAC GRACIE will take

Music Prize. In 2013 they released Awayland, which won

recorded in single takes, that form "one long breath,"

to the stage. Inspired by familiar greats in Radiohead,

the Choice Music Prize and was once again short listed for

as the artist puts it. This is the first release from his label

Leonard Cohen, and Bob Dylan, Isaac has an instinctive

the coveted Mercury Prize. In 2016, their 3rd LP Darling

99CHANTS, a new platform through which August aims

knack for writing a devastating melody, and a voice honed

Arithmetic won the prestigious Ivor Novello Award. With

to put out 99 total releases from an array of producers.

to precision. His self-produced debut track Last Words was

the release of their fourth studio album on the cards later

August was last heard with a pair of 12-inches for Ninja

picked up by the likes of Huw Stephens, Annie Mac, Zane

this year, and a reputation as one of the most captivating

Tune's Counter Records offshoot back in 2016.

Lowe and John Kennedy, and has hit over one million plays!

performers on stage today, this show will be very special

Next up, a cast of performers and musicians collectively

Following an acclaimed spot at BBC Introducing SXSW

indeed.

known as HERCULES AND LOVE AFFAIR. With an

showcase in Texas, he has also appeared at Glastonbury,

ever-revolving lineup, this dance project continues to mix

Latitude and The Great Escape. This month saw the release

Hip-hop artist YASIIN BEY will be performing at this

genres like house and disco and all led by Andy Butler. Four

of his debut album “Darling I’m Not OK”.

year’s festival. Since his emergence on the world stage in the

albums later, collaborations with John Grant, Rogue Mary,

late 90s, Bey, best known by his stage name MOS DEF, has

the smoky voiced Krystle Warren and many more along the

earned a reputation not only as a highly respected recording

way helps keep the project inventive and creative. They have soundtracked thousands of dance parties with their fun

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Irish songwriters and musicians Oisin Leech and Mark McCausland are THE LOST BROTHERS. These are two very special musicians working in harmony and in unison. Since their debut album Trails of The Lovely in 2008 they have gone from strength to strength with the build-up to their brand new acclaimed album produced by Howe and Gabriel Sullivan called ‘Halfway Towards A Healing’ - “a sequence of beautifully crafted reflective songs that cruise along in an admirably unshowy way” - The Irish Times. Fresh from wowing audiences at SXSW in Austin this March, we look forward to their show. J COLLERAN, formally known as MMOTHS, has dropped the moniker and has changed direction. An electronic producer and creator of textured pop-electronica, his latest release, "O+SOH" is a hypnotic sweeping soundscape, an amazing taster from his eagerly anticipated debut LP, which will be released this summer, ahead of his show at All Together Now! Bristol based trio ELDER ISLAND are swiftly becoming renowned for their rich and unique sound. Katy’s sweet and soulful tones flow over multi-layered synths, beats, and melodic broodings to stir up any crowd to get up and dance.

OSCAR JEROME has been honing his craft as a musician

The atmospheric folk of MARIA KELLY will be a great

Sonically placed somewhere between the likes of The xx,

from a young age. He has worked as vocalist, guitarist

addition to our line up. Growing up in Mayo, Maria spent

Sylvan Esso, Mount Kimbie & Maribou State, there is no

and composer with countless acts and grown through the

many years crafting and developing her sound into a delicate

denying Elder Island are carving out a home for themselves

thriving South London music scene. Jerome brings all of

blend of atmospheric-alt-folk. First taking influence from

in the musical landscape.

his influences together, sighting artists such as Gil Scott-

the story-telling elements of Irish-trad, as well as artists

Heron, George Benson, John Martyn, The Clash, Ali Farka

like Regina Spektor and Lisa Hannigan. Maria released her

The world’s most successful Beatles tribute band ever - THE

Toure and Jay Dilla. His creative vision is to make music

track ‘Stitches’ and was quickly named one of ‘The 50 Best

BOOTLEG BEATLES have been bringing audiences of

with sincerity and pay homage to his countless inspirations.

Tracks of 2016’ in The Irish Times. The track went on to

all ages sheer joy with their hit-packed setlists. Established

With an acclaimed live show that has taken in Boiler Room,

garner an impressive 180,000 streams on Spotify. Her brand

in 1980, they have gone on to play huge, notable shows

Jazz Cafe, Union Chapel to name a few, Oscar Jerome is

new double sided single Dark Places / Small Talk.

across the globe - and have become stalwarts and favourites

well on his way to becoming a major draw.

of the Glastonbury Festival scene. Imagine lying back on the grass in the August sunshine while they play - love is all you need.

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12 miles of stone walls enclose the grounds, creating a magical space for this 15,000 capacity event. There will be plenty to see and to do, to spark your imagination, to capture your attention. Music to dance to, spoken word to be moved by, theatre to be entranced by, treats for the senses. Bespoke cocktails, fantastic feasts, musical treats and so much more. It is important to us to create a festival for families and kids to enjoy, be inspired by, to be safe at and to feel cared for. So, the team have curated an area to adhere to this ethos

Unpack your tent for this 3-day camping festival or check out our bespoke accommodation options. Those with families can make their 3 day home in our Family Camping Area, an independent space to retreat to with your little ones. Tier One and Tier Two tickets are now totally sold out, with limited Tier Three Tickets on sale - so move quickly! Fabulous landscapes, the dramatic backdrops, secret spots and hidden gems all lie in wait for you at All Together Now.

called‌. Kids Together.

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T h e at r e M I N D I N G FR A N KI E

Noel is struggling to be the best mother he can.

to rear a child, or at least a street. Maeve Binchy is one of

Clare originally from Galway became a professional actor in

those rare writers - like Dickens, Wilde, Shaw or Behan -

2003 and prior to that was a General and Paediatric Nurse.

Noel Lynch is struggling with an alcohol addiction, when

whose work springs from their larger-than-life personalities.

“I took the long way round to a career in acting! However I

he gets a call from Stella, a girlfriend with whom he shared

More so than other writers, their unique voices are captured

have been performing since I was 4 so it was something that

a drunken weekend. Stella is having Noel’s child; she is

in their work. This production of Minding Frankie once

was always in my mind.”

also dying from cancer. Noel must raise their daughter,

again makes Maeve's voice available to all those who love

Frankie. Social worker, Moira Tierney, has other ideas, and

her, and to those who will come to love her. We chatted

After she finished college in 2003 Clare has worked in

is prepared to do battle for custody of the child. In order to

with Clare Barrett who takes on the role of Moira in this

many different theatres and with many different Theatre

prevail, Noel must prove that he can fill a woman’s shoes,

sure to be a well worth trip to the theatre.

Companies at home and abroad. “I've just finished

break all the stereotypes, and become the best mother that

playing Gabby in the Abbey Theatre's production of the

he can be. Along the way, he discovers that it takes a village

Unmanageable Sisters and I'm thrilled to be on the road with Minding Frankie now until June.”

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Are audiences enjoying Minding Frankie - what’s the reaction so far on the tour? Our audiences have been fantastic so far so hopefully that will continue as we make our way around the country. The show is a great night out, a great story with some good fun along the way. Do you have any good luck rituals before you take to the stage? Not really it varies from show to show I like to be ready in good time, I do a warm up and then maybe keep the same order to how I get ready and dressed as my character...I don't know if I do that for good luck or out of superstition. It has worked so far so I guess that's my good luck! You have been in Limerick working previously on Angela's Ashes, The Musical, can you tell us what you like about the City? Any favourite pubs, cafes or restaurants? We had such a wonderful time while we were here with Angela's Ashes the people of Limerick were amazing hosts it was hard to leave, we were pure spoiled! My fiancé says I should have shares in Aroi. It was recommended to me when I was here in 2014 with another show and I always look forward to popping back. For lunch I was a regular at ZEST in the gallery. I'm actually dreaming of those salads and cakes as I talk about it. There is no better spot than Limerick for shopping and if the time allows I'll be popping into a lot of my usual haunts. At night when we were with Angela's Ashes we had many a good night in the wonderful South's Bar and no doubt I'll introduce Steve to it. I also Could you tell us about the production and the cast?

Can you tell us about the characters?

love a quiet drink in Tom Collins it has always been a go to

The production is called Minding Frankie and it's based

The part I play is Moira she is a social worker working with

spot when I'm on tour in Limerick or visiting pals. Oh dear

on Maeve Binchy's bestseller of the same name. It was

Stella, Frankie's Mum. The show is performed by just Steve

so much to choose from and only 3 days and nights I better

adapted for the stage by Shay Linehan and its directed by

and I with Moira and Noel being our main part although it

start making out my itinery.

Peter Sheridan. We first performed the show in 2016 in

wouldn't be a Maeve Binchy play without several different

the Viking theatre in Clontarf and as the show has grown

characters so we both play multi-roles.

so have our venues as we transferred to the Gaiety and the

Minding Frankie is a family love story by one of Ireland’s most popular writers. Full of Maeve Binchy’s trademark

Everyman Theatre in 2017 and now we are off on an Irish

Have you always been a fan of Meave Binchy's work? Can

wisdom, warmth, and humour, the hugely popular novel has

Tour and also going to Manchester, so it is most definitely

you tell us what your favourite books of hers are?

now been adapted for the stage. Directed by Peter Sheridan

the little show that could! The cast comprises of myself and

I first read Maeve Binchy's 'Light a Penny Candle' while on

and starring Steve Blount and Clare Barrett, Minding

the wonderful Steve Blount. We have been with the show

a camping holiday with my family, my Mum had finished

Frankie is at the Lime Tree Theatre from May 1st- 3rd.

since its beginning so it’s great to be working together again.

it so I grabbed it and devoured it! Her wit and human observation has always made her books totally engrossing

Article by: Michelle Costello

and magical. While I love Light a Penny Candle and Circle of Friend's I think my favourite is still Tara Road....I still remember the cover ...I think it was read a few times!

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Fa s h i o n L i me r ic k S c h o o l o f Ar t a nd D es i gn U nvei l U nw ra p Unfolding in a series of stages across multi-venues in Limerick city, Unwrap fashion festival will celebrate the ideas, creativity and innovation of LSAD students, while paying homage to the college and city’s fashion history and exploring the future of fashion as a business. The two day festival, which will take place from Wednesday May 16 to Thursday May 17, 2018, is devised and produced by Limerick School of Art & Design, LIT and supported by Limerick City & County Council. Unwrap will present LSAD’s Fashion Design BA Honours Degree Course 2018 Graduate collection in an exhibition at the Limerick City Gallery of Art, in partnership with EVA International. The exhibition launch will also include the screening of the 2018 graduate fashion collection video, styled by one of Ireland's leading fashion stylists Kieran Kilgallon, and shot by film maker Albert Hooi. A unique collaboration between students from the BA in Fashion and Textiles for Product & Costume, and Digital Arts students from Clonmel Campus, will feature in a second multimedia fashion showcase. Unwrap will also host the inaugural Business Fashion Forum which will bring together some of the most influential voices on fashion including

Sinead Burke

(Minnie Mélange) and Aileen Carville (SKMMP). Mike Fitzpatrick, Dean, Limerick School of Art &

All Unwrap events are free to the public who will be catered

The Unwrap festival is also looking to the future of fashion

Design and Director Cultural Engagement said, “LSAD

for in a first come first served basis.

and partnered with The Hunt Museum to develop the

is synonymous with fashion and the Unwrap festival is

Future Fashion workshops for post-primary students.

about connecting a design ethos and a creative energy to

Home to the Sybil Connolly collection, the Hunt Museum

the entrepreneurial ambition that exists in Limerick City.”

will display the pieces created during the workshops and inspired by the Connolly collection, throughout the fashion

“It is also about marking a milestone in the careers of these

festival.

young fashion designers as they transition from students at LSAD to working in a competitive, creative and exciting industry,” he said.

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Photography by: Sean Curtain


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T h e r i s e i n p l us s i z e FAS HI ON Don’t you hate that feeling when you walk into a shop or

Parchment initially hated the idea of modelling, but

Lastly, BooHoo Man is my favourite store online. It’s

go online shopping and you find the perfect piece, but it

eventually came around, and has now switched careers. He

cheap, trendy and very student friendly. BooHoo Man

doesn’t come in your size. Welcome to my world. Being

reckons he is part of a major uprising in showing men’s

recently came out with their plus size range also labelled

6ft 3” and carrying that little extra poundage makes it hard

bodies as they are and says that can only be for the good:

“Big and Tall”. BooHoo Man has copied the model

sometimes for me to be as fashion forward as I’s like to be.

“Seeing other big and tall guys might help people accept

created by River Island but has brought a new spin on it.

This is changing however as some of the biggest brands are

themselves more.” ASOS might have started the craze but

Of course, they have sizes up to 4XL and 48” waistlines

coming out with plus size or big and tall collections. With

other retailers soon copped on and started their own plus

but they have a new defining moment of plus size ranges…

the average waist in Ireland for a man being 38” and most

size ranges within months of the ASOS collections going

A celebrity range. They launched the first ever plus sized

well known brands only going up to 36” its about time that

live.

range by American Rapper, French Montana last month

this massive niche in the market is catered for. I’m going

and it has done extremely well. The range features colour,

to give you the lowdown of the top retail offerings for the

River Island is one of the most popular stores in Europe.

vibrant prints and comfy relaxed fits. It is safe to say this is

fashion forward bigger man.

Having over 24 stores in Ireland alone including two in

a game changing move and it’s great to see plus sized men

Limerick one in the city and one in the Crescent shopping

in the entertainment industry paving the way by creating

The first store ever to come out with a plus size collection

centre. I know from experience that sometimes River

new standards of body image. BooHoo Man say this is

for men was online clothing giant ASOS. Over the past

Island would be a no go for me size-wise. Their clothing

only the start with more celebrities coming on board for

couple of months ASOS has been extending its menswear

is trendy and on point but their sizing was just way too

collaborations in the coming months so make sure to keep

ranges up to 6XL, to reflect the size that many guys

small. Following on from the success of ASOS’s Plus range,

your eyes peeled.

actually are, rather than what high end designers would

River Island came out with Big and Tall, to be honest I

prefer them to be. It’s been catering for bigger women for

prefer the name of this collection as it is much less offensive

On a final note, I hope this story opened your eyes up to

the past five years (the “curve” sector accounts for 20% of

than PLUS. River Island’s Big and Tall range isn’t quite as

the options there are for plus sized men out there. I feel

Asos’s womenswear sales) but now bigger men are getting

inclusive as ASOS as it only carries up to 6XL but at least

like bigger men are always cast aside and the focus is more

the same treatment. ASOS are one of the big hitters in

it’s a start. The Big and Tall collection carries everything one

on the plus sized lady which I want to deflect away from.

the fashion stakes and having bigger men included in the

could need in his wardrobe from comfy casuals to luxury

Men can have body issues too and I feel like this needs

biggest trends right now is important to them. They are

occasion wear. Their jeans go up to a 48” waist so there’s no

to be brought more into conversation. One of my main

also a pioneer of change in the fashion world as they are

need to worry about that awkward and sweaty struggle of

passions in life is fashion and keeping up with the hottest

changing the way modelling agencies take in clients. Before

pulling up ill fitting denim that everyone goes through once

and latest trends. For a while I felt limited with what I

the launch of the line, very few agencies had plus size males

in their life. The only downside to this line however is that it’s

could wear because of what the media presented to me.

on their booking lists meaning ASOS had to scout their

an online exclusive which I do feel is a bit discriminatory in

Now with major fashion brands accepting the plus sized

models from festivals, out on the streets and even in their

many ways. Why can’t plus sized men not walk into a River

male to a major audience I feel myself more accepted into

own office. 23-year-old Nemar Parchment, was spotted in-

Island store and have the same experience as a slenderer

the fashion world as a whole. I am grateful to these brands

house working as a buyer’s administrative assistant.

gentleman? It feels like River Island have jumped on the

and many others for taking away the stigma that comes

bandwagon to seem inclusive but feel that just having an

with not being “perfect” whatever that may be. Not all

online collection enough. Hopefully, pending demand, the

men have to be ripped and not all women have to be stick

collection will be rolled out into stores but at least it’s a turn

thin. There are so many different body types out there and

in the right direction for now.

fashion should cater for all. Article by: Reece Creed

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Vote Yes on 25 May. Limerick Vote Yes #Together4Yes 15


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A r t i s t P r o fi l e K ate O ’S h ea

A Limerick based artist with a broad social practice that

Tell me about your background as an artist?

The café is the reason I do what I do now because I realised

includes printmaking, sculpture, curating and publishing.

Okay I’m going to try and do this quickly but it is a bit

I wanted to bring people together and make a community.

Kate O’Shea’s work stems from a concern for contemporary

long winded! When I finished school, I was like art isn’t

It was outside town so it was all very utopian. From this we

social structures and the fractures within them; she

like something you could do in college so I went to study

created a festival called Nom Stock full of bands and artists

established her first social space at the age of 19.

architecture but dropped out after two years because I

talks. It is important to say it was never just me so many

wasn’t suited, I should have gone straight into art but I still

friends helped. Next year I went to study a PLC course in

Her most recent project, ‘Durty Words’, a book bringing

figured that wasn’t a real job so I dropped out and moved

art in Cork and it was here I realised “wait I can do art!”

together 60 artists, activists and writers from around the

home to Kerry.

then I went to LSAD and fell in love with Printmaking.

and practice today. This work is being co-produced with

I was on my Father’s land and decided to convert my

Why did you want to undertake printmaking as your

designer Victoria Brunetta as part of an MA by Research at

Father’s home into a café. With a friend, Aoife Scanlon, we

discipline?

Limerick School of Art & Design.

converted the building called Nom Nom café which was a

It was perfect for me. For me print is like the under-dog in

café, then we converted the barn into both a gallery and gig

fine art. It is not that it is misunderstood but it is just like it

space. The café we ran for 7 years during the summer.

exists in-between two worlds.

world, responding to the relevance of anarchist theory

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It was perfect for me though, firstly because it was so process based and then in workshop while working with the machinery it was just a good way for me to work through making the pieces. Then in the later years, as I had never thought of print as a political discipline, in my third year when I started self-publishing it was like everything clicked. It was like wait we can make the media, then it was through Rumpus which led to ‘Durty words.’ Your Prints are very politically charged and deal with themes of social movement and community, why is this relevant to the art you create? So as I said the first magazine I did was called Rumpus! We would print everything ourselves. The whole idea was art and politics together and the theme of the first magazine was community, so we wanted to create different points of views about community. We did this just prior to my degree show which included music, prints it was like a mini festival in college. After that I got the bursary for cork printmakers but then I got a place in sample studios. I was trying to bring the community together in sample studios, trying to

I was using structure and color and paint. My work at

While undertaking projects with the Limerick Spring

reach out to more people. That’s where volxkuche happened.

this point wasn’t text based, it wasn’t magazine based. I

and curating ‘Durty Words’, you managed to put together

Which means peoples kitchen. I did that with Darren

discovered in third year though that all of us were beginning

a show of your work called Hardwired, what was the

Kirwin, it was based on this German Anarchists movement

to get a lot more political so we wanted a way to bring

inspiration behind this?

of giving food out at cost price and creating a space that

all these people and communicate these ideas through

With Hardwired I realised I need to take time out. For

was non-commercial. That went really well and booked out

one thing. So being artists the logical step was screen

me being in the workshop is more for my own head than

every month.

printing a magazine! Talking about ‘Durty Words’ we see

anything else. See it is all connected and it all works together.

Then I came back to Limerick to do my masters by research.

how most things snowball. So I had my research started

I spent months in the workshop just making. I started with

That was my way to try and bring all this together, looking

on what anarchism means today and as I said we believed

color and layering and layering. All the ideas and research

at theories and practice associated with social change. It was

the natural step was to create a magazine. I met Victoria

then came in as I started to add text. Hardwired was about

here we started Limericks first people’s kitchen with Lizzie

Brunetta who is a graphic designer based in Limerick, we

showing people my research but it was really about my own

last September in the Urban Co-Op and also working with

had really similar ideas and she was interested in the project.

head space cause I wreck my head a lot and that helps me, it

The Limerick Spring team!

The more people I contacted the more momentum it gained

gives me the space to do the other things because if I don’t

and from here it turned from a magazine into quite a big

do that I know I would burn out with the other things.

From the small scale magazine called Rumpus you are

book! It is a collection of work from artists, poets, political

now compiling a book of artists, poets and political

activists. Just a mad group of people. Before that we thought

activists called ‘Durty Words.’ What set this idea in

it would only be 40 people, it should be done by now but

motion?

change takes time so why rush it? We are so used to instant

For the first two years I fell in love with printmaking as

gratification, I wanted to do it now but then I realised what

a process- so just creating work. For me it was just about

could happen if we stepped back and gave it more time.

Article by: Cathal Ryan

communicating, a way for me to communicate my ideas through print.

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R i v e r fe s t 2 0 1 8

The summer will be noisily and colourfully waved in

Visitors travel from across the country and many also from

across the May Bank Holiday weekend in Limerick as our

abroad for a four day celebration that includes everything

Shannonside city becomes the focus for the first major

from high-octane water based activities across the weekend

national festival of the year. Riverfest will attract thousands

to the country’s biggest fireworks display of the summer,

to the banks of the Shannon for the 14th year of a festival.

its largest BBQ cook-off, celebrations of food and fashion,

The festival is a carnival of activity and variety, all based

outdoor and indoor concerts and, of course, the Great

around the great waters of the Shannon, with much of the

Limerick Run.

high jinks on river itself. Among the major new attractions this year will be the first ever visit to Ireland by the Seabreacher Shark – a dare-devil ride all the way from Queenstown, New Zealand an 18ft ‘shark-craft’ that can travel at speeds of up to 80km per hour, soar 18ft high out of the water, dip up to 5ft under the water, do side rolls and doughnuts.

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The water based activities will also involve a free Double Zipline across the Shannon, Water Zorbing, Kayaking, and a social swim that will have hundreds getting a different perspective of the great river. At quayside there will be annual favourites such as The Riverfestival Village, at Arthur’s Quay – a weekend long cacophony of foods, crafts, vintage amusements, street performers and live musical entertainment. The Limerick Food Experience in the Garden of the Hunt Museum will showcase the best quality, locally produced food and drink that Limerick has to offer while the Saturday will also see one of the annual high points of the festival take place as Ireland’s largest BBQ cook-off takes place with teams representing cuisines around the world competing for honours. The weekend’s ‘Big Gigs’ will include Jack L on Saturday night and Bell X1 at King John’s Castle. Sunday’s Great Limerick Run, which is Ireland’s fastest growing participatory event, is another of the top features of the weekend, drawing an anticipated 13,000 people for three events – the full marathon, half marathon, 6 mile. Sheila Deegan, Culture and Arts Officer with Limerick City and County Council, “The continued development and investment in Riverfest shows Limerick’s desire to grow our visitor offering. Riverfest is one of the civic festivals delivered by Limerick City and County Council to bring the May Bank Holiday Weekend to life in the city and celebrate the river. Festivals are an important way of bringing us together to share and learn about ourselves, our culture, our heritage and give confidence and voice to creative expression of all kinds.” Laura Ryan added: “We’ve had a very long winter, that very much consumed the spring but we’ll be putting all that behind us with Riverfest. It’s a brilliant mix of different elements and, most of all, offers something for everyone. The fact that the last act that many who come here for the festival do as they depart is to book again for next year says a lot about Riverfest. It’s a great time for Limerick and this festival is a weekend long celebration of that.” Visit www.riverfest.ie for full details of the festival Photography by: True Media

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Jo e Cl a r k e mu s i c I nte r v i ew

‘To be able to court and foster an artist in following their

Can you tell me a bit about your background?

Why did you step up from event promoter to manager?

dream and then it working out at the following end. That

I grew up in Limerick and from my earliest years I have

I guess it kind of happened organically, I really loved the

is a beautiful thing.’ Music manager Joe Clarke on the

always been involved in venues and with bands, running gigs

Rubber Bandits and wanted to see what more we could

exhilaration of being a manager. In 2009 Joe Clarke left

and festivals. I would have been the Ents officer in UL in

add to the obvious talent. That is always the challenge with

his position at the head of Trinity Rooms nightclub to

my early career then I would have gone off working for the

the manager to see can you bring added value to the act

focus fully on managing the Rubberbandits, under his

means of MCD and other companies like that around the

and what you can do to make the story different to how it

new company CWB aiming to create “large scale arts and

UK and Ireland. Then I came back to Limerick where I ran

would be. How you could change the outcome so that could

culture events.”Now a massive player in the industry Joe

a nightclub called Trinity Rooms for a number of years and

happen.

has helped bring the Bandits and acts such as The Strypes

then I began managing the Rubber Bandits and from there

to global success. Expanding and based in Dublin, Joe is

that led to the birth of our management company CWB

Did you always want to be involved in this side of the

still helping pave the way for Limericks cultural footprint

which currently manages a roster of 14 acts all together and

music industry?

helping curate plans for Limericks Electronic Arts Festival

runs festivals and does consultancies all over the world.

Well as my short lived piano teacher said when someone

in 2019. The Limerick Magazine caught up with Joe to

asked her ‘Did you remember teaching Joe?’ and she said

talk past ventures, music management and advice for future

‘Well I remember the really good ones and the really bad

artists.

ones and I remember Joe.’ so you take from that what you want, a lack of musical talent drove me into musical management!

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Where did CWB come from?

You are always making connections and looking to meet

What you see in him is someone who has undertaken

CWB was a company that myself and Paul Boland set up

new people, hoping people will look at your acts the way

so much, he went to Bulgaria to learn how to write for

along with Paul Webb back in 2007 to start doing tours

you see them yourselves so you can bring them forward.

orchestras, he put a lot of work into it and would have

and start producing event,s I suppose to a better quality

turned down a lot of other lucrative gigs, like short term

and with more imagination than we thought was out there

What is the process when you find a new act?

paying work at the expense of following his dream. I

at the time, and we quite quickly started doing things like

What we would do with an act is before we ever look at

suppose to be able to court and foster an artist in following

working on the Rose of Tralee, working on the opening of

booking them we would meet them a couple of times,

their dream and then it working out at the following end.

Thomand Park, working with big companies that we started

record some demos, have a conversation. Some bands do

That is a beautiful thing.

a relationship with like JP McManus scholarship awards

not need management some bands are on a track that they

that we still produce to this day and then it continued to

are perfectly happy with some bands then can benefit from

What is your advice to young artists?

grow. So the two sides of the company are the production

a medium term strategy where you go let’s hold back on

We are currently working on a scheme with some young

side which kindly is working on festivals, working on

the album a little bit more, let’s build fans a bit more and

acts in Ballyfermot in Dublin, what we say to them is be

orchestral tours across Europe and then the management

let’s get an awareness built up of them. That would be the

very aware of plotting your own path but plotting it really

side. Last year we would have begun work on our studio

current strategy with the new acts we have taken on this

well. Work out where you want to get to. There is a phrase

here in Bird hill and that would have been the studio we

year, like Montauk Hotel and Thumper they are currently

a friend of mine uses a lot and i slag her for it but it goes,

would have built first of all for our own acts such as LA

on their second or third single, they would be doing support

‘What does success look like?’ so you know when you have

Galaxie and The Strypes and stuff to come and record in

slots, couple of shows in the UK. We would be talking to

been successful so if your first goal is to support someone

but were now opening that out as a fully blown commercial

different producers and looking at how we would expand

upstairs in Pharmacia once that is done sit back and take

studio.

their sound. At the end of the day though, the manager can

a little bit of pride in having done that and then the next

only manage what is there so if there isn’t talent to begin

thing is releasing a track /recording a demo. There is so

CWB has expanded immensely; did you expect this

with the role of the manager is a little redundant. This is a

much noise out there particularly in the music business

growth when ye started?

job with long hours and heartbreak where every corner is

about what you should be doing and how people went from

I go into everything with the knowledge that we will just

sometimes financially awful but you have to love it or else

their bedroom to selling out an arena in two years and all

about get through it and get out the other side! It was

there is no point doing it.

that stuff and it is easy to get dissuaded but like 99% of the

always our ambition from the exposure we would have had

time the person in their bedroom had actually been spotted

from touring bands and acts and even back in my earlier

What is your favourite thing about working in this

three years before they ever came out, being coached and

days when I would have been working up in Theatre Royal

industry?

pushed and having money put into them and everything

up in Cecil Street you always had an awareness of that life

It is when you get that hair in the back of the neck moment

else. It is to work out what success looks like for yourselves.

of bringing something up to a level that lots of people are

when it comes together where your acts have sold out

interested in. That was something I was fascinated in and

maybe the Olympia or some show, or a production you have

What is next on the cards for CWB?

that idea of taking something that begins as a little sketch

conceived and put together. An example for us would have

We have shows in Europe and the US and then we are

on a piece of paper and all of a sudden it ends up going all

been Kormacs Equivalent Exchange show with the Irish

doing Music Cork in Cork. There are some shout-outs I

around the world and 50,000 people get to see it.

Chamber Orchestra last week in Vicar Street. That would

would like to give, people should always look at first music

have come from one of our acts that we managed for a long

contact which I am a board member of, it is a great resource

What is your role as a ‘Manager?’

time, he was always known as a DJ and he had a big band

for any bands and it is really good as a starting point. The

So my role as a manager would be to map out the bigger

and would have done a lot of music sound tracks and stuff

other thing is go to peoples gigs, help each other out. If

picture for the band. So one thing that is really important

but he never worked with an orchestra so we sat down with

you go to their gigs they might come to your gigs! Don’t be

for a manager is that they are not a member of the band,

him and worked out we were going to get to the point to

always looking to have that one finished polished song, put

they need to separate themselves and see the bigger picture.

him being able to produce this show with ten original pieces

out loads of songs. If you can write one you can write ten

It is very similar to the role of producer on a record; they

of music composed with the Irish Chamber Orchestra and

and look for validation in the right places not from people

need to be able to hear what the drums, the guitar, the bass,

loads of guest acts and soloists so when that came together

whose opinion you actually do not care too much about.

vocals, everything will sound like all together whereas the

it was quite a thing. On the back of that show going so well

-Solid advice from a man who knows his stuff-

musician is concentrating on their own part being really

that show will tour Melbourne, Toronto and the UK at the

good. So the manager has to look at, particularly in today’s

end of the year and those are the ones that are particularly

world everything from revenue streams to remixes, to what

rewarding. That said every single thing, every Spotify play

the overall impression is that people have of the band,

we get for an act, that is all part of the validation process,

where the fit into the current musical landscapes, getting

that is what makes you go it’s alright.

Article by: Cathal Ryan.

the timing right on when the record is released.

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T o p Li ve M us i c V e n u e s i n L i mer ic k Limerick has always been at the heart of great live music. Sometimes with all the hustle and bustle in pubs it can be hard to find a good spot of live music amongst all the DJ’s. So we at The Limerick Magazine have compiled some of our top spots for live music in Limerick City. The Curraghgower Great for a trad session and located right on the banks of the river Shannon. The Curragower bar is at the heart of Limerick’s Medieval Quarter. Dolans Warehouse Situated just off the Dock Road, Dolans Pub is one of the best known spots in Limerick for Live music. Between the front bar which always has a band of traditional musicians playing away to the massive warehouse stage that has brought us so many big names over the years. Pharmacia Home of the DIY LK shows Pharmacia hosts local bands almost every week supporting the underground culture growing in Limerick. With a modest stage and a great atmosphere Pharmacia is a must if you are looking to dance to some live bands! Smyths Bar With live music every night of the week, Smyths bar is last on our list but certainly not least. Always busy, this top location in the heart of The Market Quarter is a must for anyone travelling to Limerick for a night out. Article by: Michelle Costello & Cathal Ryan Charlie Malone’s Hosting open mic nights and have original acts every night of the week, Charlie Malone’s is more a quirky and different interior to what one would call an old man pub. With a cozy stage and warm fire Charlie Malone’s is the perfect spot to head if you are looking for a quiet acoustic session with friends!

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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE Kasbah Social Club The home of Seoada Shows, the company that has brought this city so many great acts, Kasbah social club isn’t outrageous in size but hosts one of the best stages in Limerick for live music. Positioned next to Dolans if you are around this side of town there is always music to be heard. Photography by: Shane Seranno

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Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a battle that you know nothing about...


The Law The referendum on May 25th is about one simple

Under the 8th Amendment, from the moment a woman

A ‘yes’ vote is a vote for the latter, but what does that

proposition: whether to remove Article 40.3.3 and

becomes pregnant the state’s obligation is to try to ensure

mean?

replace it with the words ‘Provision may be made by

that both she and the foetus are still alive at the end of

law for the regulation of termination of pregnancy’, or

it. This may seem unproblematic, but it means that while

It simply means the Oireactas would be able to make law

whether to leave the Constitution as it is.

everyone will try to maximize the heath of the woman,

regulating access to abortion in situations that go beyond

the reality is that even if her health will suffer grave

those in which a woman’s life is at risk. Without the 8th

The 8th Amendment states that the unborn has a

and permanent injury the law compels her to remain

Amendment, the Oireachtas would be able to decide on

constitutional right to life, which the state is to defend

pregnant. As far as the Constitution is concerned, the

what the appropriate balance is between women’s health

and vindicate, as far as practicable, with due regard to the

state has done its job if a woman is still alive at the end of

and rights in pregnancy, and the protection of unborn

right to life of a pregnant person. In practical terms, this

a pregnancy, regardless of the state of her health and its

life.

has wide-ranging effects.

implications for her life, her ability to care of her children, and her prospects of future, further motherhood. The 8th

Let us be clear: nobody argues that the protection of

The fact that the unborn has a constitutional right means

Amendment is, thus, about much more than abortion: it

foetal life is unimportant. Indeed, supporting healthy,

cases can be (and are) brought to the High Court to

is about the care of all pregnant women and the clinical

happy and consensual pregnancy is in everyone’s interest,

override a pregnant person’s lack of consent to proposed

practice of physicians who are caring for them.

and earlier this year the Supreme Court confirmed that

treatment. Furthermore, anyone at all can take a case in

However, it is also, of course, about abortion.

even without the 8th Amendment the law can protect

an attempt to protect the rights of unborn life. It was

foetal life as doing so is in the common good.

through such cases that the Society for the Protection of

The 8th Amendment was proposed in the early 1980s for

Prenatal life is clearly of moral and ethical value. But so

Unborn Children successfully prevent the distribution of

a very clear reason: to stop abortion being introduced

too is the life and health of a pregnant person, and her

information about abortion services in England until we

in Ireland. At the time abortion was a crime, and the

ability to make decisions about what would be appropriate

voted in a right to information after the X Case in 1992.

Supreme Court had said that even though married

for her and her family. Since 1983 it has not been possible

couples had a right to privacy and thus to plan their

for the Oireachtas to strike a balance between these

families it also explicitly said that this did not extend to

interests: the 8th Amendment has taken that balancing

a right to abortion. There was no real political campaign

role away from it, and replaced it with a constitutional

seeking abortion; indeed contraception for ‘bona fide

provision that aspires only to the maintenance of life.

family planning purposes’ had just been legalised at the end of the ‘70s.

If the 8th Amendment is repealed then politicians will take on that role of balancing, and the government has

The 8th Amendment was a preemptive strike: it meant

already told us how they believe the balance should be

that the Oireachtas could never introduce lawful abortion

struck: by allowing a fair degree of discretion to the

as long as it remained in place. To remove or change it

pregnant person in the first 12 weeks, and almost none

would require a referendum. Now, in 2018, we are being

thereafter.

asked for the first time whether we wish to maintain that constitutional barrier on legislation or whether we want

Up to 12 weeks since a woman’s last period (which is

to make change possible.

about 10 weeks since conception) it will be possible to access abortion without having to justify oneself provided a doctor is satisfied that the pregnancy is within the protected period and the woman has taken a 3-day waiting period.


That 3-day waiting period does not have any medical

Between 12 weeks and viability, then, the government is

Repeal of the 8th Amendment and the introduction of

function. Instead, it is a key part of the balance

proposing very limited access to abortion and to strike

the systems proposed by the Government would strike

being struck in early pregnancy, providing time for

a balance that allows for foetal life to be ended only

a fundamentally different balance in Irish law. But this

further reflection, advice, discussion, and, if necessary,

where

would not be an unduly liberal one. It would be one

counselling to support a woman in her decision-making.

there are serious health reasons justifying it. This is

that recognises the importance of supporting decision

completely different from the law in England, for

making, of letting doctors support their patients, and of

Some people think 12 weeks LMP is too long, but

example, where abortion is lawful up to 24 weeks

protecting foetal life in a balanced and compassionate

the reality is that many women do not discover their

if there is a greater risk to a woman’s health from

way.

pregnancy until 8 or more weeks in because of irregular

remaining pregnant than there is from ending the

menstruation or contraceptive failure. Nobody would

pregnancy. Statistically that is almost always the case,

Without a ‘yes’ vote nothing can change. The 8th will

want a time limit that is so short that women are

but in the Irish law only a serious risk will be enough.

remain in place, and nobody—including rape victims

forced into a rushed decision. 12 weeks including

Even then abortion is only lawful up to viability,

and people with fatal foetal diagnoses—will be able to

the 3-day waiting period is the average time-limit

whereas in England abortion is lawful without any

receive the care they need at home. Instead they will

across comparable countries in Europe and generally

term limit where there is a serious risk to the pregnant

continue to travel, to take abortion pills unsafely and

recognised as striking the right balance.

woman’s health. Abortion ‘on the basis of disability’ will

illegally, or to be pregnant when they feel they cannot

not be lawful in Ireland, whereas it is in England, again

be.

Some might say there should be no protected period

without any time limit.

at all, but such a period is vital to protect and support

Article by: Fiona de Londras

women who have experienced rape and sexual violence,

Arguments that compare abortion in England with

most of whom never tell anyone what has happened to

what is proposed in Ireland fail to acknowledge the very

Fiona de Londras is Professor of Global Legal Studies

them and none of whom should be re-traumatised by

substantial differences between the systems.

in the University of Birmingham. She was born in

having to somehow prove the crime in order to access abortion.

Limerick and grew up in Tipperary. The only time that abortion may be possible in later pregnancy will be where a foetus has received a fatal

Those who oppose this have not told us how they would

diagnosis and the parents decide that it is best not to

provide a more humane and compassionate system for

continue with the pregnancy. These so-called ‘late term

such women, perhaps because they recognise—as the

abortions’ are acts of loving parenting by people for

Joint Oireachtas Committee and Citizens Assembly

whom the right thing to do is to bring the pain and

did—that no such system can realistically be designed.

suffering of their child to an end. For others this will not be the right thing to do. The new law will allow

After 12 weeks abortion will be strictly limited. The

Irish doctors to support people in dealing with such

proposed legislation says it will only be available where

a diagnosis and enable us to care for them at home,

two doctors certify that there is a risk to life or a serious

in Ireland, surrounded by the people who love them,

risk to health, and abortion is appropriate. One of these

regardless of which decision they make.

doctors will always have to be an obstetrician, ensuring senior oversight of decision-making. If a foetus is viable abortion will be a crime: the pregnancy will have to be ended by early delivery.


Disability and the 8th A note on language: [This article will use ‘disability-first’ phrasing as opposed to ‘person-first’ phrasing, as many disability rights campaigners, including myself, prefer it because our disabilities are not secondary to who we are, but a fundamental part of ourselves. I also will be using ‘women’ in reference to people affected by the Eighth Amendment for the sake of brevity, though I acknowledge that nonbinary people and trans men are also directly impacted by the Eighth Amendment.] I joined the movement to repeal the Eighth Amendment for many reasons, but the one which I return time and again to is this: as a disabled woman, the fight for bodily autonomy is one I have been fighting my entire life, and will likely spend the rest of my life fighting for. Disabled women face a triple-bind when it comes to our reproductive and sexual healthcare: we are burdened by ableist prejudices which lead to the depressingly pervasive idea that we don’t have sexualities, by the health issues we might have as a result of our disabilities, and finally by the daily struggle of navigating a world built largely without us or our needs in. These three, with an added dash of good old Irish misogyny, make for a hell of a cocktail.

The idea that disabled people either cannot, or do

There are also many health conditions which are made

not, have sex is an extremely common stereotype, and

worse by pregnancy. In my own case, I have Ehlers-

one that has an overwhelmingly negative impact on

Danlos Syndrome; this is a rare, genetically inherited

disabled people, particularly women. Disabled women

connective tissue disorder which means that all of the

in particular are frequently seen as ‘eternal children’i,

collagen in my body is malformed. This causes constant

innocents who neither desire sex nor ought to.

joint pain, poor healing from injuries, excessive bleeding from cuts, and near-daily joint dislocations.

This prejudice became starkly obvious to me personally

If I were to become pregnant, my hips – which already

when I first began to use a cane on a daily basis at the age

dislocate every second day on average – would likely each

of nineteen. Previously to that, I had barely had a GP’s

dislocate multiple times daily from very early pregnancy.

appointment since the age of fourteen or so wherein I

My pain levels, already high, would become nearly

wasn’t asked whether I was sexually active, or told about

unbearable, and I would probably need to use a wheelchair.

the pill. In the almost four years since I started to use

I would also probably have to quit my medications cold

my cane, I have been asked exactly once whether I was

turkey for the health of the pregnancy, which would cause

sexually active, and in that instance I was asked by a

intense withdrawal and almost definite relapse of my

consultant OB-GYN. (Apparently, a mobility device is

mental health conditions.

more of a barrier to my having a sex life than being a nerdy teenager who never went ou,t ever was.)

I very much want to have children, but it is no exaggeration to say I would be unlikely to survive a

Any sexual or reproductive health information I have

pregnancy. But I have absolutely no idea whether, under

needed since using my cane, I have had to seek out myself

the current vague constitutional definition of ‘threat to

– it is more than a little bit humiliating to have to do this,

the life of the mother’, I would be considered to be in

knowing that the only reason the information is no longer

enough danger to access a legal abortion in this country.

being offered to me as it was before is because it doesn’t

I, and other disabled women – including my partner, who

occur to many medical professionals that I might need it.

has the same genetic condition as me – should not have to

It is much documented that the less information given

live in fear of becoming pregnant, and of the potentially

to people about reproductive health, the more likely they

disastrous results to our health that this may have.

are to experience crisis pregnancies – there is no reason, other than the assumption that we do not have sex, that this does not apply to disabled people as well.

When planning our families, we should not have to factor in the costs of travel or the obtainability of illegal medication just in case something goes wrong. The

The risks inherent in an unplanned pregnancy will

Eighth Amendment casts a shadow over our family lives

also tend to be greater when the woman is disabled or

and relationships; unless it is repealed, the uncertainty

chronically ill. Many of us will be taking medications to

and doubt it casts over our lives will remain.

manage our symptoms which may not be healthy for the developing foetus – but abruptly stopping medication

The increased availability of the medical abortion pills,

once a pregnancy is confirmed can also be disastrous

misoprostol and mifepristone, have made abortion care

for a woman’s health, both mental and physical. And of

more accessible to disabled women in Ireland, who often

course, many women may not even be aware that they are

face even more barriers to travel than abled women do.

pregnant for weeks or even months – particularly if they

However, as long as the Eighth Amendment remains in

have a chronic health condition which leads to irregular

place, and women cannot access abortion care at home,

periods. By the time a pregnancy is detected, damage may

there will be women who need to travel.

well already have been done to the developing foetus. Many disabled women, particularly those of us with complex or rare medical conditions, are already familiar with having our healthcare needs exported to the UK.


This does not make the journey any easier. The experience of travelling abroad to access an abortion is a miserable one for anyone – imagine, then, how much that misery is

Men for Yes

compounded for those of us with ‘specific access needs’. Not

I’d like to see the eighth amendment removed from the Irish constitution. I feel strongly

only the isolation of sitting in an airport terminal alone, but

enough that I’m going to be out knocking on doors and campaigning as much as I can

perhaps also of needing to lie to the wheelchair porter about

on this referendum.

her reason for travel. In some ways I’m completely unqualified to have an opinion on this, let alone go out That is, if she could somehow, on the maximum Disability

campaigning on it. I’m a straight white man in his late thirties. I’ve been married for

Allowance rate of €198 a week, actually scrape together the

11 years, but my wife and I can’t and won’t have children. I think you’d be hard pressed

money for the trip at all. Or find a clinic with doctors who

to find someone less qualified to write or speak about women’s reproductive rights

had any knowledge of her disability, or access to her medical

than me. Yet it is precisely for that reason that I want to stand with women who are

history. Or, if she were a wheelchair user, if she could find

campaigning for this referendum.

a clinic she could actually get into the door of, actually get onto the surgery table of. And that isn’t even touching on the

I am an incredibly lucky person. I am a straight, white male. I was born in a relatively

difficulties of accessing adequate aftercare if complications

rich country. I received a good education, most of it free of charge. I am a beneficiary

do occur: which they are far more likely to if the patient has

of most of the structural inequality in this country, because I am on the winning side

pre-existing conditions.

of it. I live in a country where women are paid less, where people who grow up in disadvantaged families are themselves more likely to suffer disadvantage as adults, etc.

The reality of the Eighth Amendment is this: it does not

etc. And (bear with me!) sometimes that’s difficult. It’s not my individual fault, right?

protect women, and it does not protect disabled people.

I’m doing the best I can to be a decent person, occasionally succeeding, and while I didn’t create my genetic, historical and social good luck I can’t really do anything to

There have been claims by some defenders of the Eighth

reverse it either. But I can empathise, and imagine. Imagine what it is like to not have

Amendment that a liberalisation of Ireland’s abortion laws

the rights and privileges that I enjoy by accident. And, in particular, imagine what it

will lead to women en masse deciding to have abortions

might be like to have the fricking constitution inserting itself between me and my

when they receive diagnoses of foetal disabilities; this is not

doctor on what is the best for my health, life and well-being.

a point that I want to address, but I feel it is one that I must. This argument, to my mind, is rooted solely in ableism; in

It is just awful that Irish women not only have had to put up with an incredibly draconian

the appalling assertion that women will only knowingly

reproductive rights regime, but that, over the next two-and-a-bit months, they have to

give birth to disabled children if they do not have a choice

go out to the Irish people and ask and say please. Ask and say please for rights that they

in the matter. It is simply ableism couched in paternalism:

would enjoy in almost every other developed country.

disabled people need protecting, and we only exist because of a moralistic control of women’s reproductive choices.

I think it is time for Irish men like me, with our privilege and our luck and our sorrybut-what-can-you-do demeanour to stand up. Stand beside the women who are

As a disabled woman, I reject this utterly, and I say this: if

campaigning for control over their own bodies. Stand up and say please to the Irish

we are to protect disabled people, we must repeal the Eighth

voters who will ultimately decide on their rights.

Amendment, and allow disabled women to have control over our reproductive choices and appropriate continuity of

I know there are many people, some of whom are my friends, who disagree with my

care when we access abortion care. We must remove barriers

views on abortion, and I want to do my best to respect those views. I’m sure what I’ve

to sexual and reproductive health education, not only for

written here may sound tone-deaf, patronising or even insulting to women. I know I’ve

abled but for disabled people, taking our differing needs

a lot to learn. With rights and privilege come a responsibility to fight for those without.

into account. We must accept that reproductive healthcare,

Offering to help out in this referendum campaign may not atone for the rights and

including abortion care, is as much of a healthcare right as

privilege that I have been gifted, but it feels like a start. If you’re lucky, like me, you’d be

any other, and we must strive to make it free, safe, legal and

very welcome to come and put your shoulder to the wheel.

accessible to disabled women. Article by: Thomas Bibby – Limerick Together for Yes Article by: Aisling Kenny


My Eggsistentialism

Two years ago, I wrote a play about my journey to a decision

Every time that I sit on my bed or toilet seat with a

Like Miss P, a 20 year old woman who in 2014, though

about whether or not to try to have children. In the show I

pregnancy test in my hand, I will wait for the result knowing

clinically dead from a head trauma, was kept alive as a

wanted to look at how political and cultural contexts inform

that the moment a second pink stripe appears on the test

human incubator against her family’s wishes by somatic life

personal life decisions and so alongside my own journey I

will be the moment that I become less in the eyes of the

support because she was found to be 15 weeks pregnant.

also looked at Ireland’s reproductive health history from the

state. I know that that stripe will strip me of rights I had just

Although the High Court ruled in favour of her family,

inception of the state to chart the sequence of events that

the day before. The right to healthcare without qualification.

the decision was informed by the evidence of seven doctors

have brought us to where we are today.

The right to assume that if there was a complication or if I

who said they didn’t believe the foetus would have survived

was to become ill during my pregnancy, that the doctors

anyway.

One of those events was the addition to the Irish constitution

would be able to do everything that they could to treat me

by referendum of the 8th amendment in 1983, which gives

appropriately, immediately and without question to protect

Because of these cases and others, I will hold the test

unborn foetuses and pregnant mothers an equal right to life.

my health or save my life. The right to give informed

knowing that becoming pregnant will mean I am less

consent to medical procedures and decisions at every stage

valued, less cherished, less protected, less safe; That my

of my maternity care and to refuse unwanted interventions.

healthcare will be qualified; That I will lose the right to

This detail in my show - and in our shared history - is not something that has directly affected me in my life until now.

informed consent; That unclear legislation and an inchoate

I’ve never been pregnant so I’ve never been in a position

I worry that I might be treated like Mother B, Geraldine

where I needed to consider having an abortion. But now

Williams, who was taken to court by the HSE in 2016 in

Article by: Joanne Ryan

that I have made the decision with my partner to try and

an attempt to force her to have a caesarean section against

Photography by: Eoghan Lyons

have a child, I find that in fact I am suddenly very much

her will. Or like Savita Halappanavar, who was refused a

affected by it. I am affected because the 8th Amendment not

life-saving termination in 2012, despite the fact that she

only prevents women from having access to safe and legal

had already started to miscarry and would lose her baby

abortion, it also affects the rights and care of all pregnant

regardless, because a foetal heartbeat was detected.

women in Ireland. Or like Michelle Harte, a nurse who in 2010 was refused cancer treatment while pregnant and then a refused a legal termination by a hospital ethics forum and so had to travel, while gravely ill, to the UK for a termination, delaying her cancer treatment for weeks. Before she died she sued the state for violation of her human rights.



THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

Working remotely, I am not privy to the exact saturated

I would advocate that our Government provide further

experience those of you living at home have. I am delighted

tailored support for the physical and mental health for

when I hear that the media, particularly radio, are giving

parents in such cases. In Ireland, it is legally and medically

voice to a variety of people across society- young and old,

viewed that if carrying the pregnancy to full term causes no

male and female. From talking to people at a personal

threat to the mother, there is no need to intervene. While

level I have noted that there can still be a discourse against

such cases are perhaps at the crux of the heart ache, voting

men having an opinion on this matter, from both men and

'Yes' now only means we hand the decision of what actual

women. This is not simply 'a womens issue'; I am a woman,

laws will be put in place to the Oireachtas Committee,

a woman alone did not make me, my mother and my father

who have not publicised a definite phrasing of potential

are the reason I am here today. Another issue we have in

new laws. Great consideration has been given to abortion

society is the fragility of mental health, particularly in

being available up to 12 weeks at the choice of the mother-

men, and saying they are not entitled to an opinion on this

meaning, not just severe cases mentioned above, but with

This is an opinion piece, but hopefully informative. I would

matter, the matter of life, is unfair, and not right. Likewise,

free choice to abort any unborn child.

be identified as Anti-Choice by many but consider myself

for men to say 'it's not my decision' or 'it has nothing to do

Pro-Life. I am Pro-Life because I believe the unborn child

with me', is an absolute cop-out. Inform yourselves- do your

If only the Government educated accordingly, provided

does have rights. It saddens me greatly to hear of the many

own research.

a compulsory and set curriculum on the ideas of consent,

Saving the 8th

instances where our existing laws have not been adhered to

understanding of the life cycle- how pregnancy occurs

and women’s' health has not been prioritised. I would be of

I believe the biggest issue at the root of the entire debate is

and the menstrual cycle, in addition to the impact and

the thought that our medical system is under-funded and

that our government has not educated society or explored

responsibility of having a child. Our Government lacks so

under-resourced and believe our government should focus

themselves, these key areas, and this has been an ongoing

much, in so many aspects of their governing it is exhausting

on developing that.

issue for decades.

to even think of it. They should; Support newly expectant mothers and fathers; have low-cost clinics that open the

This is not an easy topic to discuss and I have found

Areas such as:

discussion on how to deal with having a child, the cost,

it challenging, often remaining silent for fear of being

1) Consent

the change in life path, the new routines and financial side;

condemned for saying the wrong thing, yet it is through

2) The Menstrual/ Life Cycle

provide free contraception; support the mental health of

discussion that we learn. No matter what your opinion, I

3) Abortion itself- the details of the procedure, the

the mother and father of unplanned pregnancies; provide

ask you to consider my words. Please also bear in mind,

implications it would have on our society as means of

and advertise amply the facilities to aid the parents to-

there is absolutely no way a single article, discussion or

financing, and in my eyes, more importantly, the people we

be, because there is no point in services being available if

video post can completely encapsulate all parts of the

share life with.

people don't know they are there to use them.

use this space to create discussion and provoke thought, not

On this last point, as the 8th Amendment stands, women

Most importantly, they should ensure that a discourse

make demands and give directions.

whose baby will not live for long or at all after birth are

is created where diverse opinions and understanding are

required to carry the baby to full term. I can only imagine

fostered and developed, without promoting such extremities

the turmoil a woman, or indeed a couple, going through this

that this debate already has created, with people in the

must deal with. In the cases of fatal foetal abnormalities,

public crudely mocking each other and tearing each other

and indeed in the cases of severe foetal abnormalities, where

down- create an environment where a mature and informed

the child may survive but suffer many conditions, anti-natal

debate can occur. We have not been educated and supported

care is available.

as a people so we are angry and driving the debate with fury.

debate; any offensive omissions are unintended as I want to

As the 8th Amendment stands, "The State acknowledges

32

Labor and delivery continue as normal, but every case is

the right to life of the unborn and, with due and equal

individual and often expectant parents and obstetricians

regard to the equal right to life of the mother". The 2012

bring forward the delivery date through induction of

death of Savita Halappanavar is often used as a tool in the

the labor, in full understanding of the implications and

debate. Two enquiries and one inquest into the tragic death

possibilities of the given situation. There is no legal guidance

of Savita found the medical practitioners were neglectful of

on this currently, but doctors work with parents to provide

her needs as a patient (on 13 occasions), and in turn they

them with the best option for them.

neglected following the existing laws.


The 8th Amendment is not the cause of the awful result- a

Women should not feel degraded or dehumanised during

The mental torture and trauma of being raped is incredible,

death. Women can be rightfully treated for cancer, sepsis,

the process of their pregnancy. Funding into the medical

never mind having to deal with a resulting pregnancy.

and any other condition to save their life, even if it results

service should be prioritised so staff are not stretched so

Likewise, women who have made the decision that abortion

in the death of an unborn child according to current laws.

thin, and medical staff expectations in how to treat expectant

was the right solution for them, have trauma to deal with,

These facts come from a collection of sources, they are also

parents, in particular, women should be constantly revised

and their partners too in many cases- see 'The C Case'.

explained on the save8.ie site.

and examined. Yet, to alter the constitution in the proposed

Sometimes, I feel that the value of the impact of abortion,

way doesn't solve this issue appropriately. Remember, the

for those who have undergone abortion is neglected too.

During the development of a foetus, the unborn heart starts

law currently states its' duty is to protect the unborn child

Research has proven that women who undergo abortion

beating around 35 days, and at the end of 8 weeks eyes,

and the mother- with specific guidelines of care in the 2013

suffer more trauma and depression than those who don't.

nose, lips, tongue, ears and teeth are forming, and by week

Act, Protection of Life During Pregnancy identifying how

I've heard very little on supporting women who have

12 the unborn child is fully developed (organs and all) and

to best care for the mother.

already travelled to England or for plans should the 'yes'

from then fourth develops strength and functioning of their

vote pass and legislation be created and finalised in Ireland,

organs. If the 8th amendment is removed, and politicians’

I have supported friends and family through unplanned

to support these women. It is traumatic and couples, or

current views are placed into practice, abortion may be

pregnancies; I know people- friends -that have made that

individual women also need dialogue, and a voice. It is time

requested by any expectant mother up to 12 weeks and

awful journey to England and I have cried with them for it.

women not only feel but are actually empowered and cared

thereafter. This is what is currently being discussed to go in

I am not lacking in empathy or heart ache. I support that

for.

to legislation should the public vote 'yes' and allow our laws

'this is my body, let me protect it'; but until it is no longer

to change. Again, you decide how you feel about that, and

my body alone. We are long overdue reform as a nation,

Pro-Choice people believe our government has inadequate

practice your vote on May 25th.

and together we must push for the best solution and a more

laws and provision of services and wish to pursue change,

inclusive, supportive society regarding the 8th Amendment.

but similarly, most Pro-Life people believe that services can

As our government has indicated, we will use the British

To remove the 8th Amendment removes all rights to the

be improved and introduced that will cater for our nation at

abortion system model should the 'yes' vote win Referendum.

unborn. Do you believe that the unborn has absolutely no

a much more comprehensive, sensitive and supportive level.

Irish women visiting the UK for abortions have fallen by

entitlement to any rights? I believe that the unborn should

As stated above, drops in figures of women going to the UK

50% since 2002, which is quite an incredible figure. This can

have rights, and I will use my voice for them, albeit in

for abortion were evident in the early 2000s when social

be counter argued that this is a result of the abortion pill

conversation or in this pro-life opinion piece. I recently read

care was improved in Ireland. It makes more sense to care

being introduced to the UK in 2001 making figures harder

an article about rape by former Dublin football player, John

for people more, to provide for them at the highest standard.

to track, but notably, these positive drops in numbers seeking

Leonard; if you haven't read it yet, take out your phone and

Bottom line, change is needed, but we must be careful to

abortions had shown decrease prior to 2001 and popularity

find it on his website soberpaddy.com. Let me inform you I

choose the right direction- the most caring direction.

in the abortion pill really only rose significantly in 2008/

have no misconceptions about rape - how wrong it is, how

2009. While the number of women making that journey is

traumatic it is, how reactions and understandings are all so

I know the words I have typed will bounce off some of you

still high, I believe we should be working on continuing to

varied. Current statistics say that 8 out of 10 Irish women

like bricks, I know some of you will also use these bricks to

reduce it by supporting women. Notably, 90% of Special

do not seek abortion after rape.

develop your opinions. As I stated, I cannot cover all ground

Needs unborn babies are aborted in Britain. I personally

in this one piece, I leave it with you now to inform yourself,

believe in diversity. I know it is within my life time that

My concern lies within the availability of abortion being

visit the repealeight.ie site and the save8.ie site. Don't be

Special Needs people have suffered major neglect by society

more open should the 'yes' vote pass, is how many unborn

complacent.

and state, but I have also seen such amazing growth in

will be aborted?

these areas in my adulthood and consider that we will only

Article: Rebecca Egan

move forward in supporting Special Needs individuals. By

Eliminated from their right to life? The rapist should be

removing the 8th Amendment, expectant parents will be

trialed, our society needs to keep pushing dialog and

free to end the life of an unborn special needs person- be it

growing in understanding around consent and stronger

a person with down syndrome, spina bifida, a heart murmur,

laws should be enforced. There have been many harrowing

and so on.

public cases of late and of course, every trial is different, and some are very extreme, and we as a people should have a system in which we can place our faith in.


In Her

Shoes In Her Shoes is a social media movement that has been set up to share stories of women affected by the 8th amendment. After speaking with members of the public on the streets, they realised that people don’t understand the various and complex reasons why women would seek to terminate a pregnancy. They wanted to offer the opportunity for undecided voters to ‘take a walk in her shoes’. Given the chance to look a person eye to eye, when we stop and take a moment to place ourselves in their shoes - we gain empathy and compassion for their lived experience. In Her Shoes wanted to take the opportunity to shed light into the lives of every day women in Ireland. Our sisters, colleagues, friends. Our school teachers, nurses, accountants.. Every parish around the country is home to a woman that has travelled for a termination, has sourced illegal abortion pills, has needed or wanted an abortion but was unable to access one, or has been pregnant under the 8th amendment - which restricts her right to bodily autonomy and consent. What wasn’t anticipated was the level of outpouring - the vital need for women that have been shamed and stigmatized, that have been living with a secret, to finally bring it to the light. Healing, and a weight lifted ‘I am not alone’ ‘I am not a criminal’ What has started as one way for undecided voters to meet the experience of 1 of the 12 women in Ireland that access termination services daily, has quickly evolved into being a platform for the voices of those that have been silenced in this country - the women that have continued to be terrorized throughout this campaign, the women that have to walk by graphic and gruesome billboards, the women that have been called horrible things by those that claim to ‘love both’. What has evolved is a greater understanding of the lives that the 8th amendment impacts, and just how it does - from pregnant women being threatened with Gardai, brought to the high courts. With women having their waters broken, or their genitals cut in birth without consent - to women pregnant with a baby with fatal foetal abnormalities, those pregnant due to rape, failed birth control, living in poverty, trying to escape domestic violence, or simply not ready to be a parent. Thank you, to the brave women of Ireland that have shared their lived experience. Much love to those that are unable to share theirs, we stand with you in solidarity. - Mná na hÉireann


”I was a 19 year old student nurse in an Irish Hospital

"I terminated my pregnancy at 25 weeks, last August

Yes, to make a terrible situation worse, my placenta

when I answered a toilet call bell during a day shift.

and it took me 11 years to make that decision. I was

came away and I started to haemorrhage. I lost 2.5l of

What I saw in there changed my life. A woman on

so grateful that I didn’t have to make the choice to end

blood and had to emergency surgery and a transfusion.

the toilet floor and her still birth baby in the toilet

my baby’s life when I lost my first little boy in 2006 to

The surgeon told me after that it was touch and go for

bowl. The woman was quietly crying and the hospital

Potter’s sequence.

my life as they couldn’t stop the bleeding initially.

bathroom tiles were covered in blood. The woman was

I had to spend longer away from home than planned

in hospital because she had been told weeks previous

It was my first, and very much wanted, pregnancy. As I

and hobble onto a plane 3 days after major surgery.

that her baby was going to die but nothing could be

was young, fit and healthy, I was considered low risk and

This ‘side effect’ could have happened to me at any time

done until the scans suggested no heart beat. She had

therefore had a dating scan at 12 weeks and no other

during the pregnancy and had I not been seconds from

come in to finally be induced. She shared a 3 bedded

scans for the rest of the pregnancy. I went into labour

an operating theatre I might not be here telling this

ward with 2 other pregnant healthy women. She went

and ended up having a Caesarean section as the baby

story. My life was at risk had I remained pregnant and

to the bathroom to use the toilet and it just came.

was in distress. I had no amniotic fluid and this would

the baby was suffering.

That happened in 2007 and under current laws could

have been picked up instantly at any scan after about 18

happen to any one of us today. The current options in

weeks, but unfortunately I wasn’t offered one.

Ireland are to wait the weeks out knowing that you

So, I’m home and I recovered well physically, I had to. But my heart was broken in two and my mental health

are carrying a dying foetus, or go to England to have

Our baby died after 12 hours hooked up to machines.

has not been the best. But I’m getting there, thanks to

a medical abortion (if you can afford the time off work,

The post mortem showed that he had no kidneys, small

an amazing husband, family and friends.

flights, accommodation, and procedure). In Ireland

lungs and heart, flattened facial features and bent feet

there is this culture, as long as it is not in sight then it

due to no room for movement in the absence of any

My problem is likely genetic and if my daughters, nieces

isn’t happening. As long as she is sent to an institution

fluid.

or siblings have to endure this fate, please let them do it

then she doesn't exist. As long as she's on a plane to England then it’s not our business.

with me holding their hands in their country of birth.” I grieved. I said I’m not having another baby. I was angry. But I recovered well and I have a beautiful

Making Irish women leave this country for healthcare

angel floating around who is always looking after me. I

is no different than driving them up the gates to a

learned a lot from that experience and I wouldn’t take it

"I suppose the last story you’d expect to hear on this

religious Institution. We need healthcare for pregnant

back. Little Jack came to me for as long as he was meant

page is from someone currently 29 weeks pregnant. But

women in this country. And we need it now.

to and he will always be in my heart.

here goes!

The woman in that toilet is one of many stories of

I now have three gorgeous and healthy girls (ages 9, 5

In my teenage years, I was diagnosed with a mental

neglect by us as a nation and hundreds have followed

and 3) and was pregnant with my 5th child last summer

illness. Since this time, I have learned to accept the fact

her. Stop pretending this repeal is black and white. This

when my world simply collapsed at the news that our

that the stats are against me and someday, whenever it

repeal is about giving an Irish woman a choice for the

baby had the same problems as Jack. Our anatomy scan

may be, I would choose to take my own life and die by

first time in her life. Stop putting your own morals/

at 22 weeks revealed that our baby had a fatal foetal

suicide. It then became clear to me that I would never

religious beliefs/ life experiences on us. That is your

abnormality and my decision to terminate was made

have children. Sure who in their right mind would want

business- not ours. Give us the dignity we deserve and

with no thought at all. No way was another one of my

to bring a child into a world where their mother has

the right to have our voice heard.

children going to suffer if I could do anything about it.

suicidal tendencies and a history, possibly future too, of

The abortion debate had begun in the media and it all

days where they simply can’t get out of the bed?

seemed like a horrible coincidence. We were now facing a trip to the UK. Plans were made with the help of our

Instead, I gathered all that motherly love that’s

incredibly supportive family and we terminated baby

instinctive to most girls growing up and I poured it into

Daniel at 25 weeks.

my nieces and nephews. They deserved it all. I worked damn hard to fight my bad tendencies and somehow

I did not know this at the time, but one of the side

found myself in a relatively healthy relationship. I kept

effects of this condition is placental abruption. I was

on top of my contraception. I wouldn’t let times of

not made aware of this until I received a report from

feeling good fool me. I wasn’t going to ever be a mother

the NHS explaining why my sudden emergency section

and that was that. Then, I was given new medication

had to happen.

off the doctor. I was not told that it would counteract my pill.


In November I found out I was pregnant. Whilst they

We need to stop the judging people in every area of their

She was a lady I would have paid any amount for that scan

debated in the Dáil whether or not to let this legislation

lives and instead help them. Help them make the correct

but she gave us our money back which I thought was nice.

go to a referendum, I was debating whether or not to go to

decision for their lives, not yours. Help them when their

England. I chose not to. That’s right, I chose to keep this life

mental health, physical health or financial health is failing

We then went to the rotunda hospital a few days later, I

inside of my belly so maybe that means I’m prolife? But it

to provide what their child or future child needs.

remember sitting in the waiting room, all the other woman

was still a choice, MY CHOICE.

there pregnant. I sat on the chair trying my best to hold I hope I have made the right decision in keeping my bump.

the tears in but I couldn’t. I couldn’t control myself, it was

As my pregnancy progressed, the hormones surging

I hope I can continue to fight my dark days and be the

all so upsetting “why me, why my baby” again got scanned

through my body proved to be too much to handle. I

best mother I can be. I hope I can raise him to completely

and told even more worst news about my poor little baby,

began self-harming for the first time in two years. I found

respect women and I hope it will be in a country where the

pushing the scanner on me so hard because I had no fluid. It

myself feeling more hopeless and suicidal once more and

choice is your own, if you are ready or not to be a parent.

was so hard for them to see the baby, my stomach was sore

asking myself had I made the wrong decision not to go to

Stop shaming women out of their country for a decision

for days after each scan. I asked was there even 1% chance

England?! And yet instead of helping me feel better, some

that they feel is the best. Life isn’t ever black and white.

and I was told 0% chance of survival. We were brought into

people I tried to talk to made me feel so ashamed and

Every moment is a choice. Repeal the eighth"

a tiny room then.

utterly guilty for even thinking of it. Which didn’t help the depression clearly already creeping in.

I thought they would tell me I would be started or they were going to give me a C section, never in my life did I think they

I asked myself if my family members that seem to be anti-

”In 2015 I was 21, and beaming with excitement that I was

would tell me I have to continue with the pregnancy until

abortion would think differently and wished I’d taken “the

pregnant with our first child, same time as my sister too.

he dies inside me or make it to full term, or go to Liverpool

easy way out”. If today, they realised the pregnancy was too

to get induced. I just remember standing up and feeling my

much for me and I said goodbye to them forever. Would

At a routine check-up at 23 weeks I was scanned to find out I

world turn upside down. How could this be happening to

they still be pro-life to someone they hadn’t met in replace

hardly had any amniotic fluid. We were told the devastating

me? I stood up and my body just went into shock I couldn’t

of their own sister/daughter/friend?

news that our baby had no kidneys, no bladder, very bad

believe what I was hearing, I started to get sick and while I

spine bifida, holes in his little heart and brain damage, but

was getting sick I started to wee myself. How embarrassing

A few months back I watched a mother send her child into

yet his heart was beating perfect. He didn’t know once he

it sounds, I just went into complete shock.

rob a shop. I didn’t know if she was high on drink, drugs or

was out of my womb that he had no chance of survival.

medication but she wasn’t quite all there. As I looked at her

If I continued with the pregnancy I would have to keep

a man said to me “some people should never be mothers”.

I felt sick, I felt numb, and I felt robbed. I just got up and

going to Dublin weekly for scans, just to see if his heart

And although I somewhat in a grey area agreed with his

ran out of the room. I ran outside, sat on a bench at the side

stopped beating, so I was just waiting for my baby to die.

comment, I couldn’t help but get angry at such blatant

of the hospital sobbing my heart out with loads of people

Everyone knew I was pregnant. I hated bumping into

judgement. Especially when he has also told me he is voting

walking by me. One man stopped, he never asked what’s

anybody, people asking when I am due, I got to the stage

no in the coming referendum. You can’t have it both ways.

wrong but just wrapped his arms around me and said “you

where I wouldn’t leave the house.

You can’t think she can’t get an abortion but also can’t have

will be ok pet” I just cried my eyes out, and he walked away.

a child. Do you think she should be a virgin her whole life?

I will never forget that man.

Maybe this lady, knew herself she was not stable enough,

We got the money together and decided we would go to Liverpool, I just couldn’t do it. I felt so depressed and sad, it

responsible enough to be a mother yet. Maybe she, like

The hospital was referring me to another hospital but they

was like I was grieving and my child wasn’t even dead yet.

me, had contraception fail her. Maybe something horrible

said it could take 2 or 3 days. I couldn’t wait that long, so

Everything was booked. We had to go back to the rotunda

happened her and this is her trying to cope with it, trying

I went straight onto the internet for a private scan and got

for my final scan in Ireland, they were hoping his heart

her best.

one that day. My partner’s sister brought us. On the way

would have stopped beating so I wouldn’t have to travel and

up I was praying, praying so hard to everyone in heaven,

have him at home, how horrible to be even told that, but

Maybe she knew she was not ready to responsibly rear a

to God, “please let them be wrong, it was a mistake, my

there he was his heart beating away not knowing what was

child but could not afford to get to England. Maybe if we

baby will be fine please” we got there and paid around €170

ahead.

repealed the eight we wouldn’t have so many “unfit mothers

for the scan. The woman was lovely, I think her name was

scrounging of the state” (a direct quote from a separate man

Monica, she scanned me and I could see straight away by

I was starting to have doubts, the midwife Jane was so, so

I know).

her face that it was bad news. She just told us what the

lovely, she told me if I did continue on more than likely his

hospital told us. She tried so hard to get me a picture of the

heart would stop beating, or I could give birth and his back

baby’s face on the 3D scan, left the room and came back in

was so bad it could break during birth, and his lungs would

with 2 envelopes one with the scan pictures, and the other

of been filled up with the fluid so it would be so hard for

with our money back, she said she couldn’t accept it.

him to breathe. I felt so sick, I wanted to see my baby open his eyes I would have loved to spend an hour with him, a minute, any time, but for his sake I couldn’t. I couldn’t put him through that.


I started to have awful bad nightmares at night and they

Repeal the 8th so women don’t have to travel, don’t have

were making me more scared to travel, I was absolutely

to bring their baby home on a boat in the middle of the

petrified. Just my partner and I travelled to Liverpool,

night in a boot of a car. I always feel so much was taken

our family wanted to come to support us, to be there,

away from me. I would have loved my other sisters and

but I was having none of it. I knew they couldn’t miss

my family to meet my son but they couldn’t, my home

work, but I was feeling so punished, punished for

country let me down, let my son down and took so

nobody being able to meet our little boy. It was such a

much away from us.”

horrible feeling felt so lonely and low and I was so so We were blessed to have an aunty living in Liverpool, I

"I wanted to share my story because very often I see

say she was like an angel, she and her husband helped us

people like me used as an excuse against repealing the

so much. I couldn’t imagine having to go over and stay

8th amendment.

in a hotel. We got a late flight out on Monday night, Tuesday morning we went to the women’s hospital for

I have struggled to get pregnant and struggled to stay

my final scan, this scan was to make sure 100% that he

pregnant.

was very sick and had no chance of life, and again we were giving even more bad news his brain was so badly

At 23 I decided to have fertility testing done as I knew

damaged, along with having no kidneys or bladder and

my cycles were erratic and it worried me. My fears were

everything else that was wrong with his tiny little body.

confirmed after a series of tests and I was advised that I

The lady that was scanning me went into detail with

probably wouldn't get pregnant without assistance.

everything, it was all so much to take in, how could all

I was referred then to a fertility specialist.

this be happening to my little boy? I was induced and

A week before my appointment I felt ill and my whole

stayed the night. I would never forget the pain I was in

body broke out in a rash. It was like I was having an

Wednesday morning, and then my Mam and dad and

allergic reaction.

sister walked into the room, and my partners Mam and sister walked in. It was so emotional, I couldn’t believe

After a few days my partner asked if I could be

they came over. My partner had it set up. They were

pregnant as I was still very nauseous. I shut him down

there in the room the whole time until he was born,

straightaway and sobbed because I knew my chances of

10 hours later my little boy was born still at 27 weeks.

conceiving naturally were slim to none. Still, his words

I carried him for 4 weeks known he was going to die

stayed with me and when I was out shopping I threw

and it was hell.

a test into the basket just in case. It came up positive instantly. I was in total disbelief. It was exactly what I

He was so beautiful, so perfect on the outside, but yet so

wanted but after having just been told I was unable to

damaged on the inside. The hospital treated us with so

ovulate I was afraid it was a mistake.

much respect and dignity, they were amazing at such a I booked a private scan because I couldn't date my pregnancy due to the erratic nature of my cycle. We left on Saturday and travelled home by boat. We were told his tiny white coffin had to be in the boot

I had my scan and there was no heartbeat. I was told it

of the car for the journey home, it was awful but I was

might be too early and to return in two weeks.

just thankful I could get my baby home. I wouldn’t have been able to leave without him. Leaving the hospital

During this time the rash became worse and I was very

with empty arms and an aching heart was bad enough.

ill. I went to the maternity hospital to see what was

We laid him to rest the next day, it was Mother’s Day,

going on. They scanned me and couldn't find a heartbeat

my first ever Mother’s Day and I buried my precious

either. They advised I return in 10 days. I couldn't take

son whom I would have taken my last breath so he

anything for the hives all over my body.

could take his first. Luke was 3 last week and I think about him every minute of the day.

going to end with a baby in my arms. It had happened too easily after all the anguish and torment of trying and trying and then getting bad news from the fertility tests. I returned 10 days later and the pregnancy sac had grown, I was suffering with nausea and the rash was

scared.

hard and sad time.

At this stage I was fairly certain the pregnancy wasn't

still present. Again I was advised to return in another 10 days. I was told that because there had been growth they couldn't diagnose a miscarriage ''just in case''. But I knew it wasn't right. They were the longest 10 days of my life. I returned on a Tuesday morning with my partner and was finally given the news I'd dreaded. There was still no heartbeat and the pregnancy hadn't grown since the last scan. We were devastated. To not only lose our longed for baby but to also face the harsh reality that there would be a battle ahead in order for us to have a baby. Since then I have lost two more pregnancies. I often see people pass remarks online about how they are against abortion because ''some women can't have children'' and this really hits a nerve. My struggle is not anybody else's load to carry. Just because I struggle to get and stay pregnant it shouldn't mean that anyone else should be forced into a pregnancy. I just want to shout out that it doesn't matter what another woman does with her body. It won't bring my babies back and it's not like they can transfer their pregnancy over to me. It doesn't work like that. We all have our own journey and I hate hearing stories like mine being used as an excuse to deny someone a choice over what happens to their own body. As it turned out I did have one successful pregnancy. It was filled with terror and scares, I very nearly lost her. It appears that I have issues with how the placenta functions. I am so lucky she is here with me now. Now instead of fertility testing I am undergoing recurrent miscarriage testing. It is hard. We don't know if we will ever have another child. It doesn't make a difference to us if every woman in Ireland gets pregnant and chooses to go through with their pregnancy. It still won't bring my three back and it won't mean I'll miraculously become pregnant again.


It won't heal the ache and longing I have to have a bump

The sac was still empty. I had been bleeding for days and in

Our second baby was to make our little family complete

and feel the kicks. A thousand babies could be born around

every fibre of my body, I understood my baby was gone. ‘We

and we were excitedly preparing for his or her arrival in

me right now but it won't fill the emptiness I feel myself.

are so sorry but you will have to come back again next week.’

September. Following a healthy pregnancy with our

I was in utter shock. I literally had no idea that I could be

daughter two years ago, and the comfort of an early scan,

Please stop using women like me as a reason to save the

denied treatment yet again. I cried, begged and pleaded.

there were no nerves that morning. The visit would provide

8th. Throughout the tests and the failed pregnancies I have

I offered to sign anything, to do anything for this to just

a better glimpse of our child and a photo for the memory

been hurt by the 8th amendment. It has a huge impact on

be over. All I wanted was to allow my body to let this

book.

how miscarriages are handled. It makes an already dreadful

pregnancy go. They explained that I had no option but to

experience a million times worse because we have no control

wait and come back the following week.

whatsoever over our healthcare choices, even in the case of a failing pregnancy and a failing heartbeat."

"Getting engaged and getting a cancer diagnosis in the

I am not religious and I am not actively involved in politics. I wholeheartedly respect an individual’s right to choice

At the third appointment, after the third scan, I was finally

and have been aware (and in support) of the Repeal the

given misoprostol and sent home to end my pregnancy. It

8th Amendment movement and upcoming referendum,

took five months for my HCG levels to drop back to zero

admittedly from a comfortable distance. Despite this, when

and I was bleeding each and every day.

the consultant dropped her eyes and told us that they would

same month was not in my plan. My lovely boyfriend and

not be able to help us should we decide to end the pregnancy,

I had been together since we were 19 and thankfully, he

That miscarriage led me to the darkest place I have ever

I was floored. I didn’t understand how I was going to put

was my rock throughout that horrendous year of fertility

been to in my life. Unlike my cancer journey where I craved

one foot in front of the other with the pain in my heart, let

treatment to create embryos in case the treatment took

love, support and company, I could not let anyone into this

alone make my way to the UK.

away my ability to get pregnant, chemotherapy, hair loss,

pain. Not my husband, not my mother. I was alone. I was so

radiotherapy and counselling. I was enveloped by the love of

ashamed of my body, so ashamed that I had somehow caused

The team did their best to remain compassionate but the

my family and friends and that wave somehow carried me

the loss of this life. The shame and fear that I would never

advice was cold and well-rehearsed and they sent us away

though. My wedding day was a celebration of love and life

have a child almost ate me alive. I isolated myself in horror

with phone numbers and a promise that they would resume

and triumphing over the terrible. I found out I was pregnant

and blackness. I grieved that baby so deeply, so intensely

physical and emotional care once we arrived home.

just two months later. The bright Spring day felt miraculous.

and that grief changed me as a person. The two weeks I had

I was moving on, the nightmare of what we had all gone

to wait for medical treatment was utter torture and torment.

As it was a bank holiday weekend, the Irish crisis

through was fading to a distant memory.

I will always carry the scars those two weeks inflicted on

organisations closed their doors for three long days following

me. If I had been able to access abortion medication earlier,

our baby’s diagnosis and we struggled to make contact with

I was six weeks pregnant when I started to bleed.

I might have been spared at least some of the pain and in

the UK. While the rest of the country celebrated what it

In a panic I rang the doctor. Immediately, I was booked in

particular the trauma of repeatedly having to go up the

means to be Irish, we were witnessing the very darkest side

for an appointment in the Aisling Suite in the CUMH. The

CUMH. The Eighth Amendment hurt me deeply but at

of our archaic legal system.

scan showed what I had already known, there was an empty

least I am alive to tell the tale. As we know, not all of its

sac. Empty. Our baby was gone. Everything came crashing

victims have been so lucky."

What followed was a living nightmare. Trying to come to

down as my body betrayed me yet again. At the end of the

terms with the fact that our little baby would never be while

corridor, I cried behind an almost transparent curtain and

reaching out to every resource, from Irish charities to UK

waited to find out what would happen next, fully expecting

"Just before St Patrick’s Day this year, during a routine

hospitals, was devastating, abnormal and so very lonely. For

that everything would be quickly taken care of. The nurses

booking visit at the Rotunda Hospital, my baby of

seven days, we tried and failed to arrange an appointment

explained that they would need to wait at least a week before

nearly thirteen weeks was diagnosed with a fatal foetal

with a suitable service. The only option available would be

they could do anything for me. They said that there had

abnormality. He or she would have absolutely no chance

two weeks from the original diagnosis - a lifetime away.

been some misdiagnoses and that they had to be 100% sure.

of survival and if carried to term, could only live for a few

Numbly, I agreed to wait the week.

hours, if not minutes. The confusion, shock and grief was

But that’s where we are, nine days later. I have made contact

utterly overwhelming.

with a number of wonderful women who have done and

Finally, after a week of sleepless nights, we duly arrived the

are still doing their utmost to help secure an appointment

next week. I kept my eyes down as we passed the pregnant

sooner but we may just have to wait.

women in their dressing gowns and new-born babies in carry-tots in the lobby of the CUMH as the scan was repeated.


I had been beginning to feel the baby move. We had

To add to it, the amount of the amniotic fluid appeared

with, I had to face a lot of strangers and act normal,

picked names and were reading books to our little girl

reduced. The scan operator advised that we make an

when all I wanted to do was to curl into a ball and weep.

about becoming a big sister. As someone very accurately

urgent appointment with a specialist at the hospital.

I also lost a lot of blood during and after the induced

put it, “you’re grieving the loss of the baby that could

She tried hard not to alarm us. She managed to fool

labour, I became anaemic, causing me to faint several

have been while grieving the loss of the baby that is.”

my husband, but she didn’t fool me. I spent the journey

times. Because of my condition, we couldn’t take our

home in floods of tears. This was just the beginning of

return flight, and we struggled with booking a new one.

the ocean that followed.

All flights to Dublin were fully booked until 2 days

My heart is broken for this tiny creature and I am so sorry that things are not different. I panic that each

later. Only thanks to the hospitality of the Liverpool

day the baby grows, the more awareness he or she may

Five days later we went for the appointment with

develop (despite the medical professionals’ assurances

the specialist, and my world collapsed. The specialist

otherwise) and the guilt of working so hard towards the

confirmed that my baby had only one stunted kidney

Almost 8 months passed since, and we’re pregnant

goal of the termination goes against all of my maternal

which didn’t work. My baby couldn’t produce urine,

again. I’m terrified of every single upcoming scan and

instincts. Even so, I know that this is the path we have

and because of that the amount of the amniotic fluid

I’m afraid to be happy. I also still wake up at night

to take.

reduced even further, leaving very little room for the

weeping for my little boy. I never regret termination;

little one to move. I was told this could lead to a stunted

I just regret that he couldn’t live. And this notion still

I want to be able to say goodbye to this little life, to

growth, malformation, and eventual miscarriage. More

breaks my heart. I wish that we didn’t have to travel

mourn the child that could have been and the child who

importantly however, my baby would not develop his

abroad to seek help in our darkest hour, and that our

is. I want to just be sad. I don’t want to spend my days

lungs, as the amniotic fluid is vital in their formation. My

little boy was buried in Ireland, close to home, where we

on the phone, worry about the logistics and the costs,

very first and very much wanted baby was to die trying to

could visit on a Sunday afternoon."

waiting for news on an appointment I so badly need but

take his first breath. We were 16 weeks and 5 days, and

would do anything not to keep.

our dream was over.

hospital we had somewhere to stay.

”I was 31 when I became a first time mammy, I was also There is no happy ending for our situation. We will

We were given information on our options, and were

31 when I lost my eyesight and learned the true nature

always live with this loss, although over time I hope that

assured that whatever we decide the hospital will help us

of the 8th amendment.

the pain will subside. There is, however, hope for the

through it. We decided to terminate through an induced

unfortunate women (and couples) who find themselves

labour, and we started the process of arranging things

I'm lucky that my shoes didn't walk me on that long

in our tragic circumstances in the coming months and

with the hospital in Liverpool. My husband made most

walk to another country, but my shoes walked the other

years. Hope that they will have their wishes met at home,

of the calls. I couldn’t face them. In fact, there was little

side of the 8th amendment. We were newly married and

that they can move forward fully supported by Irish law

I could face at that time; I was too consumed with grief

decided to start trying for a baby, we were really lucky

to mourn their loss without the complications and added

and sorrow.

to get pregnant straight away. Everything was perfect. I

trauma of a broken system."

have type one diabetes, a long term life altering illness I learned that I still harboured a glimmer of hope, when

that can cause extra issues in pregnancy, but everything

the foetal medicine specialist in Liverpool yet again

was perfect. That was until exactly 20 weeks pregnant,

"We treated ourselves to a scan at 12 weeks. We went

confirmed the diagnosis, crushing whatever hope was

when I went blind overnight. From a few dark shadows

to a private clinic, and were delighted to hear our baby’s

left, and yet again breaking my heart.

to total darkness.

was perfect: the heart, the brain, ten fingers and toes.

We decided to go ahead with the termination. My

My team of eye doctors had never seen a case like mine,

However, he wasn't fully cooperating, and was positioned

husband and I were crying together, and made all the

and they didn't know if they could save my sight. But

in such way that his kidneys could not be checked. The

decisions together throughout this process. He was my

they vowed to try, because this was a New Ireland with

scan operator advised us to return in 4 weeks’ time in

rock.

more help.

Our little boy was born at 18 weeks and 2 days gestation,

But one part of me getting the treatment was a need to

And so we did, full of hope and excitement, delighted we

and we were given time to say many goodbyes to him.

wait until after 24 weeks, when the pregnancy was past

will see our little bean again so soon. This time the baby

He couldn’t travel back with us. Due to my husband’s

viability and the risks of treatment crossing the placenta

was in a perfect position to observe the kidneys, or to be

religious beliefs, he had to be buried where he died. So

was 0.0001% so until then I had laser therapy in my

more precise, just the one malformed kidney.

part of us too remains in Liverpool.

eyes three days a week. After 24 weeks I travelled for

Overlooking the financial implications (which were

hours to get injections into my eyes, a new innovative

considerable), travelling to another country added

treatment that helped stop the damage and allow my

heavily to the emotional and physical strain. To start

eyes to recover.

heartbeat and see him move. All that was observed

order to complete the scan.


Some days I'd regain my eye sight enough to see about

We decided not to involve a solicitor yet, but I wrote a

Due to some health issues I have, I am automatically listed

20% of the world and other days I could only see light and

letter stating my refusal to allow them to take my baby, my

as a high risk pregnancy, so an early scan was arranged for

shadows.

husband wrote a letter stating his stance on them forcing

when I was 8 weeks to make sure everything was going ok.

me to choose between my eyesight and protecting the life of

We missed the 8 week date due to the storm, but went in

I thought all my medical team was behind me, I expected

my baby. We gathered documents and medical publications

early the following week for a scan where I was told the

that my eyesight was a top priority, so I could see my child

on the treatment I was receiving and we tried to get my eye

baby had not developed as they had hoped and I need a

and hopefully regain my eyesight, but at 29 weeks I learned

doctors to write letters, but they felt that under current laws

second scan to confirm more.

the true face of the 8th in a continuing pregnancy. I went to

they couldn't put their names to a legal battle.

see a doctor at my hospital, who told me I was most likely

When I went to my second scan I was told that I was

going to have my baby at 32 weeks because we don't know

So myself and my husband attended the next appointment

having what is known as a delayed miscarriage. What this

what effects your treatment could have on this baby. I sat

armed with out letters and ready to fight. My doctor barely

means is that the baby (hospital refers to it at this stage

in stunned silence while I was told that the ethics board

batted an eyelid. She said that she would wait and see how

as a foetal pole) had stopped growing at 5 weeks, however

of the hospital was unsure about 'allowing' me to continue

things progressed, but that's final decision was hers. That

my body hadn’t realised this and was assuming I was still

the pregnancy while continuing treatment. I asked if I

from that appointment forward I should bring a bag in case

pregnant even though the baby was not developing. They

could meet the ethics board and show them the studies I

it was decided that I would be having a c-section.

suggested I would have to go to a consultant and get a

was shown to prove how minimal the risks were. I also had

D&C as there was a high risk of infection because my body

contact details for doctors in the USA who had been kind

My eye sight began to return temporarily at 34 weeks and

had not removed the baby/gestational sac from my uterus

enough to speak to me over the phone about what treatment

my son was born at 38 weeks. I lost my eyesight again a

and I also had a sub haematoma tear & bruising where my

was available and how it had worked for others. But I was

few weeks after the birth, but my experience was totally

body has been trying, so they need to help my body remove

told no. Go home and pack a bag. The doctor told me to

different that time. It took me two more years to fully regain

what’s left.

attend the hospital the next week for steroid injections to

my eyesight. The doctor I dealt with has left my hospital

develop my baby’s lungs for early delivery.

now and I'm so grateful I won't have to face her again.

When they went to conduct the transvaginal scan to check out everything, before the next step it turns out the baby

I left the doctor's office in a silent haze. I was due to

The eighth amendment has left me with horrible memories

(foetal pole) still has a very small heartbeat (4-8bpm as

have laser the same day but when I got to the eye clinic I

of what was already a difficult time, but a time that I was

opposed to 130-150 bpm).

crumbled on the floor in floods of tears, a nurse cared for

finding ways to enjoy the experience of pregnancy, and

me that day, she hugged me and she gave me strength to

trying to separate my blindness and pregnancy.

make decisions. I had to skip an essential laser treatment

They couldn’t help me any further due to the 8th amendment, or to put it in their words, there’s not a doctor in the country

that day as my eyes where too swollen to handle the laser,

I've always been pro-choice, but I live in that bubble of

and the next day when I headed to Dublin for injections, my

believing it wouldn't happen to me, and I'm so lucky that I've

specialist had to contact my clinic back home to make sure

only been a bystander, the shoulder to cry on and person to

So where did this leave me….

that there wouldn't be an issue with the ethics board taking

get angry when friends have made that journey. But I didn't

It means physically, I was still experiencing all my early

this further. My husband was my eyes, he and my family

know until I lived it that the eighth amendment means I

pregnancy symptoms:

worked hard to read up on the eighth and where my rights

have no rights to my own body in this country. I would love

Nausea

stood. It was scary to realise that my eye sight was not seen

to have another child, but I have a deep rooted fear of what

Fatigue

as important and they were willing to risk my child's life by

could happen next. If I lose my eye sight permanently and

Headaches

giving me a c-section at 32 weeks.

I have to consider other options. Or just having another

Dizziness

doctor tell me that how and when I have my child is their

Plus all the symptoms of a miscarriage:

decision.

Severe abdominal cramping

And then my baby would have to travel miles from home to

who will touch you at the moment.

be cared for as my hospital didn't have the facilities to care

Shooting pain down my leg

for a premature baby.

High risk of infection in the womb "This is my life right now!!

I got the steroids as I was scared of what I faced at my next

I found out early February this year that I was pregnant. My

Lastly, the emotional pain, they told me this pregnancy was

appointment, I spent a night in hospital getting the steroids

husband and I were overjoyed as we had been trying for a

now considered a miscarriage on their books and yet they

and I spoke to a midwife about what I faced, she told me

significant period of time and we couldn’t wait to become

couldn’t help me.

to get a solicitor as the hospital had the legal rights to force

parents.

me to have the baby early under the rights of the unborn.


I am HEARTBROKEN that I have lost my 1st baby,

down my jeans. I remembered crying, asking him to

a child that was wanted and already loved, and can't

stop because he was hurting me. I remembered him

stop crying, yet I’m also terrified that I am going to end

"This is my story, I have never spoken to anyone about.

laughing and pushing harder.

up with a severe infection due to the lack of treatment

This is for those who say the 8th has no place being

I didn’t think of pregnancy until Tuesday. Five days later

and potentially damage to my womb/risk of no further

repealed, even due to rape because it’s not the baby's

when I left my apartment.

pregnancies. I have to go back in 10 days and they will

fault, or to just take the morning after pill because it's

redo the scan, then if the heartbeat has not stopped

what you would do in that situation. It is very easy to

By then it was too late for emergency contraception,

another 10 days and so on, they have no idea how long

hypothesize your reaction to a scenario that has not yet

I spent the following 2 1/2 weeks abusing myself

it could take. It is ridiculous to me that I can be left in a

and hopefully will never happen to you.

hoping there would not be a pregnancy as a result of

half way state, a purgatory while they wait for the baby

that monster. I visited every shop and chemist and

in me to just die. Unable to begin to heal emotionally

I was at my friend’s apartment, there was 11 of us having

bought in bulk any type of painkiller I could, along with

and physically because of a rule that states the foetus

a few drinks getting ready for our night out. Two new

prescription painkillers and steroids that had previously

has equal rights to me.

lads joined us that night. I had never met them before

been prescribed for an ongoing medical issue. They were

but a few of my friends knew them. I hadn't passed

my back up, because I couldn’t go to England and had

If my baby was a person on life support with no hope of

much notice of them, we all sat around playing 'truth or

no knowledge of abortion pills being available online.

recovering and going to die no matter what you would

dare'. It was my turn, I chose truth. One of my friends

If I was pregnant I would use those pills to kill myself.

have the option to turn off the life support. I should

asked me when I last had sex. I wasn't ashamed or

have the same option as I am the vessel of life support.

anything so just said "never, still a virgin". Most didn't

I starved myself. I stood under searing hot showers until

seem to care and if they did, I didn't notice. But one

I had blisters all over my stomach and legs. I punched

I understand that all the Pro-Life groups say for a

reaction caught my attention. One of the new boys. He

and hit myself in my stomach so hard and so often I was

women like me, where there is risk to the mother’s

stared at me even when I caught him staring he didn't

bruised, swollen and the blisters burst. I skipped college

life and the baby will miscarry anyway, they would

look away. After a few minutes he got up and walked

and walked/ran kilometre after kilometre during the

understand and feel I should be provided treatment, yet

across the kitchen with his chair and sat next to me. He

day. I fainted and fell down my stairs after 2 weeks of

they think we should keep the 8th amendment. What

hadn't spoken or acknowledged me all night and now

hurting my body. I was glad. I couldn’t bring myself to

part of them doesn’t understand that as my reproductive

he wouldn't leave me alone. He kept putting his hand

buy a test. If I bought one and it was positive that’s it,

rights are tied into the 8th amendment women like me

on my knee and trying to run it up my thigh. I asked

my life is over. Truthfully I was too scared to take one.

will NEVER receive support!

him to stop and he just stared. I felt embarrassed, like I

I am and ALWAYS will be denied medical assistance

was overreacting but I couldn't help how uncomfortable

I woke on Monday morning at 5:35am with the worst

he made me feel.

cramps I had ever had and cried hysterically for hours,

as long as the 8th amendment is in effect, as it is

I had gotten my period and my sheets were ruined with

a constitutional agreement, so there is nothing a

Eventually it was time to go to the nightclub. He was

blood. At 8:40 after my housemates had left for college,

government can do to assist me or anyone like me in the

driving some in his car so I got a taxi with a few others.

I got up, had a shower, changed my pjs and my bed

future unless it is repealed, no other laws can be brought

Having had my usual few drinks, I was tipsy but aware.

sheets and got back into bed and slept for the first time

in to change this, so when you choose to vote no, this is

He insisted on buying me a drink, I didn't want one

in almost a month, slept for 14hours straight because I

what you are denying your sister/mother/friend.

so politely refused. It wasn’t enough, he told me I was

knew I wasn't pregnant.

rude and hurt his feelings, everyone was looking, I felt I have always said abortion was not for me, but if

embarrassed so said ok. He gave me the drink and I

Some women continue with a pregnancy as a result of

someone else wants one, then that is their business, just

began drinking it. I don’t remember finishing it.

rape and find great strength and healing in it. For me

like who anyone marries/loves is none of my business.

I would rather die. It was never going to be a baby to

I personally love kids and want a bunch of them, that’s

I woke the next morning torn, in pain, bloodied and

me, but a constant reminder, as it grew day by day like

my choice and my opinion and that’s right for me. I

sick. I couldn’t move, I nearly wet the bed as I struggled

a time bomb, of a night that has broken me in so many

have no right to stand in the way of anyone else’s choice,

to get to the toilet. It was painful to pee.

ways. I have nephews and nieces that I adore and love

as they know what is right for them. Yet here I am in

and would do anything for, but it was not the same for

a situation where I need medical intervention and have

After vomiting the day and night I started getting

no choice, oh the irony.

flashbacks. I remembered him linking me to the car. I remembered him pushing me into the back of his car.

I am so angry right now that my country can do this to me…..What if I can never have kids after this…"

I remembered him forcing himself on me and pushing

my potential pregnancy.


It was 9 years on the 19th of March since it happened

I looked at him and said yes people are entitled to

and I still struggle. Every year as the date gets nearer I

relationships, to sexual relationships if they can consent, I'm

am immediately brought back to that time, clear as day I

“I've gone to write this so many times and honestly just

not trying to sterilize her or hurt her in anyway. Because

remember, I feel, I cry and I shut myself away from everyone

can't get my head around this.

she is so violent she is a risk to herself, to her teachers, her

and put a smile on my face during the day so I can get

school place may be in jeopardy, she will kill me as she has

through work.

I'm a mother to a little girl with severe special needs; she is

I physically, emotionally and mentally could not have faced

non-verbal, has a rare genetic disease, brain damage, and has

the possibility of having his spawn grow inside me for 9

a severe learning disability and huge global developmental

She will never live independently, never have a romantic

months. Because for me that’s what it was, it was his, not

delay.

relationship, she is a 2 year old in an 11 year old body. She

mine.

no idea of her strength.

has no concept of what's happening her body. She can't She is 12 but like a 2 year old. She needs 24 hour care and

tell me if she is in pain. If she had her period, her hands

I have read and listened to people call women murderers,

full assistance with all aspects of daily care. Due to the onset

would still be in her pants, where is the dignity in that?

sluts who should have kept their legs closed and so now

of puberty she has become extremely aggressive and violent.

What if I'm not quick enough to stop it? It's cruel to put

have to live with their mistake.

She has no understanding what is happening to her little

her through this while she is so unbalanced.

body, she never will. I have done books, pictures, stories and I ask you to remember there are women who can see what

she plays with the book or tries eat it like a baby.

you say, who won’t press charges because of these "opinions".

Again he said under the 8th amendment every woman has the right to reproduce. I said she can't ever consent. Ever.

Women who have had abortions not because they wanted

I've been trialling her with panty liners to get her used to

So then he said that he could suggest putting a mirena coil

them but because they needed them. Needed them because

them, she takes them out and hands them to me. If she has

in a 12 year old, which will have to be done under a general

of so many reasons that are personal, difficult and important

a little itch or tickle in her privates, her hands are in her

anaesthetic. I said no, she can't tell me if it's uncomfortable

to them. Remember them as you type your "opinions" about

pants or the pants are down regardless of where we are or

if she is in pain, let alone the risk of anaesthetic. Because

what you would do in hypothetical scenarios. Remember

who is in the house as she has no comprehension of what is

of family history, hormones are not suitable like the pill or

your words can cut like knives. They are hurtful and soul

appropriate and what isn't.

injection or implant and they could make her worse. I said

destroying to living, breathing, sentient human beings, who

it is cruel to make her go through this, to suggest a coil, how

have families, friends, and emotions, conscious thought, a

This is not laziness on my part. I gave up my job to care for

is that ethical and an injection for a few months to delay

fully functioning and developed nervous system that means

her 24/7 no help. She is up day and night and her aggression

the start of her period not?? His answer was to move to the

they FEEL pain.

is mainly directed at me, thank goodness. As therapists say

states where there is a programme? I said surely we are not

Think if it were your mother, sister, daughter who had an

I'm her safe place. The aggression can be so bad even with

the first family to present with this problem and he said the

abortion or who had been raped would you repeat these

meds that my face, chest and arms are black and blue. My

ethics board of this hospital won't delay puberty unless it's a

"opinions" to her.

teeth have been broken, split lips, she even tried to push me

gender identity crisis. Every girl has the right to reproduce.

down the stairs. I was 'lucky' I didn't need an abortion after I was raped.

I will always fight for the rights of the special needs

I was either never pregnant or the abuse I put my body

I met with her teachers, psychiatrist, psychologist, nurse

community in Ireland, we receive no help from the HSE

through caused a miscarriage, I will never know. But what I

and GP and as she is so volatile due to the onset of puberty

- there is just none available. I'm lucky I can care for her.

do know is that the most traumatic thing I have ever been

it was felt that maybe we could delay the start of it until

I firmly believe everyone has the right to relationships if

through was made so much worse by being made to feel like

the aggression was better managed and she turns 12 when

they can consent, to jobs, to education. I will always fight

I was the criminal, like I had done wrong, because we live

she may have access to better medications to help. We were

for rights. But my daughter will never have that, she will

in a society where "boys will be boys" and where I would

referred to a doctor in Dublin. That day I was, as usual,

always need 24/7 care, never be Independent, never have a

have to prove I didn’t want to be torn, bruised and violated.

black and blue; she was extremely agitated because she

romantic relationship. She will always have the mind of a 2

It was made more traumatic because I didn't have support

wasn't in her usual environment so was lashing out of me. I

year old. But under our current laws as long as she has the

and counselling to safe, legal and free access to healthcare

gave the doctor the letters from all the doctors who assessed

right to reproduce that's all that matters.

in my country".

her, all the recommendations, pictures of my injuries. He said to me "if your daughter walked in here and told me

I live with the very real fear that she will kill me or

that she wanted to be a boy due to gender identity crisis

seriously hurt me because she has and never will have the

they could delay puberty but due to disability laws and the

understanding of what is happening to her body. This isn't

8th amendment that she has a right to reproduce.”

just about abortion. It's about protecting women and their rights.”


Catholic and voting Yes!

For me, pro-life was some vague idea in the background.

I started to research and look into all the different cases

The realities of which were a world away from me.

that have taken place here in Ireland. Each known by

Abortion was never something I would consider for

a letter. The woman’s privacy respected but her wishes

myself and so it wasn’t something I needed to give a

denied. Details of their individual cases made public

lot of thought to. I am ashamed of the way I thought.

knowledge. The lengths this country would and will go

The disregard that I had for other women in their time

to to ensure a woman remains pregnant. Rape survivors

of crisis. I couldn’t and wouldn’t see beyond a baby, an

who have already been cruelly violated have their voices

innocent life.

once more left unheard. People with the tragic news of a fatal fetal abnormality, forced to carry to term or travel

A pro-choice Catholic might seem like an oxymoron to

It wasn’t until I was pregnant with my third and last

if they can afford it. And the cases that never make the

some or a rarity to others, but we are here and we are

child in 2016 that my thought process began to change.

headlines. The women who take tablets alone, without

numerous. For many of us it has been a journey to come

There was much talk about the eighth amendment. Not

medical supervision and with the fear of a fourteen year

to be pro-choice. We were raised with mass on Sundays

only how it effects a person’s rights to an abortion but

prison sentence hanging over them.

and religion class throughout all our schooling. We had

how it affects all pregnant people in Ireland and their

those little feet pins on our jackets going to school and

ability to consent. I joined an online support group

We have doctors telling us repeatedly that the eight

were told plenty about why abortion was a sin, so much

for people who suffer from hyperemesis gravidarum

amendment makes their jobs impossible.

was said about “babies” and innocence. That Jesus was a

(excessive morning sickness). One woman’s experience

We have lawyers telling us it is a law that is not fit for

kind and compassionate man who valued all people. I

in the states really brought the realities of the eight

purpose.

can't remember hearing anything about the person who

home for me.

was pregnant and what they were facing.

How is any of that Christian? Where is the compassion No medications were working for her, she was starving

that I was taught Jesus showed to all people? He valued

and her organs were starting to fail. This was for her

the poor amongst all and here we are with a law the

a much-wanted pregnancy and she was faced with

makes the poor suffer. They are the people who cannot

a decision that no one ever wants to make. Continue

afford the choice of travel.

her pregnancy and possibly die as a result or terminate her pregnancy. I realised that I wouldn’t ever be given

Catholics for Choice, an organisation based in

this choice here in Ireland, at least not until I was near

America, tells us that the church officially teaches

enough to death that the decision was taken out of

that the conscience of the individual is supreme. We

my hands. I would be leaving my two beautiful girls

as Catholics can apply conscience to decisions about

without a mother, my husband without a wife, my

abortion. This means that if a woman feels that it would

parents without a daughter. All because my life is seen

be morally wrong to bring a baby into this world, for

as equal to that of the unborn in the constitution.

whatever reason, then following her conscience is the right thing to do. Article by: MaryAnne Tresoldi


THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

Limerick Together for Yes - Chairperson Yvie Murphy

- Deputy Chair Jennifer Schweppe

There is just a matter of weeks to go before this referendum,

Since its launch only a few short weeks ago, the

Our country is being asked, for the first time in 35 years, to

if we don’t get a YES majority it could years before we

national civil society campaign set up to remove the 8th

reflect in our Constitution what is happening every single

get another chance. This needs to pass, for the sake of the

Amendment from the Constitution has made its presence

day in our country. In Limerick Together for Yes, we would

women in your life, for the sake of all of the people in this

felt all over the country, with posters, leaflets, stickers and

like to ensure that the stories of Savita, Miss X, and all the

country who can get pregnant, for the sake of the people

badges having been distributed to all corners of Ireland.

other women whose stories should have been a private issue

in this country who cannot afford to travel, for the sake of

The campaign didn’t spring up overnight, however, and its

discussed with their doctor, become part of our history. We

people buying pills over the internet and taking them while

three partner organisations, the Coalition to Repeal the

hope that you agree and will vote yes on May 25th.

home alone, scared and without medical supervision, for

8th Amendment, the Abortion Rights Campaign, and the

the sake of the doctors, nurses and midwives whose hands

National Women’s Council of Ireland, have been working

are tied by the 8th Amendment and are not allowed or

tirelessly for years to allow pregnant people access abortion

afraid to give certain care to their pregnant and birthing

care safely in their own country.

patients, for the sake of future generations. On May 25th please vote YES.

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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

I n t e rv i e w Business Spotlight on Dennis Mc Gettigan As I drove along Sheikh Zayed Road to The Bonnington Hotel, JLT, Dubai. I reflect on the first time I met Dennis Mc Gettigan and what a charismatic character he bore. The warm, welcoming and friendly energy you get when you walk into a Mc Gettigan's establishment was certainly no front- it ran through to the core. Everybody in the office gave me a warm welcome and parted from their hectic jobs to make me feel at home. Running a tight schedule, as captain of the ship, Dennis was prompt to our arranged time and we sat to chat right away! Now a household name, tell us where the McGettigan's franchise journey began? It all began with my father ( Jim) in Dublin, back in 1964. He opened a bar on Queen Street and called it Mc Gettigan's; Dad was the eldest of nine children and left school at 14 to earn money to help support his family; first he worked in a local pub and then on board the Queen Elizabeth 1. After working and saving for eight years on the QE1 and meeting his wife-to-be in Southampton, he returned to Ireland and bought a property on Queen Street in Dublin, calling it Mc Gettigan's- that's where it all really began. In 1969 he bought a pub called Dan Lowrys, that was going into liquidation and named it The Baggot Inn, (the name we use for our first bar here in Dubai too), and it hosted acts like Tracey Chapman, U2, David Bowie, Christy Moore, Thin Lizzy, Mary Coughlan and The Water-boys. From there he went in to the hotel business, buying his first hotel in 1978 called the Sheehy Hotel in Raheny, he went on to have six hotels in Ireland and then his first property in London, The Bonnington Hotel. That's where the story really started in coming this way I guess, as a piece of sand came up for sale in 2004, and that was that!

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You certainly have kept the traditions of your father running with some great music at the venues across Dubai; I've seen countless live performances here in Dubai venues from the likes of The Coronas, S Club 7, Kodaline... well, lots of acts, and Limerick's own Hermitage Green not so long ago too! Do you see this as a key attraction in your business to entice customers? Of course it is yeah, but we have always wanted to have somewhere accessible, especially over here in Dubai, when the sand patch was bought in 2004 and The Bonnington Hotel, Dubai was opened in February 2009. I knew no more about the middle east than... well I knew nothing, but I promised my parents I'd come out for three days, and I did, and nine years later I am still here! I saw all the amazing attractions here, the five-star bars which were in a market designed for a specific type of person, and then I saw some really bad, bad bars. So, for me, I wanted a bar that I wanted to go to. How did you build on that thought? I came up with the concept of Mc Gettigan's, and I thought of my Dad's first Mc Gettigan's in Dublin which is very much an inner-city pub, and this was a very different concept, it had a modern twist. I didn't want to fall into the stereotypical Irish bar. I wanted entertainment at the best level, sports, food, drinks- I wanted it all at the best level, I wanted the service right. I would equate Mc Gettigan's to a very good four-star bar. It's not the five-star champagne and cocktails that rob people. It's a concept I came up with to basically support the hotel because there is no way the hotel could have progressed or dealt with its' own debt if I didn't come up with the bar. It was a pressure situation. That's where it started and ended for me at the time, I didn't have a further vision at the time to expand as we now have. You had a good immediate reaction so? We did, the CEO of African and Eastern (DIAGEO of the UAE) asked to meet me after four months or so after opening. It was like an interview, and an hour into the chat I asked, what exactly are you looking for?

47


THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

They invited us to open a bar near the airport and if I would be interested in opening up a franchise. Of course my first thing was, 'how much will it cost me?'- nothing, it's a franchise! So, we went with it and it was completely 'learnas-you-go', but it got me thinking. I spoke to our executive head chef, Derek, and I said if we can take in X amount of money on a daily basis, we will be elected. The first year had an intake that was double our projections. It was crazy! Then I sought and found a second owner-operated venue and we got DWTC (Dubai World Trade Centre). It snowballed from there. We got the venue in Donegal then, and I wondered how the image would translate back to Ireland but after much deliberation, we stuck with it, shamrock and all! Donegal was received very well, then we opened in Abu Dhabi. The Abu Dhabi venue won the Irish Pubs Global Awards in 2017 for 'Best Irish Community Pub in the World'! You must be very proud of the journey you have taken. It's an honour to receive these awards, we were lucky to have won five big awards in total, and we are most proud of my

We have a new venue of the same concept as Warehouse

It's not easy here, Sunday to Thursday is 100 miles an hour.

father for winning the Lifetime Achievement Award, and

in Letterkenny opening on The Palm, Dubai soon, but we

I try to get to bed early, and up to work early. You try to

of course for the pub below us here in JLT, to have won

will call it Factory over here. They have that bare, industrial

get home, have dinner, hang with the kids and get have

Irish Pub of The Year, it really was great. We did certainly

feel to them.

some TV time, then get to bed. At the weekends, I do the

snowball as a brand- not in a bad way, but now, it's probably

complete opposite of that, I'm out enjoying myself but I'm

once every two weeks we are approached and asked 'would

How do you juggle yourself between locations and

trying to change that because the extreme to extreme a)

you consider putting Mc Gettigan's here', or there and so

balance the workload?

isn't good for you and b) I don't think you give yourself

on. All of this is a huge compliment to the brand name, but

It's extremely tiresome, I'll tell you that. I'm looking forward

the chance to think about things properly, you know? And,

you have to be careful that we a) don't bastardise or b) over

to a good two-week holiday now. I try and base myself in

yeah... Try and go to other places than Mc Gettigan's too!

saturate the market.

Dubai because the bulk of our owner operated businesses

Or I've been told to do that anyway! It's hard, you're trying

are here, and apart from New York, everything is within

to give time to family here, family in Ireland, your team-

It sounds like you have more tricks up your sleeve though,

seven hours from here. This is where I need to be; my family

there is just a lot. You've got to give 100% and get everybody

what are your next plans regarding new properties?

and main senior team are here, but I also try and take June,

excited with you, in the hope you hatch an egg, but I know

Well at the moment we have 19 bars- since 2010, and

July and August to get involved in the businesses we have

it's important, no matter how hard it is, to switch off.

another 6 to open up in the next six to eight months;

at home.

Bahrain, Philadelphia, Ajman, Doha, Abu Dhabi, and The Palm, Dubai.

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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

Would you expand at home? We bought five hotels in Ireland in the last four or five years, in doing that, we put a Mc Gettigan's or Warehouse in each and unless we want to get in to further acquisitions, which I think Ireland is getting a tiny bit over priced now, so unless I want to do that, I don't see us getting involved in further bars at home right now. There is a huge amount of competition as well, and there are some fabulous operators who have cornered a lot of the market- Alan Clancy has done a phenomenal job, McKillen Jnr has opened a number of great places too. My attitude is, when an opportunity comes your way, if it looks good and makes sense, then of course we will jump all over it! What is the biggest challenge you had along the way and how you tackled it? Oooh! A tough question... yes! The biggest challenge for me was probably trying to open New York. If I didn't die of a

I have no idea what he did, but he went out of the room,

massive heart attack... We had a similar situation opening

returning about thirty minutes later and he said 'Okay, look,

in Abu Dhabi in 2015, but certainly opening New York in

we're gonna do this. I'll sign off, no problem'! I don’t know

2014 tops it all. I moved over for three weeks and learned

who or what he spoke to but I signed the dotted line and

how bureaucratic New York is. You have to have a certificate

the next day I sent a fella to get the alcohol license, the gas

for every wire, for all your plumbing, your joinery; absolutely

went on at 4 o'clock opening day- Derek (the head chef )

everything- there is about 16 certificates which themselves

was going mad about the food and worry and all. He asked

require a completion certificate. Then you need to show

'Here, are we gonna be okay today' and I had to play Mr.

proof of the completion certificate to the fire people, the

Cool and I said 'Of course we will be!' But in my mind...

food people, the gas people, the electricity people... and

I was going absolutely bonkers! It was by the skin of our

you have to get all these people to click together to get the

teeth, but we got there and had a great night!

venue ready. I remember that two days before opening I had four of the sixteen and I'd spent a couple of hundred

I guess you learn as you go though...

thousand dollars on the opening event- flying people here

Absolutely, I'm very careful and realistic about my timelines

from Ireland and Dubai, we had The Coronas joining too

now and I try to avoid putting myself under pressure.

and it was going to be a great event. What about your Limerick premises, how do you find the Oh no! What did you do?

Limerick market?

I went to meet the commissioner of building authority.

Ah look, we're very lucky. In Limerick, we sponsored

It's in a nice part of the city and the people, like elsewhere

I couldn't do anything without his piece of paper, and I

Thomand Park for a number of years in a row, we have

in Ireland have been very supportive of us, so we're very

prayed to my uncle who had just died and said please, help

wonderful loyal customers but I do think it is a tough market.

grateful and appreciative of that. As I mentioned, our brand

me out here! I sat with him and said, 'Look, I know we're

I must say, the people of Limerick have been exceptionally

intends to provide sport, music, food, drink and service at

nobody in this town, we're small fish, but I need to open

supportive of us, especially as an outside company. The bar

the very best level and we deliver that globally- Limerick

in two days time' there was lots of to-ing and fro-ing, with

is tipping away nicely and we did a lot of changes with the

included; our customers deserve that.

an initial reaction from him not looking good. He gave the

venue when we took over, and they were done very well.

alternative of opening the building but letting somebody

Article by: Rebecca Egan

else run the bar, as an outside catering company, and I just said, 'Sir, that is not an option'.

49


THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

Building Brands THE SECRET TO BRANDING SUCCESS

What is a brand?

Why is your brand different?

What’s the opportunity for your business?

The concept of a brand was first used more than a century

One of the biggest brand challenges for businesses is

Ultimately your brand is how customers recognise and

ago by US cattle ranchers. A branding iron was used to mark

having clarity on their brand. Are you absolutely clear on

experience your business. Etihad Airways is a super

which animals they owned as they transported the animals

the purpose of your brand? Why is your business different?

example of a visual language grounded in what’s different

across the US. A brand mark shows that a product or service

Why should a customer choose your product or service

and unique about this airline. The opportunity for your

comes from a specific source. It’s something entirely unique

rather than one from your competitors? Can your employees

business is creating a clearly differentiated brand that

to your company.

succinctly communicate this when they are speaking to a

engages and motivates customers to buy your product or

customer? Does your messaging clearly communicate what

services. The impact and opportunity for you – is business

In the late 20th century, the concept of branding and its

makes you different across every touchpoint with your

growth and customer loyalty. Etihad achieved 17% year-

value evolved. Advertising tycoon David Ogilvy famously

customers?

on-year growth following it’s rebrand. On average customer

described a brand as ‘the intangible sum of a product’s

experience focused organisations grow 14% faster than

attributes’. What your customers think about your product

those organisations who are less customer-centric.

or services is critical. Your brand exists only in their mind. What they think about it, will be key to your success.

50

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ERICK

May

N? T’S O WHkA ’s Event Highlights

2018

Limeric Fri 4th - Mon 7th

Sun 6th

RIVERFEST LIMERICK

BON SECOURS HOSPITAL GREAT LIMERICK RUN

Limerick City

Sun 20th

AFRICA DAY

Limerick Racecourse

Fri 18th - Sat 19th

UNWRAP FASHION FESTIVAL

MARIO ROSENSTOCK University Concert Hall

Limerick City

Limerick City

Fri 25th - Sun 27th

FAMILY FUN RACE DAY

Wed 16th - Thu 17th

Sat 26th

31st May - 3rd June

ASLAN LIVE AT THE BIG TOP

Limerick City

LIMERICK FLEADH CHEOIL 2018

Milk Market

Kilfinane

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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

T r av e l

Ever want to get out of Limerick City without having to put

Shopping

Pubs and Restaurants

much thought into the trip, some of our surrounding towns

Newcastle West offers a large range of stores to choose from.

A good place for a bit to eat and a pint is Cronins bar

are full of shops, restaurants and activities to make a perfect

Fashion retailers include highly respected Ela Maria is one

in the middle of the town. It has a great warm and

day trip. Take Newcastle West for example. Newcastle West

of the longest luxury boutiques in Ireland. Based in The

traditional atmosphere. They also have the very best in live

is the largest town in Limerick containing historical sites,

Square House in Newcastle West, Ela Maria stocks over

entertainment and top DJ’s every weekend along with a late

great shopping and delicious food. With only a population

80 designer labels on 3 floors. The Well-known Limerick

bar. For a finer dining feel, No8 The Square is your place to

of just under 7,000 people Newcastle West is becoming

retailer Noels Newcastle West which has been trading well

go. The restaurant setting is truly amazing with Georgian

a must see town for tourists with the number of visitors

since 2005 offers a unique style of branded merchandise

architecture making it feel more historic. The menu on offer

multiplying year after year.

for every age and any event. The store stocks an array of

is simply delicious, No8 takes great pride in sourcing local

high street casual brands including BARBOUR, GANT,

fresh ingredients plus its homemade relishes and pesto’s are

Historic Attractions

LACOSTE, RALPH LAUREN, REMUS UOMO,

to die for!

Newcastle West’s main landmark dominates the end of the

TOMMY HILFIGER.

Main Town Square. The banqueting hall of the Desmond

Outdoor Activities

Castle, seat of the Earl of Desmond, parts of which date

If you’re looking for homeware however, Objekt Design

There are loads of walking trails in the town the main one

from the 13th century, is the most notable historical feature

Space is your one stop shop for furniture, lighting, rugs,

being the Mullaghareirk Walking Trails.

of the town. The Current Castle dates from the 15th

mirrors & daily lifestyle items, from brands such as

the walks ranges from 5km to 24km and cover a variety

century and has been recently partly restored and is open

Kartell, Calligaris, Missoni Home, SIA, DesignersGuild,

of terrain from open farmland and forest paths to quite

to the public, for guided tours May to September. Castle

ArteEspina, La Bougie, Durance, PresentTime & many

country roads. All the routes are signposted with route

Demesne has just under 100 acres of parkland located

more. They also have interior designers in store to help you

maps available for rack of the walks providing full directions

beside Desmond Castle and Banqueting Hall full of plants

get the home of your dreams.

and information on points of interest. Newcastle West Golf

The length of

and greenery. It is the perfect place for a stroll on a nice day.

Club is perfect for any golfing enthusiasts while also having

The park also contains leisure and sporting facilities as well

extraordinary views of the landscapes and scenery.

as a children’s playground. Article by: Reece Creed

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home I am currently obsessed with trying to make my outdoor

4. Vintage Trailer – A vintage trailer is a perfect alternative

space more “user friendly”. Since we have about 10 days

to a guest house and can also be transformed into an office

of sun in this country and a lot of beauty outside. It can be

or writer’s retreat.

quite depressing looking at it from inside the window so

5. Office Pod – Prefab office pods are incredibly convenient

without building a conservatory, what are my options?

to install and can provide you with an office space, play room or art studio in as little as a day.

The decking has been painted, the wooden furniture too, I’ve all the trimmings. The outdoor throws, the candles,

6. Teepee – Teepees are pretty trendy these days, which

the cushions, the fabulous outdoor table range, the drinks

means you can easily find one to buy online and in some

cooler, the BBQ, the firepit and the solar lanterns, it’s all

stores, or you can check out lots of do-it-yourself teepee

there - in hiding at the back of the shed due to the rain.

projects online. Backyard teepees make great reading nooks

On the hunt for solutions, I have come across these beauties,

and play rooms, and larger ones can even be used as a place

hopefully they will be of inspiration to you too, weather your

for guests to sleep.

space is big or small. You can’t beat having a gulp of fresh air with your wine spritzer on a bank holiday weekend!

7. Screened Porch – If you already have a paving stone patio, you may want to consider turning some or all of it

Backyard Room Ideas

into a screened room. While a screened porch is a simple

Here are just eight of the ways you can add an extra room to

structure, it creates a space you can use as a game room, art

your home by creating one in your backyard:

studio, sleeping porch and more.

1. Yurt – A yurt is a circular tent with a wood frame that makes it super sturdy. This versatile outdoor room is perfect

8. Solarium – Also known as a sunroom, a solarium can

for use as a guest room or meditation space.

be built into the design of your home or can be added after construction to expand your living space. Sturdier

2. Summer House – Some summer houses look a bit like

and providing more protection from the elements than a

converted sheds, but these simple structures are designed

screened porch, a sunroom can be used an a gym, office,

to provide a comfy place to relax outside when the weather

play room or other space where you might want electricity

is warm. They often have large door or one wall that can be

and need to protect office equipment or your treadmill from

opened completely to allow the outdoors in. Most popular

bad weather.

in Europe, summer houses are a growing trend in the United States.

There are a few things to consider when expanding your living space outdoors. First, you will want to check with

3. Converted Shed – You can convert a conventional shed

your local governing body to learn about regulations that

into a sewing room, summer house, yoga studio or game

could limit how you can use your outdoor room.

room, which makes this a great option for folks who already have a shed and have a smaller budget to use for their

Article by: Michelle Costello

outdoor room.

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C re ati v e ways t o g e t s p or ty!

Being the home of Munster Rugby with Thomand Park, being sporty has always been at the heart of Limerick. With such a creative city lying on a river with egger and active citizens, Limerick has always found a new way to get sporty! Coming up to summer everyone is getting ready to pop into their swimsuits so TLM got together a list of some creative ways to get sporty this summer. Roller jam Located on the Ballysimon road, Limerick Roller jam is a great way for the whole family to get active while still having fun! Open Wednesday to Sunday Limerick Roller Jam offers student nights, caters for hen parties and family nights as well as 80’s and 90’s nights so everyone can work up a sweat while still having fun and socialising. Skating for just one hour a week burns 600 calories and causes 50% less stress to joints than running does so it is just the perfectly creative way to keep fit and have fun! Pole Dancing Pole dancing is no longer just a form of entertainment with Burlesque and Bubbles workshop taking it to the mainstream showing us how it can be a fun way to stay fit and healthy, while helping your confidence and having fun. As well as the Burlesque and Bubbles workshops on Thomas street, KC Pole Fitness offers classes for beginners that aren’t too intense and you can still have great fun! With reviews describing the classes as a great laugh and still and intense work out, pole dancing looks like the cool creative way to get fit this summer.

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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

Soul Sunday at the Milk Market

Dog walking in Chez le Fab

Kayaking

With yoga and meditation growing more and more popular

If you are ready to put you’re walking shoes on the dog

Being the riverside city it is only expected that Limerick has

in Limerick so many places are getting behind the active

friendly cafe in the park offers dog walks from 11 O’ Clock

found a way to get creative and sporty using the Shannon.

lifestyles we have adopted offering Yoga in so many creative

every Sunday. The scenic walk which follows down the river

NevSail water sports offers fun and safe ways to keep fit

venues.

is the perfect way for you and your dog to keep fit while

while getting to see a whole new view of Limerick. Weather

enjoying a lovely Sunday stroll. You don’t need a dog to take

taking part of the team games, going on a history tour or

Every Sunday from 11-12 the Milk Market transforms its

part just walking with a group of people and their dogs is

just simply kayaking down the Shannon for the sights and

upstairs seating area into a Yoga hall, all you have to do is

great motivation. The walks are free and the cafe encourages

sounds it has to offer. Limerick Watersports are based from

bring along your matt! Soul Sunday at the Milk Market

everyone to get involved.

the Hunt Museum, offering Limerick Kayaking, Stand up

also offers Tai Chi/Qi Kung from 12-1 with Nadine. If you

Paddle Boarding, Boating, Sailing, Raft Building, Archery,

are based in Castletroy and the Milk Market is a stretch the

Archery Tag, Team Challenges and much more.

University of Limerick offers classes on a Saturday at 9:30. Article by: Cathal Ryan

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Pa r e n t i n g A positive birth experience

a larger element of all of this will be using the room for more natural processes and trying to get more natural birth. We have in addition to the bath, an adjoining shower room, a birthing cube, and birthing balls. This is something of a prototype for us and if it is successful and demand increases, we hope to do the same thing in another labour room,” he said. Members of the public were invited the UL Hospitals Group Inagural public lecture series on ‘Water Immersion for Labour’, at the Clinical Education and Research Building at UHL to hear speakers share the history of ULMH and how the home away from home or home birthing suite came to fruition. Birth workers, medical staff and expectant parents alike were informed of the technicalities of the pool, such as time required to fill -35mins and availability – first come first

A positive birth experience encompasses how a mother feels when she greets her baby for the first time, and how safe and supported a mother feels during the time of giving birth. Whether it’s a normal physiological birth in a hospital, a gentle-caesarean, or a home birth, positive birth experiences happen when a woman’s care provider trusts her to give birth and she trusts herself. With the implementation of the National Maternity Strategy underway, initiatives to improve birth experiences for women are rolling in across the nation as of last year. At the University Maternity Hospital in Limerick, a water immersion service for labour is to be made available to expectant mothers by the end of May/beginning of June, and will be available for normal-risk women in the newlyrefurbished home birthing room, as part of a range of labour supports in the home-birthing room to facilitate natural labour. The benefit of using water to reduce the pain of labour and childbirth is well established and accepted in most care settings. The use of a shower or hot wet towels for pain relief is common practice, while the buoyancy of water enables a woman to move more easily, alleviating pain and optimising the progress of her labour.

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served (birth preference inclusion advised), along with some Water offers a laboring woman an environment where she

restrictions as currently outlined by the Coombe for safe

can behave instinctively and feel in control. When a woman

use, which state:

feels in control during childbirth, she experiences a higher degree of postnatal emotional well-being.

• Use will be restricted to generally healthy women, with no pregnancy complications

Woman who wish to labour while immersed in deep warm

• No VBAC’s, so the expectant Mother has not had a

water know it is a simple way of assisting them to cope

previous cesarean birth

without the use of strong drugs. A reduction in the use of

• Pool is for labouring only, not birthing

which not only benefits the mother (who is more alert and

• Baby must have reached term i.e no earlier than 37 weeks

responsive after the birth) but the baby will also benefit

• Must be a single birth only, no multiples

considerably, allowing for an increase in tendency to latch

• Labour must have started spontaneously, can’t have been

and bond.

induced • Baby is in a head down (cephalic) position

There are considerable perceived benefits of using immersion in water during labour, including less painful contractions

Due to the large size of the immersion pool, partners are

and less need for pharmacological analgesia, shorter labour

welcomed to enter the pool with you. Mum’s are free to avail

and less need for augmentation with no known adverse

of Entonox (gas & air) and pethidine before entering the

effects for the woman herself.

pool providing no nausea, but no epidural.

Dr Mark Skehan, consultant obstetrician/gynaecologist,

Info leaflets are currently being created for ante natal class

said the team at UMHL was looking forward to opening

inclusion so if you are to give birth in the coming months

the new labour room to women, stating “Water immersion

and want to follow this route, the time is to discuss the

and hydrotherapy can be quite effective for pain relief and

option is now open. Article by: Jess Lyons


THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

H e a lt h a n d Fi t n e s s It’s all in the Vitamins and Minerals If you’re feeling tired and low on energy all the time or you’ve suddenly developed digestive issues, skin or bone issues, and a lack of minerals in our diet may be the root of the problem. So why are we mineral deficient the first place? A lot of it stems (excuse the pun) from the amount of plant damaging from poor soil. The soil nowadays is spread with insecticide, growth hormones, and multitude of chemicals thus being transferred into the plant. By the time we eat it certain amounts of the plant structure providing us with a larger and more plentiful amount of vitamin and minerals are destroyed. It is easy therefore to assume that even though you may be eating your veg that the actual quantity is no where near where we need it to be. Those affected most are the fussy eater. Having a varied diet is the only way to come close to achieving our RDA%. Saying that it must also be pointed out that some people have certain conditions that

While of course this is crucial to the prevention of skin

So as you can see just eating the known is not merely

may have them avoid some food groups.

cancers, it also stops us from producing the necessary

enough, but quite possibly leaving us deficient in many

amount of Vitamin D that we need. Scientist at UCC cork

other sources, that fundamental to our health and well

Supplements

conducted an analysis of Vitamin D only to find that 1 in 8

being.

Supplements are quite useful in obtaining the lack of

people in Europe, that’s about 13% are vitamin D deficient.

certain vitamins & minerals, but must not be seen as the

Now that there is a stretch in the evenings people should

Will power, may actually be cured..!

ultimate solution. We need to be eating a good variety

get out and try get some more sunlight as it is the best

Have you found yourself after eating or at lunch craving

of food each day to compliment our deficiencies. But we

source of Vitamin D.

something sugary or almost kicking down the vending machine as you frantically press a1 on the machine to stick

can by all means target certain deficiencies by utilising the availability of supplements. A simple blood test if often all

Phytonutrients

your teeth into a juicy mars bar. You beat yourself up as

that’s required to check if you are lacking in certain minerals

Here’s where it gets even more complicated. The trouble

you have left yourself down. Which now unloads a flood

and vitamins. Most of the time we are unaware that are even

with research is that every day there is something new

of hateful emotions as you have ruined your diet again.

deficient at all.

discovered. This of course is fantastic as we get more and

Well you maybe glad to know that it may not be will

more information about the foods we eat. But one thing no

power after all but rather a deficiency in minerals causing

One that springs to mind now that we move closer to the

matter what has remained the same, the closer to mother

you to crave everything from cheesecake to crisps. Being

summer is vitamin D. This in particular is a vitamin that is

earth we eat the greater our health and the greater the diet

low in magnesium and Calcium for example can have you

overlooked and shockingly those who live in the sunnier

becomes balanced. Take for example a tomato. We know

crave sugary things, so when you are craving desperately a

parts of the world suffer more. That may seem strange,

it is a good source of vitamin A, C, E & K, niacin, B6,

wonderful chocolate muffin it may be down to a lack of

but it is entirely down to skin type and the amount of UV

folate, magnesium, phosphorus, and potassium. What is

such vitamins in your diet.

protection used.

not realised by most is there are 40,000 phytonutrients (a substance that is found in plants, fruits and veg that have

Article by: Jason Kenny

huge benefits to human health) that are still being identified by science.

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L i t e r at ur e B o o k R e v i e ws 10 Books To Read This Month

This month we are spoiled for choice when it comes to stimulating new books to read. May seems to be the month for publishing books that deal with important, thought provoking topics. We’ve got politically charged books, books with undertones of delving into white privilege and racism and thrillers about female friendships. Whether your interests cover a wide spectrum, from political books written by former U.S. secretary of state Condoleezza Rice to YA romance novels about waking up in a new body every day, there is absolutely something for everyone this month. Happy reading!

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I Felt a Funeral, in My Brain by Will Walton

My Ex-Life by Stephen McCauley

I Felt a Funeral, in My Brain is a touching YA novel about

David Hedges’s is going through a pretty odd mid-life crisis,

discovering your own sexuality and dealing with grief and

his younger boyfriend has left him and he finds his job of

navigating life following a loss, when there are no rules or

getting teenagers into the college of their choice unfulfilling.

specific guidelines to live by. A story about a grieving young

He’s in a real rut until his ex-wife turns up and asks his help

man, Avery Fowell, told following grief ’s own patterns

in getting her daughter into college, which results in them

of being fragmented, messy and surprising. Coming to

living together again. This book aims to change how you see

bookshops May 29.

love and define family. Published May 8.


THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

Political Risk: How Businesses and Organizations Can

They Come in All Colours: A Novel by Malcolm Hansen

That Kind of Mother by Rumaan Alam

Anticipate Global Insecurity by Condoleezza Rice and

When the Freedom Rider’s protests came to Georgia, Huey

From the author of Rich and Pretty, comes a book about a

Amy Zegart

Fairchild parent’s assured him he was no different than

woman struggling with new motherhood. Rebecca Stone

Coming to bookshops May 1. New York Times bestselling

his white peers. But when he flees the state along with his

connects deeply with her black nanny Priscilla, who teaches

author and former U.S. secretary of state Condoleezza Rice

mother in 1968 along with his mother and begins attending

her about motherhood as well as to confront her own white

and Stanford University professor Amy B. Zegar come

a pretentious high school, it becomes apparent to him that

privilege. When Priscilla dies in childbirth Rebecca comes

together to examine political risk to a business. In today’s

he is biracial. When tempers flare Huey finds himself

forward to raise her son, although she isn’t prepared for how

changing world political risk can originates from the likes

on academic probation and begins to look at his current

differently the world is set on treating her two children.

of prominent figures and the public alike using their voice

situation through the lens of his childhood memories

Published May 8.

and influence on social media and also increased terrorist

of growing up in Akersburg during the Civil Rights

attacks. This book investigates what businesses can do to

Movement. Published May 29.

navigate this evolving landscape.

Dead Girls by Abigail Tarttelin

Sorority by Genvieve Sly Crane

Published May 3, this thriller follows 11 year old Thera

This book about female friendship and coming of age will

who, after her best friend Billie is killed, sets out to find her

appeal to anyone who has ever been curious about what

killer with the aid of a Ouija board, Billie’s ghost, and the

goes on in a sorority house. The book is as tense and filled

spirits of four other dead girls.

with as many secrets as the house itself, where the girls are reeling after the death of a pledge. Published May 1.

Every Day by David Levithan

The fourth book in the Red Queen series is finally here.

Every day A wakes up in a different body, with a different

Coming to bookshops May 15 the eagerly anticipated

life but every day they are in love with the same girl. A lays

novel picks up from where we left off, with Mare fighting

down some rules to protect themselves, such as never get

to secure freedom for Reds and newbloods just like her.

attached. But when A wakes up in Justin’s body and meet

Overthrowing Maven won’t be easy though, especially as

Justin’s girlfriend Rhiannon, A decides the rules no longer

he will stop at nothing to have Mare as his own again. It’s

apply because they have found someone they want to be

promised to be an epic conclusion to the New York Times

with forever. Every Day will challenge your idea of love, as

bestselling series.

you watch A and Rhiannon navigate the challenges of loving someone who changes every day. Movie adaption coming to cinemas May 20

Anger is a Gift by Mark Oshiro Hitting bookshops May 22. Ever since the Oakland police killed his father, Moss Jeffries has suffered from panic attacks. Six years later, he finds himself and other students to be the subject of discrimination

book OF TH E MON TH

War Storm by Victoria Aveyard

at his high school, involving random locker checks and police stationed in the hallways. Moss and his peers decide to utilise their anger and fight back against an unfair system. By Sarah Talty

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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

TV TV MAY

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Patrick Melrose

The Bridge

Our favourite comedy about post-cult life is back!

Benedict Cumberbatch returns to the small screen in

The Bridge has been one of the superior Scandanavian

"Unbreakable Kimmy Scmidt" returns to Netflix for its

this adaptation of the semi-autobiographical novels

crime dramas, and it returns for its fourth and final season

fourth season on 30 May. Netflix are releasing the season

from Edward St. Aubyn. Cumberbatch plays the titular

this month moving from its former home on BBC Four

in two halves so we'll have to wait until later in the year

character, who is an aristocratic playboy that suffered a

to BBC Two. The last season left Saga under suspicion of

for the last six episodes. In the meantime, we do have six

deeply traumatic childhood leading to substance abuse

killing her own mother, and we'll pick up two years later

episodes of bizarre hilarity to enjoy as we watch Kimmy

as an adult, and ultimately recovery. With such a journey

as she languishes in prison. Of course, there's also another

(Ellie Kemper) navigate life with her equally barmy friends

from victim to survivor, this is set to be compelling viewing.

macabre crime that's occurred and this one involves the

– Titus, Jacqueline and Lillian. We may discover a bit more

Each of the season's five episodes will be based on the five

brutal murder of a woman in charge of immigration for the

about what happened in the bunker, with perhaps a further

novels within the series. Also starring Jennifer Jason Leigh,

Danish government. Henrik has a new partner whose lack

appearance or two from Jon Hamm. Busy Phillips is also

Hugo Weaving and Blythe Danner, the cast is stellar and

of political correctness leaves a lot to be desired, and they'll

slated to join for a few episodes so once again, Tina Fey's

makes this a must-watch. Check it out on Sky Atlantic on

focus on a left-wing activist group, while Henrik continues

show is looking to be another season of guaranteed giggles.

13 May.

searching for his missing daughters. With so much going on, this season is absolutely unmissable.

Siren

Bulletproof

The Handmaid's Tale

Mermaids have been in fashion for a while now, so it was

Bulletproof is Sky One's new show about police duo

The first season exploded into the cultural stratosphere, and

inevitable that there would be a show about them. This will

Bishop (Noel Clarke) and Pike (Ashley Walters) who

considering current #MeToo movement, season two will

be a much darker and stranger show than expected however,

are best friends, despite their differences as Pike's father

create just as many fireworks. Moving beyond the story

as the mermaids are less Ariel and more odd, brutal killers.

was the first black commissioner while Bishop spent his

of Margaret Atwood's novel, Offred is now free from the

Set in Bristol Cove, which according to legend was once

childhood being moved from one foster home to another.

home where she served as handmaid and is set on finding

home to mermaids, a mysterious girl Ryn comes to town

Their personal motivations may be different but they share

her child. Moira has managed to escape to Canada, and the

and catches the attention of marine biologists and a

a strong moral code. Bulletproof will have a mixture of

Commander and his wife deal with the fallout of Offred's

fisherman while a military conspiracy ensues. This promises

action, drama and comedy as their friendship is put to

disappearance. Few shows have had as much impact as The

to be more of a horror series so expect to see mermaids in a

the test. Everyone loves a buddy cop drama and this will

Handmaid's Tale and season two will be upping the ante.

whole new light when it premieres on SyFy UK on 3 May.

certainly provide!

Watch it when it airs this month on Channel Four. Article by: Sarah Lafferety

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T L M e v e n t G ui d e MAY EDITION EXHIBITION/TALK

FAMILY/KIDS

Jack L @ Dolans 8pm

Tuesday 1st – Sunday 3rd June

4th - 7th May 2018

Saturday 5th May

Bealtaine Festival

Riverfest Limerick

The Don Baker & Rob Strong Band @ Dolans 8pm

Thursday 3rd - Sunday 6th May

Saturday 5th May

Sunday 6th May

UL/Frank McCourt Literary Festival @ University of

UL Sport Kids Run @ University of Limerick

Live @ King John's Castle: Bell X1 @ 7pm

Limerick

Saturday 12th May

Wednesday 16th May

Thursday 3rd - Thursday 31st May

Darkness Into Light Limerick City @ 4.15am

Death and the Maiden: Irish Chamber Orchestra @ St

Exhibition: Painting the Stars @ Friars Gate Theatre,

Saturday 19th May

Marys Cathedral 7pm

Kilmallock, Co. Limerick

Storytime with the Under the Bed Monsters @ Granary

Friday 18th May

Monday 7th May

Library, The Granary, Michael Street, Limerick 11.30am

Lisa Canny @ Dolans 8pm

Conversation Programme for People Living with Dementia

Saturday 19th May

Friday 25th May

@ The Hunt Museum 2.30pm - 4pm

Twinkle Twinkle @ Belltable, 69 O'Connell Street,

Finbar Furey @ UCH 8pm

Tuesday 8th May

Limerick 11am, 12.30pm & 2pm

Saturday 26th May

Lecture: Mikael Fernström: 'Pocket Museums' @ The Hunt

Saturday 20th May

Aslan 'Feel NO SHAME' 30 Year Anniversary @ The Big

Museum 1pm - 2pm

Family Fun Race Day @ Limerick Racecourse 2pm

Top 8pm

Saturday 12th May

Thursday 31st May

Watercolours with Mary Dillon @ The Hunt Museum

Iarla O'Lionaird & Steve Cooney @ Dolans 8pm

10.30am - 4pm

MUSIC

Wednesday 16th - Friday 18th May

Tuesday 1st May

Unwrap Fashion Festival 2018

The Michael Jackson History Show @ UCH 8pm

SPORT

Saturday 19th May

Thursday 3rd - Monday 7th May

Friday 4th - Sunday 6th May

National Drawing Day @ The Hunt Museum 11am - 3pm

Fleadh by the Feale 2018 @ Abbeyfeale

Nevsail's Zorb Ball Sessions @ The Hunt Museum

Sunday 27th May

Thursday 3rd May

Saturday 12th May

Brick Con Limerick @ St Johns CMWS, Mulgrave Street,

Siomha & Brian O'Brien @ Dolans 8pm

Limerick FC V St Patrick's Athletic @ Marketsfield

Limerick 10am - 6pm

Saturday 5th May

6.30pm Monday 21st May Limerick FC V Cork City @ Marketsfield , time TBC COMEDY/THEATRE Tuesday 1st - Thursday 3rd May Echoes @ Belltable, 69 O'Connell Street, Limerick 8pm Tuesday 1st - Thursday 3rd May Minding Frankie @ Lime Tree Theatre 8pm Saturday 12th May Blindboy Podcast Tour @ Dolans 7:30 Friday 18th & Saturday 19th May Mario Rosenstock @ UCH 8pm Friday 25th & Saturday 26th May Autumn Royal @ Belltable, 69 O'Connell Street, Limerick 8pm

Fo l l ow u s o n l i n e fo r m o re e ve n t l i s t i n g s w w w. t h e l i m e r i c k m a g a z i n e. co m

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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

Cl o s i n g t i m e 1 0 M i n ut e s W i t h . . . Sean Curtin

Name: Sean Curtin Occupation: Photographer

As a photographer, I appreciate light a lot and sunrise is

Are you superstitious/Do you have any personal rituals

one of those special times of the day that many people miss

for good luck?

quite often, which is the shame as each new sunrise radiates

I am not superstitious at all, not really a believer in that stuff.

with possibilities.

I have learned that you make your own luck and sometimes

Fun fact about you:

not as the case may be. As they say “Prepare for the worst

I am a Landrover fanatic. It’s an illness really.

So as Landrover say “One Life, Live It”

but hope for the best”

Lesser known fact: I’m a water baby according to my wife

What one thing do you never leave the house without?

How would you sum up your life in 6 words?

Kate. Any chance I can get I'm beside the sea, in it or

I forget everything, I’d like to say keys, wallet, phone but

Driven, fast, breath-taking, invigorating, illuminating and

covered by it. I discovered surfing a few years back and am

always end up ordering lunch to find out I have no wallet or

passionate

hooked. I love being in the open water. It’s refreshing for

can’t ring Kate because I have forgotten my phone.

the body and soul What motivates you in the morning?

Describe your ideal weekend in Limerick? Any hidden or lesser known talents?

I try escape to the coast whenever I can. However, some

Depends who you ask……..

of my favourite weekends in Limerick have gone like this,

Not to sound clichéd, life itself. It is for living.

lazy breakfast in the milk market, strolling around getting As a child what did you want to be growing up?

nibbles, bumping randomly into familiar faces, catching up

I walked the Camino de Santiago in 2014 with my wife.

A truck driver, thought I would be a globe trotter and get to

with folks in the bustling crowd. Its the best way to start a

I was a bit reluctant to go at the time as work was so busy

see so much of the world meet so many interesting people.

day, the vibe in the Milk Market is hard to beat. Going for

(City of Culture). We walked 750Km in 24 days with a

My ambitions changed when I realised that you really didn’t

a run along the canal bank out by U.L and home for lunch

total disconnect from work, social media and life really.

get to enjoy the world from the cab of a truck.

with the wifey. An evening stroll around the river invariably

A complete disconnect allowed me to see the world in a

ends up with a few sneaky pints before dinner with friends

whole new light. In that time we talked about not waiting

What is your favourite word?

chatting till the late hours in some of the greatest bars

until retirement to do all we had dreamed. Who knows

Fred

limerick has to offer. Sundays are lazy and normally spent

when your time is up so why wait for that rainy day? It

chilling the folks and family.

was an experience that changed our lives. I came home and

Favourite quote of all time?

rearranged the way I live life. I have a “work life balance

“There's a sunrise and a sunset every single day, and they're

Favourite place to grab a bite to eat?

now” Or what Kate calls a work hard play hard life! I still

absolutely free. Don't miss so many of them.” Jo Walton

This is a hard one. Kate and I have three favourites, The

work long hours but now really appreciate the small things.

Curragower for everything from a quick lunch to a cozy

For example when I am in Limerick, I take a walk around

What is the most recent book you have read?

night by the fire. Azure has always been a firm favourite for

the three bridges at sunrise before I start into the day. Just to

The little book of lost things by John Connolly. It really

us, we have celebrated many an occasion there in style. Last

have that hour or so before delving into the madness.

sticks with you.

but by no means least, The Piccola Pizzeria, Kate brought me there when we were first dating (nearly twenty years ago now) and for both of us it is like home.

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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE

Best drink in town? Tuesday night pints of Guinness in Myles Breens Favourite people? My parents, wife, family and friends. (in no particular order of course!) All of whom I owe everything and would be nothing without. Happiness is....... Contentment, well for me at least. I am grateful for those in my life that l love and who love me. I am grateful for this life and who I have become in it, for all that I have achieved and for all that is yet to be. Almost every day I reflect on what I have to be thankful for and it’s these three that makes me feel all the good vibes. Some think mediation takes hours, seriously though, a few minutes when, walking to work, making coffee or stuck in traffic is all it takes to breath in reflect and be happy for a great many things in life. Try it. You might surprise yourself. Article by: Michelle Costello Photography by: True Media

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