2nd edition 2013
ThiS issue: - HOPE AND ‘HOME’ FOR RECOVERY CLIENTS - TRANSFORMING WITH NEW OPPORTUNITIES - PRAISE FOR A LIFE OF SERVICE
Wills Update
YOUR WILL A GIFT OF A LIFETIME
News & stories from The Salvation Army Wills & Bequests team
Hope and ‘home’ for recovery clients
For most of his life Nigel says he “never touched drugs” and had no addiction issues, yet within a few short years, the once senior Canberra Treasury advisor, who had been earning a six-figure salary, had lost his home and was living in his car. He eventually booked himself into The Salvation Army’s William Booth Recovery Services Centre for addiction to prescription medication. Now eight months into the recovery program, Nigel says he is so thankful to have the chance to reassess his life and faith. Nigel served for eight years in the Australian Defence Force and went on to work as a policy advisor in government agencies. During that time, he also worked on a number of COAG (Council of Australian Governments) taskforces. Later “headhunted” and offered a new job interstate, Nigel sold his home and moved. But, he says, for the first time in what had been a bright career, he “suffered physical bullying” and lost his job. He says the experience “hit hard”. With access to stimulant medication (he had been diagnosed earlier with adult ADHD) Nigel eventually began “doctor shopping” for multiple scripts.
Photo: Shairon Paterson
“I was in a really dark, lonely place before I came in here, so, when I came through the doors (and that’s why I love The Salvation Army) just to have that genuine caring and warmth and support – that was like gold.” – Nigel
Nigel says he is “humbled and thankful” for the support he has received.
Life soon spiralled out of control. “I am staggered at how quickly it can happen,” says Nigel. Now undertaking the Bridge program at the William Booth service in Sydney’s Surry Hills, Nigel says: “I have been here about eight months and … it has saved my life.” He has shared his story with business leaders and Rotary groups, and now wants to spend his life “investing in others” rather than chasing money and career. “I am very humbled and very thankful (for the support),” he says. Recently, residents of the service (which offers an abstinence-based residential rehabilitation program for around 500 men and women each year who have drug, alcohol and/or gambling issues) benefitted from a complete gutting and rebuild of the first floor. Salvation Army Major Bob Seymour, the service manager, says
the service effectively becomes “home” to participants. The first floor bedrooms and a detoxification unit had only minor repairs over the past 40 years and, he says, had a deeply “institutional” feel. Made possible in part through the generosity of bequest funding, Bob says of the renovation: “What we wanted to do was change the whole appearance of the place, add a great deal of colour and use the space much more effectively. “We have also been able to build more indoor recreational space. Being a bit of a bunker of a building in Surry Hills, we don’t have outdoor recreational space.” Since the upgrade, the service is now also able to offer a detoxification service for women. Bob says he is thankful to donors who have helped make the service upgrade possible and says: “The support changes people’s lives significantly!”