Lifeline counsellors to meet with Harry and Meghan
Lifeline counsellors to meet with the Duke and Duchess of Sussex in Wellington
AUCKLAND, October 24, 2018 –
Lifeline representatives will be meeting the Duke and
Duchess of Sussex, Harry and Meghan, on Monday 29th October
in Wellington during their upcoming tour of New
Zealand.
Attendees from Lifeline will include
volunteer telephone counsellor, Victoria Kendall, who lost
her father and grandfather to suicide; Year 13 student,
Leroy, who has been volunteering as a Kidsline buddy for 12
months, and Lifeline’s Clinical Manager, Renee Matthews.
Victoria commented: “We have such different lives,
and at the same time, we share an interest in mental health
and helping others. So I feel we can connect on a personal
level.”
Talking about her experience as a Lifeline
Telephone Counsellor, Victoria says, “I’ve learned how
much of a power for good you can be when you just stop and
connect with somebody—and that connection can be at a deep
level in a short space of time. That’s massive.”
Lifeline Aotearoa receives no government funding for its
0800 helpline so is reliant on public support to be able to
answer calls and the generous efforts of volunteers like
Victoria and Leroy.
When asked how her Lifeline
training has helped her personally, Victoria added “I’m
so fortunate that I trained with Lifeline when I did because
it really changed the grieving process for me. I felt like I
was doing something that was meaningful and my dad would be
so proud of me. Something good has come from something so
awful.”
The meeting with Meghan and Harry came about
after Lifeline extended an invitation to Kensington Palace
during their recent national fundraising campaign, The 72
Club.
Clinical Manager, Renee Matthews said “Prince
Harry and Prince William have been so open about mental
health in recent years, and this support has going a long
way to destigmatise the subject globally. We hoped the Duke
and Duchess would be interested in our service, and in
particular how Kidsline trains teenagers to support younger
children through difficult times.”
In addition to
phone calls, Lifeline provides support via text messaging.
Commented Renee, “We’re seeing increasing numbers of
young people texting us. Our last quarter showed 2,400 text
conversations and 65% of these were from
under-20-year-olds.”
Kidsline Buddy Leroy, a Year 13
student, is keenly aware of how his voluntary work is needed
for his generation. “I reckon for boys, we’ve grown up
with ideas like we’re not supposed to share our feelings,
so we keep them bottled up. I’m hoping this will change
when more of us volunteer.”
Leroy added “My
callers are between 8 and 13, and it’s mostly everyday
things like relationships. That’s good because it stops
all the smaller things getting bigger.” He commented
“I’m using my skills outside of Kidsline too. I used to
be a scout leader and there was a bullying incident where
one boy got quite upset so I sat down with him and talked
through how he was and how I had similar experiences. That
helped him feel better”. And what does Leroy think about
meeting the Duke and Duchess? “I’m looking forward to
saying I’ve met royalty! And I’ll get the chance to tell
them about Kidsline, too.”
Asked how Lifeline
Executive Director, Glenda Schnell felt about Lifeline’s
front-line staff meeting the Duke and Duchess, she commented
“It’s a genuine privilege for our younger volunteers to
meet Meghan and Harry. We hope the volunteers will be able
to share stories of the transformations they have played a
part in creating. We know Lifeline training changes
volunteers’ lives, the people they help, and those close
to them. I feel very proud.”
The meeting with the
Royals comes in the closing weeks of Lifeline’s national
fundraising campaign The 72 Club and a recent announcement
about its fee for service Zero Suicide Workplace programme
for corporates.
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