Sunday 19 November 2017

Project Arthur

There’s a bear with a white head and a furry brown body. He wears a blue shirt with Kids Arthritis on it and black pants. He has two big blue eyes and one massive smile. This is the very special Arthur the Kids Arthritis Bear.

Most of us have a toy from our childhood, mine is Arthur. Arthur and his massive smile would join me for hospital appointments and operations for my Juvenile Arthritis. When I’d enter a ward after an operation the smile on Arthur’s face would make the other children and nurses smile as well. He also gives the biggest cuddles that makes all the pain disappear.

This is why when I founded Australia's First and Leading organisation solely dedicated to supporting the 1 in 1000 children in Australia living with Juvenile Arthritis, Kids Arthritis. It was a no-brainer to make Arthur the cute, cuddly and official mascot of Kids Arthritis. Which is how he got his name: Arthur the Kids Arthritis Bear.



Arthur now brings smiles and offers hugs to children all over the world living with Juvenile Arthritis. So much so that now I’ve decided to turn Arthur into a heat pack and give every child in Australia living with Juvenile Arthritis their own Heat Pack Arthur by 2021. This will mean that now Arthur the Kids Arthritis Bear will be able give children living with Juvenile Arthritis a nice warm hug to relieve their pain.

There are no words to describe how incredible this feels that my favourite childhood bear is having the same impact it did on me, on other children living with Juvenile Arthritis. If you’d like to change a child’s life living with Juvenile Arthritis and give them a Heat Pack Arthur: www.kidsarthritis.org

Loosing Sight..

At the beginning of 2017 I shared with you all about “The Day I Lost my Sight”. Through writing this about my blindness in my right eye due to my Juvenile Arthritis that began in my teenage years, many reached out to me and Kids Arthritis to share their stories and access support.

During October 2017 I visited my Opthamologist, had some scans of my eyes and this was all fine, but the result wasn’t.
Once again I was back in the big blue chair and on the screen were the images which had been taken.
What happened next, changed my life.

On the screen, I saw the scan of the back of my eye and what was showing were some tiny
‘bubbles’ in the left eye (my seeing eye). These bubbles aren’t friendly bubbles, they’re Macular Degeneration.

The look on the Opthamologist face said it all.

Surprised, upset and unsure of how this could come about. All the medical treatments are
supposed to prevent this from happening, but still it has occured.



But you know what I did in that moment. I didn’t get angry or upset. I thought about the 1 in
1000 children in Australia living with Juvenile Arthritis. About how much pain they’re in right now and everyday, thinking they’re the only ones living like this. I also thought how much they need someone like me who can stand up for them living with Juvenile Arthritis and Kids Arthritis tosupport them and show them that it’s going to be ok.

Medical professionals don’t know yet when my sight will disappear, but what I do know is that with your help we can ensure that more children living with Juvenile Arthritis, who could be going through this situation don’t need to do it alone.

National Juvenile Arthritis Month


“What does wearing blue mean to you?”

Is the question I’ve been asking children that live with Juvenile Arthritis over the past few months.

“Wearing blue means that people do care about the pain I’m in each day.”

“My friends can see that I’m not ashamed of living with Juvenile Arthritis.”

These are just two of the many answers I received.
Why was I asking children that live with Juvenile Arthritis this?
October is a very special month in many ways for myself. It’s the month Kids Arthritis celebrates its

 2nd birthday! The month we hold Australia’s Biggest and Bluest Night for Kids Arthritis, Arthur’s Big Blue Night, but it’s also National Juvenile Arthritis Awareness Month.
Blue is the colour of Kids Arthritis. It represents the courage and smiles that children living with the pain of Juvenile Arthritis have. This October I invite you to wear your favourite blue shirt, socks, jacket, dress, anything that’s blue to show that you support children living with Juvenile Arthritis.

It’s a simple thing you can do to support the 1 in 1000 children in Australia living with Juvenile Arthritis. I also encourage you to upload your blue outfit onto social media to show me, your friends and family online that you support children living with Juvenile Arthritis.

Now, what does the word ‘support’ mean when living with Juvenile Arthritis?

To me, a lifelong severe suffer of Juvenile Arthritis, it means that the people around me in my community, whether that be online or the Adelaide Hills. Want to be there and show that they care about the pain, stiffness, and isolation that children living with Juvenile Arthritis endure.

So, this October I invite you to wear something blue to show that you support children living with Juvenile Arthritis.