I took the day of work on Thursday to volunteer my photography skills to a charity that was having an opening event. I'd volunteered my skills several months ago to them from seeing an advert on the Virgin Unite site requesting photographers. I'd not expected to hear anything back as I'd done similar with other charities in the past and not had them come back to me. Well last week I received an e-mail asking if I was available to photograph an event for the charity, I replied and said yes of course.
I got up early Thursday and headed upto central London with my camera gear feeling a little nervous. I found it strange that an event I'd volunteered to do and wasn't being paid for still made me feel as nervous as a paid event. I arrived on time and started working straight away photographing some of the rooms in the new home, the charity had bought 3 terrace houses near UCL Hospital and converted it into one house providing free accommodation for families of children receiving treatment for cancer and leukaemia in London. The next 3 hours seemed to fly away as I skirted around taking photographs of everyone there and the actual ribbon cutting.
I followed Marie Jordon as she was shown round some of the rooms and was found myself struck by the conversation between her and the lady showing her round. It was a genuine eye opener on how much hard work had been put in to achieve the success of the project.
I later caught up with Marie's husband Eddie to grab some photographs of him, only to find him on the phone to The Times doing an interview for the charity, once he finished Ellana the Senior Press officer for the charity took him round the house to see all the hard work that had been done. It was interesting to see him noticing the small details and commenting on them.
The thing with being the person with the camera is after about the first half hour people stop noticing you and start being themselves. This is when you start seeing people as they really are and what struck me most about everyone there was they really cared about the people the charity was helping and had a genuine interest in what it was doing.
Thursday morning has helped to change my mind on something I was quite determined about. As many of you already know, mainly because I wont shut up about it I'm running the Edinburgh Marathon this coming May. I'd originally said I wasn't going to run it for a charity as I wanted it as a personal challenge. This disappointed some of my friends as they thought it was an opportunity missed, well I've changed my mind and decided that I shall run for CLIC Sargent. The work this charity does makes a big difference on many peoples lives, they don't just provide accommodation, they also employ and fund care professionals in hospitals across the UK. If you have a moment then goto their website to learn a little more about what they do. If you would like to sponsor my first ever marathon then just pop over to my Just Giving page and help me to raise money for a really good charity.