Lizzie Sullivan - Founder of Whole Again Communities

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

I can’t choose just one! First, my two children. Second, setting up Whole Again Communities – a space where lovely ordinary people in Treneere and the surrounds can come together and gain confidence to work towards reaching their potential. And finally, still gig rowing (badly) and loving it even more at 60.

What motivates you to do what you do?

My absolute passion and desire to give people a chance; people who have been discriminated against and/or who live in a part of our community that has been under-resourced. To give them the opportunity to build their confidence and reach their potential. To give them the opportunity to learn and achieve in a more practical hands-on way through cooking, gardening and upcycling. As an intelligent capable woman who has lived with the frustrations of trying to learn and achieve with a dyslexic, dyspraxic ADHD brain, I feel well equipped to understand a bit about how people can become/accept the labels they are given: lazy, stupid, a nightmare, all over the place. I wanted do well at school. I enjoyed learning and I liked expressing my views and opinions even though I was very shy. However, I couldn’t put things down on paper. I was, and still am, ashamed of my handwriting and felt, and still feel, constantly stressed and frustrated by my lack of ability to remember things and organise myself and my time.

I’m a very practical person who loves food and nutrition and caring for people in our local community and for our natural environment. I’m passionate about sharing this with others.

What do you owe your mother?

The ability to laugh and cry easily. An Irish sense of humour, practicality, bluntness, determination and an all-round general appreciation and joy for the simple things of life: family, friendship, food laughter and travel. She taught me the principles of basic healthy eating, using homegrown produce and eating a homemade diet on a budget and without waste. Anything we did not eat was kept for the next meal or fed to our dogs.

Also, my dyslexic/ADD brain.

Which women inspire you and why?

Goodness…so many! My dear friend Mo O’Brien has just completed a fundraising row of 3,000 miles across the Atlantic – Mo is 60-years-old and is deaf.

Women I have the good fortune to work with at WAC like Jo Crooky and Emma Harvey – hardworking, down-to-earth mothers with social consciences, who care amazingly well for children with learning challenges. These women manage their families, while dealing with challenging work and self-employment situations, but still find time to support others in their community,

Suzy Messenger, Isabella Moriarty, Judith Kingdom and Janet Ross for helping me to see and develop my own potential

Shirley Pitts, Anna Murphy, Sarah Judd, Lynne Coakley, Maria McEwan and Sue Nankervis – all amazing, strong, calm, resilient role models who have the ability to turn trauma and heartache into challenges for future motivation and success.

My daughter Yasmin inspires me with her strength and sensitivity when standing up for people. Yasmin can challenge a lack of fair play and articulate her position with passion and flair. She is a better and clearer version of myself with much untapped potential.

What are you reading?

Foodie nutrition stuff. Self-care stuff. I have a manic mind and I read quite slowly so I tend to flick through magazines and papers, but I have a big pile of books on the table beside my bed!

For relaxation, I read authors like Maeve Binchy. Any old crap really, particularly light-hearted funny books, about real people and real places. Irish novelists are my favourites.

I watched the film ‘The Reader’ years ago, and it had a profound lifelong effect on me. I’m currently reading this book. It’s about a German woman working as a warden in a concentration camp during WWII. She is ashamed of not being able to read, and so accepted the blame for signing the authorisation papers to have Jews sent to gas chambers, rather than have people find out she was illiterate.

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

From my early childhood living on the farm in a rural community in Ireland with four brothers, I was aware of gender stereotyping at this time. For example, when my mum went out to work, and had seven children all living at home, as the oldest girl I was expected to wait on my dad and brothers. I strongly challenged this.

Having spent much of my adult working life in support work in a predominantly strong female-orientated environment I have not been so conscious of gender barriers.

I have observed that in meetings, for example, some men “make fun of” me and other women who take the lead by rolling their eyes.

How can the world be made a better place for women?

Oh God… where to start? For me, it’s about making the place I love, Penzance, its people and communities and environment, the best they can be. We need more openness and fairness in distributing funding to provide more opportunities for women (and everyone really) to support them to earn a better living.

We need more education to help change attitudes about life stages, especially menopause. I’ve had the great fortune to have met and now sometimes work with Isabella Moriarty (who is an expert on menopause self-care).

We need better opportunities for woman to work flexi-hours or to work remotely. I often do my most productive reports, plans or funding bids from the comfort of my PJs and very comfy bed.

Describe your perfect day?

It wouldn’t be any one particular day. Any day where I have slept well and wake refreshed, have a sense of purpose doing something I enjoy – that could be work, walking on the beach or spending time with special friends. The most delightful and life-affirming thing that I do at this current stage of my life is spending time on the beach or walking the cliffs and countryside with my husband and gorgeous four-year-old grandson Charlie and my 16-year-old granddaughter Mia.

I love the rainy days where I stay in my PJs watching rubbish telly or reading, surfing social media, organising my busy calendar or creating lots of meals from a few basic ingredients.

We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

I’d never really thought about this before! It’s a very good question!

Helen Glover, Mo ’Brien, Helen Swift, Rowena Cade … I’m afraid I don’t know enough about local historical women.

Perhaps a collage of all the lovely hardworking down-to-earth role models I have the pleasure to know and meet at my home and workplace, on the Treneere Estate. (I do have a simple idea up my sleeve for more local arty people to do something.)

Give us a tip?

The age-old tip: Keep it simple. Accept what you can’t change and change what you can. Enjoy our local environment, and use our lovely local shops and small businesses (Thornes, The Peat Project, Bosavern Farm, Archie Browns, local markets and refill projects). Walk, cycle or use public transport more. Take advantage of the many repair cafes that are popping up in our community.

Use a flask or other reusable container, challenge plastic waste and where possible only buy stuff that’s not wrapped in plastic and excess packaging.

If you ever get a chance to attend one of Isabella Moriarty’s workshops on menopause self-care, I hope you enjoy it and appreciate it as much as I have.

About Lizzie Lewis/Sullivan: I was born on a farm in the wilds of West Cork in Southern Ireland in 1959, oldest girl of seven siblings. My family moved to the London suburb of Bexleyheath when I was 9 years old, for better work prospects for us all.  

At age 27, I visited Penzance for a weekend and fell in love with it. I moved here within six weeks.

I missed my job as manager of a small healthy eating café in Greenwich and yearned for a catering opportunity. I fell in love with Dandelions in Causeway head (it sadly ceased trading around 20 years ago) and the now thriving Archie Browns.

I completed a catering/chef course and was developing a program of healthy eating recipes to deliver part-time courses at a local college; at the same time, I became pregnant. I put most career aspirations to one side and concentrated on being a mum. With no family in Cornwall and my then husband a fisherman, I could see no way to combine parenting and work for a few years at least.

I started work for CN4C when my children were in full-time education and absolutely loved working as a Community Learning support worker. However, the challenges of being dyslexic/ADD made it impossible for me to continue working in conventional learning and training environment.

I came up with the idea to reach out to and support the lovely ordinary people in my community, and began to devise soup recipes to improve my health whilst on a tight budget. I went on to set up Whole Again Communities in September 2013.

About Whole Again Communities

Whole Again Communities (WAC) is a social enterprise which encourages and supports people to learn to cook good quality, affordable food from scratch so that they can embrace healthy eating at home.

Whole Again Communities is progressing towards being self-funding through catering events – our catering service is available for meetings, workshops, weddings, parties and many more occasions, all reasonably priced and super healthy!

Whole Again Communities is a Community Interest Company. Started by Liz Sullivan in 2013 and founded on the stone soup principles, Liz began by running workshops for other women living on a shoestring budget with an interest in healthy eating. These workshops were such a success that the people who attended went on to help set up the weekly Open House, and in January 2016 we acquired our own venue which enabled us to expand our offer to more workshops, catering for outside events and offering venue hire.

Kate Campbell - Writer & Director of The Charles Causley Trust

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

Being pregnant (I did not thrive!) giving birth (my son did not ‘pop’ out!) and then surviving the onslaught of views, opinions & expectations of other people and society in general surrounding motherhood and parenting (WTF!) but it was all worth it because I now have an amazing, thoughtful, opinionated, stubborn, determined, confident, kind teenager and I am so incredibly proud I could literally cry just writing this!

What motivates you to do what you do?

My enduring love of the arts in all of its many wonderful and evolving forms. My need to be always learning something new and creating stuff. My never ending curiosity and desire to understand the world around me. Conversations with other people. My expenditure versus income imbalance!

Seriously, I’d go mad if I wasn’t being mentally stimulated. I need to be engaged creatively inside of my working life and outside of it. I write, I read, I make, I create, I learn.

What do you owe your mother?

My creative genes. My argumentative nature. My compassion and empathy for other living things. My mum became a vegetarian in the 1970’s and she was, and still is, ahead of her time in her progressive attitudes about lots of things. She encouraged us to question things and to come to our own conclusions rather than follow the crowd. It wasn’t always easy advice to follow but now I’m glad and grateful.

Which women inspire you and why?

Any woman struggling up the road with a screaming toddler or trying to feed a crying baby amidst a sea of public disapproval. Every woman who has sacrificed (willingly or otherwise) her wants and needs for those of her children and/or her co-parent. Any woman with a child anywhere in the world who doesn’t get to pursue her hopes and dreams but still carries on nurturing and loving her children and making the world a better place. Any woman who speaks truth to power knowing it may be turned against her but she does it anyway. All the young women I meet who are grabbing the world with both hands and challenging the status quo because they see they have just as much right as their male counterparts (I’m a little bit jealous if you want the truth).

If I have to name names then it would be someone like American Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Just a brilliant, confident woman owning her own space.

What are you reading?

I had a lovely bunch of books for Christmas so I’m working my way through them. I’ve just finished Lemn Sissay’s autobiography My Name Is Why and it is a heartbreaking but life affirming and inspiring book. I first encountered Lemn when I was at University.  He came and gave a talk to us because he knew my lecturer and afterwards we all went out as a group to eat and talk. He was quite young then but now I realise, only a few years older than me, but he was such a life force. He seemed to literally crackle with energy and was completely mesmerising. He and his work had a big impact on me and kick started my love of performance poetry. I have followed his career ever since, seeing him perform all over the country. I knew about his difficult childhood because he has always talked about it from day one and it feeds his work but this book and it’s raw honesty made me weep for the boy he was. But it also made me whoop for the man he is.

I’m now reading Girl, Woman, Other by Bernardino Evarista. I had avoided reading it because I’m always a little wary of the hype around prize winning books but I’m so glad someone knew better and gave it to me anyway because it is really rather excellent. It lives up to its Booker prize winning status and I would thoroughly recommend it. It is beautifully observed and completely absorbing.

And in the spirit of speaking the truth, I must confess that I was also given Wham! George & Me by Andrew Ridgeley and devoured it from cover to cover! I completely own my 1980’s Wham! fan status!

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

None, or so I thought. And then I became pregnant and the world was shown to me anew! I was working as a journalist when I became pregnant and a male colleague who had interviewed me told me that I almost hadn’t got the job because a woman on the panel had suggested they bypass me because  “I would only go off and get pregnant at some point in the future”. At the time I remember being outraged and angry with this woman. Now I feel sad that she felt that was the only way to survive in a man’s world - to sell out other women. 

#MeToo was also an incredibly important and timely movement that has enabled women to reassess their experiences and reframe them for what they really were rather than what they were told they were. We have been able to see how, as women, we have been gaslighted and brainwashed into normalising our experiences and that includes me. It is an important time to be alive and I feel a great deal of hope for future generations of women. We have a long way to go but we’ve started being brave and challenging things, putting our heads above the parapets and having the courage of our convictions. 

How can the world be made a better place for women?

There are so many ways but a good start would be for society to not automatically assign all the drudgery of parenting to women. Attitudes need to change about women being seen as the carers and cleaners and men as the breadwinners. Women don’t have a genetic disposition that makes them better at it or makes them enjoy it more but we don't’ get much choice because it suits society and it suits a lot of men. We need to break these stereotypes that have been oppressing women for centuries and make it the norm for men and women to share care and domestic duties equally. More flexibility and support in the work place for parents of any gender. Better, more flexible support for men who want to stay at home looking after their children. More opportunities for women to be able to have children and have a career so equal paternity allowance. Society needs a massive overhaul basically. Unless we start changing the way we bring up boys and girls and the gender norms that we, as a society, are subconsciously enforcing, then we can change all the laws we want and it won’t change a thing in the long term. We really need to look at how gender expectations are set in childhood and then get reinforced throughout life. Don’t get me started on the whole media/social media pressure on young women to look a certain way or on how we need to have more open discussions about things like periods and the menopause. We have a long way to go but we’ve started important conversations so I have hope.

Describe your perfect day?

Getting up to discover that you are actually still a size 12 and do still fit into all of the clothes in your wardrobe and you had just been having a horrible nightmare about losing your waist to your middle years and only being able to wear things with elasticated waists!

Mooching around a museum or gallery, lunch with my family, who have been enjoying the mooching around bit as much as me (you did say my perfect day!). Some people watching. A bit of guilt-free reading followed by front row tickets for a theatre show then home to watch the Michael McIntyre Waitrose shopping sketch on YouTube with my son who never tires of it (it is very funny) before falling into bed knowing that you don’t have to set the alarm because it is Sunday the next day...heaven.

We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

Dawn French.

Give us a tip?

Trust your instincts.

About Kate: Kate Campbell did a degree in English before going on to study journalism at The London School of Printing and subsequently working as a journalist. After becoming a mum, she worked as a Creative Writing teacher and freelance writer before moving into writing and directing for theatre and managing literature/arts projects. She was the Writer in Residence at Plymouth City Museum in 2012. In 2016 she undertook an MA in Theatre Directing and has big plans to write and direct her own play in the not too distant future. She is currently the Director of The Charles Causley Trust.

Catrina Davies - Author & Songwriter

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

My greatest achievement so far has been to avoid some of the traps and pitfalls that make it impossible to achieve anything. Capitalist society is set up to force or lure us into a relentless cycle of production and consumption. We become completely preoccupied with day-to-day survival, which is so stressful or unpleasant we spend our free time distracting ourselves from the grinding nature of it.

I think it was Gary Snyder who said that happiness is the harmony between an individual and the life he (or she) leads. A certain amount of harmony between me and the life I lead is my greatest achievement so far, and this harmony will hopefully be the foundation for achieving something worthwhile. Unfortunately, what feels like harmony to me probably looks like failure to mainstream society. Trusting myself to decide what matters and what doesn’t is an ongoing challenge.

What motivates you to do what you do?

My books and songs are all part of an effort to process things I can’t process. So I’m motivated by a desire to not be mentally ill, and by the knowledge that sharing my experiences as honestly as I can will help other people, and therefore give my life meaning.

I’m also motivated by rage on behalf of the natural world, a desire to bear witness to the systematic destruction of all the things I love, and wanting to shout at the people causing this destruction.

In the context of ecological Armageddon and the climate emergency, it seems pathetic and futile to work to uphold the status quo.

What do you owe your mother?

My mother taught me to love, and be loved. I owe her my connection to the ocean, because it was her love of the ocean that brought us to Cornwall, and she was always putting us in it when we were children. She made sure I learned to play musical instruments, and taught me about empathy and compassion.

Which women inspire you and why?

My sisters both inspire me. They’re both much more out in the world than I am, on a day-to-day level, and I admire the energy they have for making things happen. I have a close friend who inspires me because of the effort she makes to live up to her principles. She catches her own fish and keeps her own bees and has a very soft kind of power that I think is truly radical. I have another friend who works in forestry conservation and rewilding. Her practical approach to ‘saving the planet’, which is completely without ego and based on total commitment and hard work is inspiring. My Nainy (grandmother on Dad’s side) inspires me because she survived a very difficult childhood  - working in a factory aged 12, then losing her whole family aged 14 when Liverpool was bombed in WW2. She lived into her nineties. Politicians like Angela Rayner and Nicola Sturgeon inspire me because they’re brave enough to be confrontational in public.

What are you reading?

Right now I’m reading Days Without End, by Sebastian Barry, which is a novel about two gay child soldiers fighting in the Indian Wars and the Civil War in America in the 19th century. It’s brutal but also lyrical. I’m also reading On Earth We Are Briefly Gorgeous, by the poet Ocean Vuong, who was a child refugee from Vietnam.

I recently finished Pat Barker’s novel, The Silence of the Girls, which is a retelling of the Iliad from a female perspective – also brutal. I also recently finished Girl, Woman, Other, by Bernadine Evaristo, which shared the Booker prize with Margaret Atwood. Two of my all-time-favourite books by women, which I dip into constantly while I’m writing, are Pond by Claire-Louise Bennett, and Teaching a Stone to Talk by Annie Dillard


What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

I taught myself to surf in my twenties (it’s an ongoing process) and I still sometimes find the male energy in the water intimidating. There are more girls and women in the surf now, but it’s  still the case that I’m often the only female out - probably because I don’t have kids! Some men are lovely to surf with, and I have loads of male surfer friends, but sometimes there’s a really aggressive, pushy vibe, and it’s a battle not to end up feeling bummed out. I refuse to let it stop me surfing though. It’s one of the best things in my life.

When I started DJ-ing in my late twenties, and then founded Sir Vinyl, with Dave Spenceley and Will West, I used to have to battle to be seen by the promoters we were working with. It was like I didn’t exist. Will and Dave were totally supportive and treated me like an equal, and all we cared about was the music, but when we were doing gigs it often felt like an uphill struggle to be anything other than a token girl. I got there in the end.

I’ve travelled a lot on my own, busking around Europe in a van, and also hiking in mountains,  and cycling trips that have involved a lot of wild camping. I’ve often had to act tougher than I feel, because men can be predatory when they see a woman travelling on her own. I’ve been followed, and men have acted inappropriately around me. I don’t think men have to deal with this kind of fear, and I’m sure it puts a lot of women off travelling on their own. 

How can the world be made a better place for women?

Personally I’d like paid leave for two days a months, when I have my period. I have terrible pain and it’s impossible to function normally. I think there should be absolute quotas in politics, so at least 50% of all governments always have to be women, and men and women have to take turns leading parties.

Also women should not have to wear such ridiculous shoes. You can’t run in heels. It’s like being hobbled. There’s no way men would put up with that. It’s way past time for women to be liberated from having to dress up like male sex fantasies just to get ordinary jobs.

Describe your perfect day?

I wake up at my shed and drink coffee outside in the sun, watching the sparrows. I surf perfect waves all on my own, then have breakfast and more coffee in the Dog and Rabbit café in St Just. I spend the whole of the rest of the day walking or cycling somewhere new and beautiful. When I’m completely physically exhausted, and have therefore finally quieted my mind, I meet my favourite people for a cold beer at the top of Gwenver. We cook freshly-caught mackerel on a fire and fall asleep under the stars.


We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

This is hard, because women have been almost completely written out of Cornish history. I’d probably go for Dora Russell (wife of Bertrand Russell, the famous philosopher – until he left her for their children’s governess). She was an author, feminist and social campaigner, who championed the use of birth control in the working class, started a progressive school, and campaigned for nuclear disarmament. She died at her home in Porthcurno in 1983, aged 92.

Give us a tip?

I have a brilliant tip for mending wetsuits: sew them up with dental floss. Seams you can just sew, for bigger holes save the weird little patch that always comes with a new wetsuit and sew that on. Trust me, it really works.

Sweeten rhubarb with bananas instead of sugar.

Put a layer of tiling mesh behind your skirting board to keep out rodents.

About Catrina Catrina Davies is an author and songwriter. She was born in Snowdonia and grew up in West Cornwall. She attended St Levan primary school and Cape Cornwall secondary school, before studying English at Cambridge University. She has worked as a TEFL teacher, gardener, waitress, flower-picker, DJ, circus cellist and builder. Her first book, a true story about busking from Norway to Portugal, was published in 2014. Her second book, Homesick: Why I Live in a Shed, a first-hand account of the housing crisis, was longlisted for the Baillie Gifford prize for non-fiction. Her second album, Belan, is released in January 2020.

LINKS

www.catrinadavies.co.uk

facebook.com/catrinadavieswriter

Twitter: @_CatrinaDavies

Instagram: catrinadavieswriter

catrina-davies-songs.bandcamp.com

mixcloud.com/catrinadj

Faye Dobinson - Artist

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

Maintaining the rich weave of the roles of artist, single mother, and of being a Love Activist! It’s been the ultimate balancing act for me as I have such a rich inner world and engage so deeply with the outer world too that I can get a little overwhelmed!

My solo travels in far flung locations, including twice on the Trans Siberian Railway, through India and Nepal, and also having exhibitions in Tibet and Mongolia which I feel are also worth a mention…

What motivates you to do what you do?

I have a deep drive to make art, to use creativity and to love people, all in the service of Love as a fierce force for change. I have never had a natural sense of logic or order, which has made life more beautiful though often very difficult when trying to manifest my ideas and visions! I have a cross-disciplinary experience of applying a creative, heart-led approach to different endeavours - personally, politically, culturally and socially. And the result is always an unfurling heart and therefore increased peace, productivity, connection and love.

I firmly believe in collaboration, the creation of community and honouring existing community. I see that artists and creatives can help society reimagine situations and scenarios and therefore open up spaces of possibility, hope and resolution.

What do you owe your mother?

Apart from a million pounds, I owe my mother everything - my life full stop, my life as an artist. She is exemplary as a woman who loves fiercely, works hard, believes in the arts and has humour on her side (she is also a total romantic on the quiet, as am I!). We are alike. She can drive me insane. I love her massively.

Which women inspire you and why?

My female friends that see all the reasons that something is going to work rather than why it won’t.

My sister Emma is a true force and inspiration. Due to a dreadful accident she was in a coma and we were told horror stories about her future (or rather the lack of it). She proceeded to blow us all away by rehabilitating and healing in the most incredible way and is now a very successful and respected Producer in often what might be seen as challenging countries and contexts. For instance, she helped produce the first episodes of BBC’s Question Time with, and for, Palestinian TV, while living and working there.

What are you reading?

I’ve just been blown away by ‘Mary Magdalene Revealed: The First Apostle, Her Feminist Gospel and the Christianity we Haven’t Tried Yet’ by Meggan Watterson. I currently have to keep it with me like a comfort blanket as it made me feel so seen and heard in terms of the courage required to pursue a life lived in love.

Two all-timers that I dip into again and again are ‘Women That Run With the Wolves’ by Clarissa Pinkola Estes and ‘To Bless the Space Between Us’ by the beautiful human John O’Donohue. Each of them I administer like medicine, with a dose being the random opening onto a page and drinking in the wisdom.

 What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

The emphasis on appearance equalling worth for women.

Coming of age as a female in London in the 80s and 90s meant stewing in a strange and restrictive pot of assertions about what one should look like, which I always found hard and exhausting. These ideas kept women much smaller and it felt like a constant push against a ridiculous limitation. My preoccupation with my looks and how they didn’t ‘fit’ this nonsense ideal used up far too much of my energy as a younger woman, energy that could have been spent on so much more of good. But being from a largely matriarchal family, I simultaneously had this reality of women as being funny, clever, quick, caring and a bit fierce reflected back to me. Thank goodness! It’s that force that my recent body of work has somehow given form to – it’s called, ‘The Rhythms Don’t Walk Alone: Discussion of Power and Love’, and suggests a way of being and moving through life that is rooted in generosity of spirit, vulnerability, radical kindness, humour as a tool to connect, fierce love, authenticity, dignity and the adopting of a more creative approach to shared concerns and sticking points. It is a way of freedom, rooted in love. That’s the world I am presenting to my 12 year old daughter!

How can the world be made a better place for women?

A world where a woman’s contribution is valued regardless of her configuration would be ace?

A world where female professionals are regarded in the same way as male professionals in ALL industries wouldn’t go amiss…

Women getting paid the same as men for the same job…

I could go on!

A massive step would be women being taught their history too - that is, the broad, brave, full story of women for the last 2000 years and beyond, and not just the edited highlights. We’ve only really heard about Mankind in any rich and complex way…and he sometimes has lacked imagination and humour! We are rewriting humanity’s story now INCLUDING womankind, so it’s going to be a much better, balanced, wry read.

Describe your perfect day?

Warm sun on my bones and shining in my face, a little adventure, art, laughter, wonderful food, a twilight swim and a rich warm night of sitting outside, laughing, talking, dining with people I love, culminating in dancing to phenomenal tunes (and some excellent kissing).

We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

I reckon I would honour the ‘Soul of the Cornish Woman’ - she who has endured the same struggles as the men who are celebrated, but from a different vantage point. The terrifically hard, gruelling and relentless work of keeping a house running, keeping a family flourishing while also more often than not having another job on top of that, all in a climate and landscape that can be unkind and harsh. A celebration of a true and alternative view of female experience.

Give us a tip? 

Apart from putting a beer bottle top into the bottom of a lump of soap to stop it sticking to the sink (you are welcome...), I would say: keep doing what you can to re-humanise people rather than dehumanise them. It’s often hard, but regularly (not always, of course) reaps beautiful rewards. We all judge, and often negatively, but it’s what we do with those judgements, that’s where the gold is. I endeavour to talk to people, to find a point of connection, no matter how small, that helps us ‘see’ each other as a fellow human. As a result, even for a moment, we feel less alone and we are all in this together - and THAT is a great reminder, in these often challenging times.

About Faye Faye Dobinson was born in London in 1976 and now lives in Penzance. She studied Fine Art at Camberwell College of Art 1994-95 and Falmouth University of Art 2006-2011.

After leaving Camberwell College, Faye was at times a croupier in London casinos, also running creativity-based youth projects and teaching children with emotional and behavioural issues. She travelled extensively on her own exploring the link between topography and location with art, resulting in solo exhibitions in both Mongolia and Tibet. She continued making and exhibiting and also helped establish Europe’s first contemporary Tibetan art gallery in East London. Her move to Cornwall in 2006, itself a continuation of the influence of location over her artwork, coincided with discovering she was pregnant with her daughter, which led her to resume her studies at Falmouth University with her 9 month old, where she obtained a First Class Degree. Since then Faye has had a residency at Porthmeor Studios in St Ives while having a studio at Trewidden Gardens, Newlyn. She leads the year-long ‘Defining Practice’ course alongside her own shorter courses in Experimental Figure work at The Newlyn School of Art and is also a Visiting Practitioner at The London College of Fashion.

Faye’s exhibition ‘The Rhythms Don’t Walk Alone: Discussion of Power and Love’ is open at the new Jupiter Gallery in Newlyn, until 31/12/19, 11-6pm Wednesday to Saturday.

The next event in the space is Faye in conversation her work and process with artist Rob Unett on 8/12/19 from 1.30pm.

Visit www.jupitergallery.co.uk and www.fayedobinson.com for more information.

Mimi Beard - Trainee Accountant

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

My greatest achievement today is passing my level 1 AAT qualification whilst being homeless. During this period I had lost my accommodation and was placed into emergency housing for 3 months. I didn’t have any internet access or food facilities so I stayed at college until late in the evening each day to ensure I could access course materials and study. By passing my AAT qualification it led me into my journey to become a tax accountant which I am on now. 

What motivates you to do what you do?

In a somewhat ironic twist, being close to death has inspired me to make the most out of life. I have always been motivated to try and change my circumstances it wasn’t until Halloween 2017 when I overdosed and later came around in the Intensive Care Unit that I realised I needed to change my outlook. I can no longer actively destroy myself and now fight to ensure that should I die today I could look back and be proud of my life. 

What do you owe your mother?

This is a very complicated answer due to the premise of my childhood and circumstances. I suppose to be polite I can say that I owe a part of my resilience to her, as the situation with her growing up gave me a multitude of challenges I had to face to survive. 

Which women inspire you and why?

The women that inspired me in a woman very dear to my heart, Kate Gibson. She has shown strength despite her challenging health issues and has fought to keep positivity in her life. Kate welcomed me into her family during one of the darkest periods of my life and has stood by my side showing me that things will improve. I cannot express in words just how amazing this woman is. 

What are you reading?

Now that’s an amazing question! I’m such an avid reader so I’ve got a couple of books on the go. 

The main book I’m reading currently is 10 Minutes and 38 Seconds in this Strange World written by Elif Shafak. A book bought for me by Kate Gibson, mentioned above. It’s a haunting but beautiful story about a dying woman’s perception of life after her heart stops. 

I am also re-reading Bottom Billion by Paul Collier, an insightful and brilliantly researched book regarding the wealth disparity between 1st and 3rd world countries. Why the Bottom Billion have been trapped in poverty and how to go about changing this. 

The final book I’m currently reading is Nelson Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom. The book takes a deep and personal dive into Mandela’s life and the fight against apartheid. A must read. 

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

I believe the main time my gender impacted my life was when I was homeless or in supported accommodation as i was at a much greater risk of danger than my male counterparts. There were times I was absolutely terrified when homeless that anything could happen to me. 

How can the world be made a better place for women?

I think the best place is to start with showing compassion to one another. In an ideal world there would be no violence against women but I don’t have that power. It is, however, extremely important to educate men and young adults about consent and help support women coming forward about their experiences and finding a way to make the police procedures less traumatic for victims coming forward. 

Describe your perfect day?

If I could do anything I wanted, it would be to sit out in a field or woods in the sun with a great book and a blanket - away from people and disturbances and truly get lost in the story at my fingertips. 


We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

It would be great to have a statue of Rowena Cade - the Lamorna woman who not only designed but built the Minack theatre which is a beautiful area in which people flock to to experience breathtaking plays performed with a view. Not only did she build it but she was known to have lugged the granite to the construction site herself.

Give us a tip?

The only tip I can give it to ensure the work you do is at a brilliant quality and to keep reaching out to women. We will support you. 

About Mimi: Mimi is a young adult who grew up in poverty in Penzance, Cornwall. During her childhood, she faced a range of challenges, for abuse, chronic physical and mental illnesses and street homelessness. Despite all of this she fought to break out of the cyclical trap and threw herself into education. She studied her A levels while being homeless once again and achieved two As and a B in Psychology, Business, and Economics. With all of this, she risked everything by moving town and starting a professional accountancy job, despite her health and is now determined to help out others that have struggled with similar conditions. 

Katrina Naomi - Poet

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

Becoming a writer, and receiving awards for my poetry from national arts bodies, despite being expelled from school and being told I wasn’t going to achieve a thing in my life.

What motivates you to do what you do?

I began writing because I felt I had things I wanted to say, things perhaps that I didn’t see other people saying. I’ve come to love poetry, I have a real passion for it. I’m as surprised as the next person. I didn’t read a poem until I was 30. And now, If I don’t write, I don’t feel that I’m doing what I want to be doing with my life.

What do you owe your mother?

A great deal. She brought me and my sister up pretty much on her own. She taught me resilience and perseverance. She taught me to always be honest – this doesn’t make for a comfortable life but a good one, I think. And on a practical level, she was really good at budgeting, at living on very little money. This has stood me in good stead, as poets don’t exactly rake it in!

Which women inspire you and why?

Any woman who is following what she really wants to do inspires me – not what anyone else thinks she should be doing, or what’s fashionable or profitable – but following what’s in her heart and head.

What are you reading?

I usually read lots of books at once. I’m reading two poetry collections, Julia Copus’s Girlhood and Nancy Gaffield’s Meridian, plus Audrey Lorde’s essays on poetry and politics, Your Silence Will Not Protect You. I’m also reading Annie Dillard’s The Writing Life, and a biography Gerturde & Alice by Diana Souhami. I’m reading through my Cornish/Kernewek language homework (I find it really hard but I keep going with it) and also a really helpful book Mindful Tech: How to Bring Balance to Our Digital Lives by David M. Levy.

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

Quite a few. And things start when you’re young. One of the first things I remember was not being allowed to play cricket at school, even though several of the boys stuck up for me and said I should be in the school team. Because I was a girl, I had to play netball, which I thought was really boring. I was sexually harassed in a café job as a teenager and have experienced a lot worse since – including violence. My last poetry collection, The Way the Crocodile Taught Me, (Seren, 2016), covers some of these issues. Things are generally a lot easier now, although I recently had two male poets speak over me on a panel discussion, and I had to shout to get them to listen to me. I just want to be able to speak at a normal volume and be respected. The worst of it was that I don’t think the two male poets even realised that they were excluding me.

How can the world be made a better place for women?

There’s so much that needs changing. Getting rid of poverty would be a major starting point, so that women and girls have real choices in their lives, whether they live in Camborne or Karachi. But I can’t see that happening any time soon. I’d love to see girls at school being encouraged from a very young age to really believe that they have the power to do what they want. I’d like examples of gender discrimination to be taught in school, as this also impacts on boys, as well as young people who are questioning their sexuality. I think it’s really important for young boys and young men at school to be brought into the conversation on sexism. I love to hear boys calling other boys out on their sexism – I heard just that the other day. And I think schools could do a lot more on talking about the dire effects of pornography.

Describe your perfect day?

It would involve walking, swimming and dancing, preferably with my partner and friends. It would end end up with a picnic, a fire and some cocktails on the beach.

We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

All of those who work for, and volunteer for, Women’s Aid and other domestic violence charities in Cornwall.

Give us a tip?

I love this quote: ‘Whatever you think you can do or believe you can do, begin it. Action has magic, grace, and power in it.’ It’s attributed to Goethe. I have it pinned above my desk. It gives me confidence and reminds me of my mum telling me to ‘just get on with it’.

www.katrinanaomi.co.uk

About Katrina Katrina Naomi's fourth poetry pamphlet – Typhoon Etiquette – was published in April 2019 by Verve Poetry Press. It was inspired by her trip to Japan on an Arts Council-funded project. She was awarded an Authors’ Foundation grant by the UK’s Society of Authors for work on her third poetry collection, which is due from Seren in 2020. In 2018 she received a BBC commission for National Poetry Day. Her poetry has appeared in The TLS, Poetry London, The Poetry Review and Modern Poetry in Translation. She was shortlisted for the 2017 Forward Prize for Poetry. Her work has appeared on BBC TV and Radio 4’s Front Row and Poetry Please. Her latest collection, The Way the Crocodile Taught Me (Seren, 2016) was chosen by Foyles’ Bookshop as one of its #FoylesFive for poetry. Katrina was the first writer-in-residence at the Brontë Parsonage Museum in W Yorks, since then she has been poet-in-residence at the Arnolfini, Gladstone’s Library and the Leach Pottery. She has a PhD in creative writing (Goldsmiths) and tutors for Arvon, Ty Newydd and the Poetry School.


Judith Bailey - Musician & Conductor of the Penzance Orchestral Society

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

My greatest achievement was probably being accepted into Conducting Class with Maurice Miles at the Royal Academy of Music. There were four places and four men!! So he took all five of us.

What motivates you to do what you do?

I was advised to teach on leaving the Royal Academy (which was the safe option) and did so for financial necessity, teaching peripatetic woodwind in Hampshire. But my love of conducting/composition and the freelance world beckoned...so, having no gift or skill for teaching which made itself felt in some minor health worries, I left teaching in schools at the age of 30 and never looked back! I've been fortunate.. NOT always financially worry-free but I’ve managed, and enjoyed some college and adult teaching in later years with two orchestras inviting me to conduct, for almost 30 years.

What do you owe your mother?

I loved conducting to the radio when I was a small child and borrowed one of my mother's knitting needles to do so! She was always a great support and, as I was conducting regularly from the age of 28, she was able to attend many concerts during the next 16 or so years.  

Which women inspire you and why?

 Being born and growing up in Cornwall the Radford sisters were a great inspiration. They were brilliant women and ran the County Music Festival; they also founded Falmouth Opera in which Evelyn played and Maisie conducted.  

What are you reading?

I love reading and am currently reading Claire Tomalin's autobiography.

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

 As a conductor you are too busy to take too much notice of chauvinistic comments, though there were a few many years ago such as "you are competing with men etc". I ignored it and got on with the job. It's MUCH easier these days!

How can the world be made a better place for women?

This is an improving situation I think, especially in recent years with many women in top jobs - musical and otherwise.

Describe your perfect day?

Feeling gratitude for my seaside home, music, friends calling. I am NEVER bored and life is full of surprises .

We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

Possibly a statue of the Radfords? There have always been women who broke down barriers and did their own thing.

Give us a tip?

To echo the sound advice of the late Elisabeth Maconchy (composer and mother of Nicola Le Fanu), I think women must just get on with what they have to offer; it’s more productive than waving banners or protesting.

Links: Penzance Orchestral Society

About Judith Judith Bailey was born in Camborne. She trained at the Royal Academy of Music where she studied clarinet, piano, composition and conducting. Her freelance career in music has been largely centred in Hampshire, where for 30 years she directed the Petersfield and Southampton Concert Orchestras. During this period she had a large number of compositions for orchestra and instrumental ensemble published, often coming to Cornwall to do her writing at the house near Hayle, to which she moved permanently in 2001. She conducts the Penzance Orchestral Society, a vibrant orchestra in Penzance which performs regularly with soloists from all over the UK

 

Victoria Amran - Founder Of The Cornish Food Box Company

Victoria Amran (left) and sister Lucy.

Victoria Amran (left) and sister Lucy.

What do you consider your greatest achievement? 

Personally: My children and my husband. Yan is from Singapore, and moving to Cornwall is a world away in terms of culture. It’s been tough making it work but I think we’ve managed to pull it off. Professionally: Getting the Cornish Food Box to where it is today. It’s one of the toughest markets to try and make a business in, and I do feel like 6 years in we are finally getting somewhere. I used to own a business in Indonesia with another Cornish girl. We had an Indonesian business partner who tried to get us deported and steal the business from us. We were followed, had threats of drugs being planted in our houses and had to have secret meetings with judges to make sure we weren’t thrown out of the country and that we were able to keep our business. We took one of the regional government departments to court for corruption and won. It was 3 days before I got married – I was 28! 

What motivates you to do what you do?

This will sound very cheesy, but I am genuinely motivated by a love of the place that I come from. We were born and brought up in West Cornwall and to be able to run a business that is a commercial operation but which has obvious benefits for the county is something that Lucy and I are both very proud of. I am motivated by the fact that we have created a business that works for everyone involved. Customers get easy access to fresh Cornish food and drink by ordering online and having it delivered to their door, producers get paid a fair price and a year round market for their produce, and in the middle we have created a business that employs local people and has become a community hub.  I obviously want/need to earn a living, but I want to do it in a way that does make a difference – that leads the way with a different concept.  I deal with all our customers so to know that we are making lots of people happy is a real buzz. 

What do you owe your mother?

My mother is a pretty impressive woman. She has unbelievable amounts of drive and energy, and has always supported us in whatever scheme we are planning. Mum has shown us that in order to succeed you must work hard but work smart. Learn to delegate and if someone is putting something in your way get involved and make sure your voice is heard.  Mum is endlessly supportive and fair. She runs her own very successful business which she has built from scratch, so she has been able to help mentor us with Cornish Food Box. 

Which women inspire you and why?

My mum for her determination, drive and attitude. I will always support my boys in the same way she has supported us.  Delphine Robbe is a French woman who used to work for us in Indonesia. Today she runs a group called the Gili Eco Trust which is working to protect the local people, animals and environment on The Gili Islands which are situation between Bali and Lombok. The islands have undergone a boom in tourism which has been great for the economy, but devastating for the environment. Delphine has earned the respect of the island people, island government, state and national government in Indonesia through leadership, determination and passion, and she is having a real impact on the future of the islands. I hope her work will be rolled out in other areas as a flagship for sustainable tourism.

What are you reading?

A Suitable Boy – Vikram Seth

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

Growing up I really didn’t think that gender barriers existed. My mum had achieved massively in business and in politics, and I truly didn’t think this was something that affected me. I had a business in Indonesia for 10 years with another Cornish girl, and we faced real difficulties because we were white, western women running a business in a very male dominated environment.  Today here in Cornwall it’s come as a bit of a shock to discover a more subtle version of the same thing. My mum has always said that you have to get involved in order to change things so that’s exactly what we have done. Lucy is now the chair of Truro Chamber of Commerce, and I run a committee of the chamber called Truro Retail Group. We hope that by creating a positive, inclusive and forward thinking voice for the city we can make some real changes and have our voices heard.

How can the world be a better place for women?

Women’s problems in the UK are very different to issues in other parts of the world so I am not sure there is one answer to this question. In the UK the way the school system works in relation to mum’s working is completely wrong. Children start 10 minutes before the normal working day starts and school finishes 2 hours earlier than the standard working day ends. If you are working full time, then you either have to pay for childcare or clubs. Once you get home the pressure to make sure homework, projects, dress up days etc are done to the best possible standard is huge, and that’s before cooking a well-balanced family meal. There is a huge amount of unrealistic pressure applied to working mums which ultimately leaves you with a feeling of guilt if you aren’t able to do it all! 

Describe your perfect day...

Kids, Husband, Beach, BBQ, Sun, Good Friends, Long Summer Evening

We've noticed their aren't many statues of women in Cornwall, who would you see remembered? 

Rowena Cade – Minack Theatre and Emily Hobhouse – Human Rights Campaigner

Give us a tip?

If you want to make changes get involved and say what you think. Only positivity gets things done at the end of the day, and there isn’t anything you can do about yesterday apart from learn from it! 


The Cornish Food Box Company was started 6 years ago with the very simple aim of making it as easy as possible for people to buy Cornish food and drink as part of their food shop. CFBC works with more than 200 Cornish farmers, fishermen, bakers and food producers and has put more than £3 million back into the rural economy. Today the company has a central Truro shop and café, as well as a thriving online delivery service

Rachel Gunderson - Owner of The Honey Pot café, Penzance

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

There are 3 sorry!

Making a perfect tiny human all by myself (mostly by myself!)

Buying and running a sustainable small business in the town I love

Getting a 1st in my degree

What motivates you to do what you do?

Giving Rosa a safe and secure upbringing and making sure we and the people around us are happy and fulfilled.

What do you owe your mother?

Independent thought, not being afraid to form opinions and be passionate about them, to speak my mind, to acknowledge when I’m wrong, to be kind, forgiving and patient towards others,

Which women inspire you and why?

My Aunty Hester who has worked for Amnesty International and who now performs Humanist funerals and is a clever, thoughtful and strong feminist who is not afraid to have an educated discussion with anyone.

 My Great Aunty Mary who worked for the national children’s home and although she never married or had children, she fostered and brought up hundreds of children who needed a home.

Greta Thunberg of course – because she is just so right about it all.

My friend Lydia, who is single and in her fifties and just does everything right. She is the best type of Christian I know – she still swears and drinks and loves life with all the right morals. She has absolutely taken control of her happiness and is open and honest in every way she can be.

My employee and friend Tamar. A single mum of two with her head totally screwed on and the calmest, most controlled attitude towards parenting of anyone I know. She always makes me feel safe.

What are you reading?

I mainly read cook books and food articles. In terms of novels or actual books, I read a paragraph of this or a page or two of that sometimes. I’m just not a very good reader and really struggle to get information into my head from the page. I should make more effort and put time aside for books, or even audio books, I know, but somehow I haven’t managed to do that yet. Definitely a goal of mine.

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

I think running a business as a young, single female has definitely had some challenges that wouldn’t have been so obvious if I were a man. I’ve definitely felt at times that I’ve not been taken seriously, especially by male office-type professionals and especially after falling pregnant. I was told by my male accountant when I’d gone to him for some advice after finding out I was pregnant that I should ‘probably just throw the towel in now’ and treated with zero understanding or compassion, as though it was my fault and a stupid thing to have done. It gave me all the fire and determination to make it work, but could’ve been a very different story if I’d been a different person.

I had a male customer who was harassing female staff – and I did not feel I could have the conversation with him as I was also a woman and felt threatened, so ended up having to get the police involved. The PCSO who dealt with him was actually a woman, and she did a fantastic job at handling it.

Having to work and find childcare as a single mother and sole trader in the first 2 years of running a business. This is definitely a challenge and something I would not ever have to face as a man. Dealing with post-natal depression and the physical consequences of a caesarean birth resulting in taking extra time off work and the financial backlash from this.

How can the world be made a better place for women?

First things first, the world needs to actually BE A PLACE. So before we can do anything else we need to tackle the climate emergency with every ounce of our energy (I realise this includes following a vegan diet, and I am just about to state multiple eatings of cheese in my perfect day scenario…Forgive me).

But that aside - better services for mental health and menstruation education for girls and boys alike. Better understanding surrounding childbirth and childcare options. More funding available for childcare. Better contraception options, especially for men to take. Better education from birth for all children with norms of the patriarchy re-thought.

Describe your perfect day?

Camping on St Agnes, in the Isles of Scilly with my baby Rosa and my parents, brother, and nephew Oscar. Waking up in a tent next to the sea, swimming in the sea before breakfast, yoga stretches on the beach, delicious breakfast of probably some local eggs baked in last night’s leftover tomato and veg pasta sauce with some sumac and chili and some bread to dunk in – a stroll around the island and a picnic of Cornish blue cheese, oat cakes, chutney, apples and cherry tomatoes somewhere in the shade with a lovely view – a nap with Rosa on the beach, head in shade, body in sun, another big swim in the sea – probably around to the pub – a couple (few) pints of a nice IPA or pilsner and some chilli peanuts or crisps in the sun – back to the tent for a leisurely evening cooking with friends – all watching over and playing with Rosa - making a big veg curry with all the condiments or a Middle Eastern stew and nutty bulgarwheat tabbouleh, or some fresh courgette, lemon and mint linguine with some parmesan and garlic oil or some big veg and herb packed salads and just-dug new potatoes with some simple grilled freshly caught mackerel or crab and some fresh bread and a good garlicy mayonnaise – eating with friends whilst the sun goes down, many bottles of wine and good conversation into the night and a long, deep sleep in bed with Rosa in the fresh air of a tent. BLISS.

We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

All the wives of miners and fishermen and farmers who did all the real work behind the scenes and never get a mention?? I’m not sure really, don’t think I know of any notable Cornish women of history – maybe Mary Kellynack – but not really sure what she did other than walk to London…That’s not very good is it. I blame the patriarchy and our education system!! 

Laura Knight – my favourite artist of the Newlyn School.

Give us a tip?

Life is short. Do what makes you happy in the long-term. If something isn’t making you happy – don’t do it anymore! Be patient, forgive others and yourself. Community is everything – look out for others as you would yourself.

About Rachel: Born at Treliske in 1991, I grew up in Gulval with good, Methodist, liberal minded, environmentally conscious parents and brother two years my senior. I went to Gulval primary school – then a tiny village community primary school - that was wonderful. I didn’t enjoy secondary school at Mounts Bay or college at Truro at all and was ill for much of it. I was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome (M.E.) when I was 11 and had a year off school – unable to even move from lying in bed for much of that time and struggling as much with the mental health side of the illness as the physical that it is most commonly associated with. This definitely shaped most of my teenage years and I think I was probably spoilt by my parents as a result of it, given lifts to and from any extra-curricular or social activity I wanted to be a part of. The physical exhaustion is something that has always affected me since and it comes and goes – but it has mainly been mental health that I’ve struggled with. I’m absolutely passionate about normalising mental health issues and am proud to say that I take a dose of anti-depressants daily that I believe keeps me alive in the same way that daily injections of insulin keep a diabetic alive. I do not believe that attitudes towards the medication of patients suffering from mental health difficulties should be any different to that of patients with physical health issues.

After learning the piano and clarinet and enjoying my time as a member of Cornwall Youth Orchestra immensely, I studied music at Cardiff University, and again struggled with bouts of poor mental health, mainly in getting to grips with the social side of life as a young person away from home, but enjoyed the research and the course immensely and graduated with a first class honours degree and a scholarship for the best public solo recital (a clarinet recital of 20th century French music) which to this day I am still in disbelief about! Maybe this was my proudest moment…Certainly the most unexpected!

I spent 7 summer seasons working on St Agnes in the Isles of Scilly, in various jobs – first in the tiny dairy at Troytown Farm - pasturising milk, making clotted cream, butter and ice cream from their 6 cows, then a few shifts at The Turks Head pub, then in Coastguards Café and High Tide seafood restaurant. Those were the best summers. We lived in tents in a staff field from April to October some years, living in a slightly squalid student community, cooking together on camp stoves and sitting around furniture we’d botched together with bits of wooden palette and rusting nails, swimming, drinking, talking, working. It was the best introduction into work and independent life you could imagine as a teenager, and those first hospitality jobs definitely opened up my passions for the industry.

I ‘did my time’ in London for a few months, working in two cafés and living with my cosmopolitan and open minded aunt and uncle, which was a great experience and I loved living in multicultural Lewisham – a world away from rural Cornwall and Scilly. 

When I came back to Penzance, after having worked for Kath Hawkins, previous owner and founder of The Honey Pot as we know and love it, for a couple of years on and off in between the Scilly and London escapades, I came into some inheritance from my grandparents who had recently passed away at the ripe ages of 94 and 96. Kath had expressed some interest in selling the business, so it just made sense for me to take it on, with my experience, a bit of an understanding of how the business worked and huge love of food. I also love Penzance so much and wanted to be able to keep a small business alive in the town and to be able to provide good jobs for local people. So I went about approaching banks with a business plan that I had had no idea how to write, on my own, at the age of 25 – and by some miracle managed to get myself a mortgage! It took a couple of years to get the plans completed and sale finalised and move in, and in the interim I worked full time at the café and part time at The Old Coastguard in Mousehole to save as much money as possible to put towards it.

After a baptism of fire taking over the café at the start of the hectic summer season and continuing to be busy through the Autumn and over Christmas, I found out I was pregnant, and decided to have the baby. It wasn’t at all an easy decision as I knew I had a lot on my plate anyway without adding being a first time single mum into the equation - but I decided I wanted this baby – and that whatever happened with the café, she was my priority now. The pregnancy was great for me, and I had never been so well physically or mentally – working 70+ hour weeks up until the week before she was born. After a difficult birth and a week in hospital, I was back to work after 6 weeks over the busy Christmas period to put on evening events and work in the kitchen. This was probably more than I should’ve done, and a postponed bout of anaemia led to a period of post-natal depression – something that was definitely not unlikely for me given my history. I’ve been fortunate enough to have Tazzy – the most amazing café manager – as well as lots of help from my family and my best friend, Rosa’s ‘auntie Jessie’ who lives with us – and a network of generous friends and loyal staff that have enabled things to run as smoothly as possible thus far.

Me and Rosa are 9 months in now and still getting to grips with our new life together, but managing to get up each day, work in the café more and more, and getting back the confidence and energy I had before becoming a mum.

I’m very aware of the privilege I’ve had in life and understand that a lot of what I’ve been able to achieve has been thanks to a supportive and secure upbringing – both emotionally and financially. Amongst my goals in life are to help others to overcome challenges they may have faced – I want to help others to be happy, healthy and to be empowered to reach for their goals, whatever background they may have come from. I’d love in particular to be an ambassador for educating young people - about food, cooking and eating healthily, sustainably and affordably – about the importance of understanding politics and voting – about mental health issues, how to recognise signs in yourself and those around you -  about discrimination women still face in everyday life – about period awareness – positive birth and parenting - about the ‘real world’ and what happens when you become an adult – how to pay bills – how to register to vote – what to do when your electric metre runs out - how to dispose responsibly of your waste– how to use social media as a positive platform and to look out for one another online…All that essential stuff they don’t teach you in school. I’m often heard saying that I’d like to be the next Jamie Oliver – but not just with food – with all of it. All the important stuff. But for now I’m very content running my little café in Penzance with my little family - my baby Rosa, my black and white cat Pepper and my best friend Jess.

Maria De Francesca - Director of the McGowan School of Dance

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What do you consider your greatest achievement? 

My 3 children, a long-lasting relationship, gaining my Degree in Dance and becoming a registered ballet teacher with the Royal Academy of Dance.

What motivates you to do what you do? 

I studied ballet, tap, modern dance as a child and contemporary dance as a teenager so dance has always been part of my life. As an older dancer and teacher I really appreciate good, safe well-taught technique and my training in London with the Royal Academy has been invaluable as a highly regarded global teaching qualification. I believe everyone has a dancer in them and I love the challenge of taking children and adults through an exam, performance or their first class in a relaxed, friendly atmosphere. I particularly enjoying teaching adult ballet classes across west Cornwall and I’m a qualified Silver Swan (RAD Ballet for mature dancers). We have a good laugh, destress, and get to workout to fabulous music.

What do you owe your mother? 

A bottle of gin, Yorkshire grit, determination, ‘kill them with kindness’, and laughter.

Which women inspire you and why?

My mum for having four children, running pubs and restaurants, and for moving to Italy with my dad before he died. Rosa Parks for defying racism and injustice. Pina Bausch for dance & choreography. Arundhati Roy for literature. Rosalind Franklin for discovering DNA, and Ella Fitzgerald for her voice.

 What are you reading? 

 ‘The School Days of Jesus’ by J. M. Coetzee.

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

All the usual ones, sadly. Having a sit-in at school to protest against girls not being allowed to wear trousers? 

How can the world be made a better place for women?

We need more women in positions of power and influence.

Describe your perfect day?

Coffee, a deserted beach or pool, a book, snacks, iced cocktails, and an Italian 5 course dinner with family and friends.

We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

Diana Mc Gowan for services to ballet in Cornwall.

Give us a tip?

Dancing improves brain function! 

 

About Maria: I was born in Southampton to Anglo/Italian parents. I Lived in Bristol for many years and had two children before travelling through Central America and the Caribbean. I moved to Cornwall in 1995 and had another child, and with my partner we renovated a barn near Madron. I became a yoga teacher and then studied for a Degree in Dance and became a ballet assistant to Penzance’s infamous ‘Miss’ Diana McGowan. I have taught GCSE, BTEC Dance for many years - in secondary schools in Penzance and St Ives, and I’m currently teaching Classical Ballet at Truro College. I inherited the McGowan School of Dance in 2016 and undertook my Royal Academy of Dance (RAD) Ballet Teaching qualification. The school is thriving and I love teaching a range of students from baby ballet all the way up to older students - having just qualified as a Silver Swans RAD Teacher (gentler ballet for the mature dancer).

https://www.mcgowandance.com/

Alex Coppock-Bunce - Artist & Therapist

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What do you consider your greatest achievement?

I guess there are two which happened at the same time. The first was starting up a successful business as a hypnotherapist, counsellor and psychotherapist 12 years ago after 30 + years in corporate life.

The second was exploring my creativity in visual arts in more depth. I'd painted and drawn every year around West Penwith for many years when taking business trips and holidays here. I joined several groups of artists in Swindon, taking classes and exhibiting regularly and recently opening up the house to the Swindon Open Studios where people could see my working environment ( and eat cake). Last year I ran a print workshop in a local community centre which was a lovely experience, helping people realise how creative they were too.


What motivates you to do what you do?

As an idealist I try to change the World in my work as a therapist, an artist and an environmentalist. I can see how good we can be as individuals and organisations and how great some institutions have the capacity to be. But I am often astonished by selfish motivation, narrow thinking and lack of altruism.

I want to save the planet environmentalist and have been trying in one way of another for over 35 years since working with renewable energy and energy efficiency back in the 80s. I've been an activist ever since, chairman of a local coppice group, protester about over development of green areas, asking difficult questions of politicians, for instance why public buildings don't have solar panels on them ( I'm still waiting for answers on that one).

The beauty of the land and sea motives me to try to capture it in paint or anything I have to hand.

I believe it is important to walk the talk and so I have invested what small amount I can in solar, wind, ethical banking, and we have an allotment! Incidentally, on a recent trip to Cornwall we found it hard to charge our electric car (EV) west of Truro. That makes it harder to for those with EVs to contribute towards the local economy.

What do you owe your mother?

A lot. Mother is 95 and was the youngest of 9, born in Cornwall of Victorian parents.

Strongly religious and a great believer in duty and that feelings are irrelevant, she still has firm Victorian values. Growing up in the 60s and 70s was somewhat interesting as a result. I owe my love of Cornwall, independence and my manners to her but my lifelong sense of wanting equality for all and rebellion against mindless entitlement I think probably go back to our conflicts earlier in life.

Which women inspire you and why?

Emily Bronte due to her untamed imagination and Maya Angelou because of her dignity, self belief and ability to overcome abuse.

What are you reading?

I tend to dip into several at once. “Where on Earth is Heaven” by Johnathan Stedall. Now I want uplifting and lighthearted reading as I am recovering from surgery and chemo for Ovarian Cancer. I finally finished the required reading for surviving OC and one about starving cancer which were hard going. I've just bought “Me Talk Pretty One Day” by David Sedaris, and “The Alchemist” by Paul Coelho, I trust they will do the trick.

What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

More than I thought on reflection. I won't list the major ones otherwise it'll sound like as though I'm still attached to them and I'm not as furious about them now. But there was general sexual discrimination and intimidation fairly commonly in offices during my time in the civil service and in corporate life.

I was even sent on a course for Women's development in the 70s and when I returned was informed by my boss that he would not be interested in implementing anything that I had learned. In the 80s and 90s I was told by a succession of male managers in annual appraisals that I “couldn't boil the ocean” when I my job was to review procurement processes and I listed the failing ones and what needed to be put in place to improve the future of the business.

I did get an award for raising awareness of bullying in the workplace ( by then it was a female Director) which involved a zero tolerance approach being implemented which was good. I left due to burnout in 2004. I married, retrained as a counsellor and psychotherapist and became self employed in 2007. All the gender barriers disappeared!

How can the world be made a better place for women?

Education of women to believe at an early age they have a right to equality and respect. It is important to help women to build their self esteem to improve equality so they realise authority figures need to earn respect just like anyone else.

Educate all people to understand that it is a privilege to help others and that paying tax is a Good Thing! The majority of women would benefit. So many caring and capable women keep the NHS, schools, residential homes and other institutions going on goodwill alone. If they expected more and felt more entitled they may obtain it.

I'd like to see women informed about what comprises healthy relationships.

Again all women would benefit. It isn't well known that they need to sharpen their bullshit radar and have good boundaries and self esteem to let other people know what is and is not acceptable behaviour. I 'd like to change the media culture which has been to make money by making women feel inadequate so that they continually buy beauty products, cosmetic surgery and fashion to feel better about themselves momentarily.

The Mindful Employer Network which I have been part of for 10 years has made great strides in improving work life balance and work related stress with many employers in our area, encouraging questions to be asked compassionately and how to recognise certain behaviours. Some men have found it totally counter cultural to their experience of work but now understand the need for change.

Describe your perfect day?

Wake up in Cornwall, breakfast overlooking the sea. Being in the landscape and drawing one of the sacred sites or fantastic coastal scenes in West Penwith with a view to creating an image in different media. The perfect evening would mean no cooking, maybe a concert or just more gazing at the sea.

We've noticed there really aren't many (if any) statues of women around Cornwall - who would you see remembered?

Rowena Cade as she had such a vision and did most of the work of creating the Minack Theatre on her own.

I also particularly like Marion Hocken, a local artist born in North Cornwall. She was searching for something spiritually and personally which resonates with me. A traditional flower artist originally, she was influenced by Lanyon and I see a lot of Christopher Wood's palette and sense of composition in her later works. She was a founder member of the Penwith Society and painted a very controversial picture called “The Hollow Men” which I love. She remains largely unrecognised but I feel an affinity with her.


Give us a tip?

Know what to look for with Ovarian Cancer which is often ignored or misdiagnosed leading to late detection and far less positive outcomes.

The 4 symptoms (only one of which may present) are:

1) needing to pee more frequently

2) abdominal bloating or swelling

3) back or pelvic ache or pain

4) eating less and feeling fuller

Pester your doctor if you have any of these, ensure you ask for a CA125 blood test and a scan which can rule it out. Please don't ignore it like I did, thinking I was wasting the doctor's time.

Sadly there is no funding going to research my particular (rarer, Low Grade Serous Carcinoma ) type of OC. It can hit any woman at any age and my type is often found in younger women. We are trying to raise awareness and to fund some research by Prof Gourley in Edinburgh who has agreed to help.

If you'd like to know more there is a lot of information ( and the chance to contribute to research funding- every penny counts) at www.Cureourovariancancer.org . My story is on there along side others' which will help women to understand what signs to be aware of, what to expect and if any of this resonates, maybe help us to mobilise to get the research we need to have better outcomes and better hope for the future.

A direct link to the Professor Gourley's research “Just Giving “ page is here.

About Alex Alex was raised in Oxfordshire and has always been interested in art, nature and healing in all its forms. She worked as a civil servant for 15 years ( latterly as a buyer in alternative energy and computers) at a large research laboratory and then was headhunted in the 80s to work in London for a large blue chip telecomms company. She travelled to many countries training buyers in EU law,, ethical trading, and process reengineering. She has been painting and drawing for many years and travelling to Cornwall, particularly West Penwith, to investigate her family history which has inspired her work recently. She exhibited her work as part of Swindon Open Studios since its inception in 2004 and held solo exhibitions locally. She also runs her own successful hypnotherapy and counselling business after leaving the corporate world where she uses art as a therapeutic tool where verbal skills are insufficient to express emotions. Recently diagnosed with a rare type of Ovarian Cancer she is recovering from surgery and chemo and deciding on the direction of the next chapter of her life. 


Sylvia Chatfield-Johnson - Pianist & Singer

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What do you consider your greatest achievement? 

Hmm that's difficult...oh dear! I suppose it's playing at Wigmore Hall when I was about 10 years old. I came top of London in a piano exam and as a sort of reward I was allowed to perform there. My teacher came with me, and my mother, and I was sat in the audience with them, and when it was my turn they called my name I walked up onto the stage terrified. I had to play it without music of course! It was a Largo...I played it and I said to my mother 'I don't remember anything about it', and my teacher said 'that was very good, Sylvia' and gave me sixpence.

I started playing the piano when I was four. My mother didn't play but she loved music and was very keen for me to. I remember saying, 'I'll only play if you come and sit with me' (because I like an audience!) so she did.

 What's been your motivation?

I was a singer as well, and the joy that I got in singing to give other people pleasure that's all I wanted to do. (And I did, apparently).

 Now I am nearly 94 and my beloved Peter has gone, I live for my wacky, intelligent, adorable little shih-tzu Buzzy. He keeps me going. I am very young at heart, and slightly eccentric I think.

What do you owe your mother?

Everything. She was on her own, because she'd left my father when I was a baby. His family had wanted to take me over. She went to live with her mother, my grandma, and she had to fend for me and her. She started me on piano lessons when I was four years old which I thought was pretty marvellous. And she was a joy - we used to go shopping together, she was more like a sister. Lovely lady, we were very close. She died a week before my wedding.

Which women inspire you and why?

Well that’s difficult…in the music world it was the Joan Sutherland, the Australian soprano. I adored ballet, although I wasn’t able to do a huge amount of it because I was so busy with music, and I loved the dancer Beryl Grey – she used to alternate roles with Margot Fonteyn. I still know her, and she writes to me every Christmas.

What are you reading?

I used to love reading biographies about all sorts of famous people. Now I just read fiction. I do have a book on the go, but I can’t remember what it’s called! I’ve actually just read Freddy Mercury’s book, called Bohemian Rhapsody of course. I haven’t seen the film and I so wanted to.

 What gender barriers have you had to hurdle?

No hurdles at all. Not having a father, I suppose as I grew up I was a little bit frightened of men. I never wanted to have a boyfriend and I never wanted to get married until I met Peter. I loved my art, and I thought it was so stupid to just get married and have babies – I wanted more from the world.

How can the world be made a better place for women?

I don’t really know…I’ve never thought of it like that. Especially as I’m 93 years old, I’ve lived a long time, and that sort of idea just wasn’t talked about. We didn’t think about it on those terms. I can’t say I have a modern perspective on it.

Describe your perfect day?

That’s difficult. Well, I don’t think this is going to interest you, but my perfect day would be with my husband Peter. We were so close, we were one. He died four years ago and I miss him every day – and I’m sad all the time really, because he’s gone. My perfect day would be with him, just talking. He was so clever, he was a brilliant man – he had a lampshade shop in Chapel Street. After we married, we came down to Cornwall in a van with a cat and a dog, all our furniture, the grand piano and £400 to start a shop in St Ives. Mad thing to do, it was such an adventure.

Which women would you see remembered as statues around Cornwall?

I admire Barbara Hepworth, but then she’s got statues everywhere…

Give us a tip?

I would say to everybody, don’t take all the time, give. Give what you can – love, attention, interest, to other people, and treat them kindly. I like to see that.

About Sylvia Sylvia was born in London and pursued music, winning a scholarship to Trinity College to study piano and singing. In her twenties she met Alice and Eileen and together they formed musical trio, performing all over London. After marrying Peter, they relocated to St Ives and opened a business making lampshades, while Silvia continued to perform locally. After a brief spell living in Kent, they moved back permanently to Penzance in 1981 and opened their Chapel Street lampshade shop, which also sold antiques, taking on commissions for the National Trust and for customers in France and America. Silvia continued to be creative, working with sculpture and writing poetry, alongside her performing. After losing Peter four years ago, Sylvia continues to live in Penzance with her dog Buzzy.