Events Calendar

« < March 2010 > »
S M T W T F S
28 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 1 2 3

Latest News

News installed
News can be placed here

FREE Newsletter signup


*  First Name:
*  Last Name:
*  Your email address:
*  Preferred Format:
*  Enter the security code shown:


PRIVACY POLICY: We promise to NEVER sell, rent, share, or give away your email address. And you can unsubscribe at any time you like.
WE PROMISE
Special Features

Content: Burns NightSpaldingCoventryBelfast

Burn's Night Celebration North East 

 
Attached are three photographs of Burns Night Celebrations on the 24th January held at the Masonic Hall Byker Newcastle in aid of Breast Cancer Charity for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Gateshead.
As you can see from the first picture Eddie Forbes our Treasurer and his two Grandsons piped in the haggis.


This Burns night allowed the target of £10,000 to be reached in the two years since Eddie lost his wife Christine to breast cancer.
The NCDS North-East Phoenix occupied two tables and had a great evening which included entertainment, dancing and raffles as well as an auction which raised £1200.00 on the night.
Graham Oldroyd(Membership Secretary ) Heworth Phoenix

Top

These are special events or features written about NCDS Phoenix Branches , if you require your club events to be listed within this page or you require further information on any of the activities listed please contact the National Secretary on email: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it Tel: 070 414 78120.


New group helping people find love


Sue Manton, who has set up the Spalding branch of the National Council for the Divorced and Seperated. (8AS0715301) Picture: ALAN STORER

LOVE, so the saying goes, is in the air. And love is everywhere. Which is fine if you're one half of a happy couple, but can be depressing if you're not. But
finding someone special can be a hard slog – especially if you're divorced,
separated or widowed. Maybe a new social evening can help you.




Jemma Walton found out more.


When Sue Manton met her husband she thought they would be together forever. But 27 years after they got married, her husband went to work one day and realised he couldn't put four pieces of paper in order.

He realised something was wrong. And it was – later a neighbour found him wandering around in the street, not knowing what he was doing.

He was soon diagnosed with a brain tumour, and died just over a year later, leaving Sue a widow at the age of 50.

"I felt so many things – loss, guilt, it was a very odd time," she said. "I had spent years being somebody's wife, somebody's mother, that I suddenly had to work out who I was by myself."

But after the huge wave of grief passes, widows and widowers often find themselves wanting to fall in love and build a new relationship. And yet the hardships they have been through don't protect them from the slings and arrows of life on the singles' frontline.

"Bob was always telling me how he wanted me to find someone else and be happy, he really wanted that," said Sue, of Piccard Drive, Spalding. "But it took me three years after he died to feel able to do that, and I really tried, but it just didn't work for me.

"Making a relationship work when you're older is completely different from when you're making one work when you're younger. When you're younger you're learning together, you're trying to build a home, and find patterns of living together, even when it comes to things like housework and gardening.

"But when you're older you're meeting people who have that already sorted, and it's different from your way of doing things. And that can be hard, even though you have the material things, the car and the house and the job, sorted out.

"Sometimes, it just doesn't work out – like with me. I am happy by myself, having friends but nothing more, for the time being.

"But some divorced people can meet a new partner and it's a dream come true. I know of a couple in their 50s who are getting married soon, and they were born to be with one another, and so that happy ending can happen."

Sue, now 61, has recently set up the Spalding branch of the National Council for the Divorced and Separated (NCDS). She knows how people feel when they've lost their other half, or when they are struggling to put their lives together after a divorce or separation.

And she knows that often, what they need is a place they can meet new people, without any pressure. Spalding NCDS is a group where anyone of any age can come and make new friends, and maybe meet a new partner.

"We're not a dating agency or a counselling service," she said. "We can't tackle people's problems for them. But what we can do is provide a nice atmosphere for people to meet other people.

"And you will be protected - everyone who comes along has to prove that they are divorced, widowed or separated.

"When I moved here I didn't know anyone, but after going along to a couple of meetings when I walked through town I began to bump into people that I knew. And I have made some really good friends, women as well as men."

"The thing is, when you arrange to meet people on the net or through newspaper ads there are very much expectations on that date. But when you come here that's not the case, you are just meeting a group of people in a friendly way."

The group currently has about 29 members ranging in age from 40 to 74, and when they meet they will have a disco, or a quiz, or just a sit down and chat.

Walking into a roomful of strangers is a daunting prospect even for the most confident of us. But Sue said everyone at the club has been in that position and goes to lengths to make sure new members feel welcome.

"I will meet you outside the club and walk in with you if you like, and we always make sure that you have a group of people to talk to – you won't just be left standing in a corner by yourself with a drink," she said.

"And remember – you will only have to be the new person once in your life. I wouldn't say boo to a goose when I was married, but since Bob died I have started to be more outgoing, and really enjoy things like this.

"At the end of the day, we have a really good laugh."

The Spalding NCDS welcomes members from all over, and hopes that one day a Peterborough branch will be
established. The group meets every Friday at Tulip Social Club, Spalding, between 8pm and 11pm.

You get two meetings free, and then a year's membership costs £6, plus £2 a week, to cover the cost of hiring the room. For more information, call Sue on                0777 0449 714        . See also www.ncds.org.uk.

Extracted from the Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Link : http://www.peterboroughtoday.co.uk/features/New-group-set-up-to.4292092.jp?articlepage=1 

Top


NCDS Coventry Phoenix



Rise from the ashes of a relationship's end

Many single people find themselves at a loss when a relationship ends but a Coventry group, the Phoenix NCDS, aims to help them find a new life.

It's not easy starting again after a divorce or a split. Your mutual friends avoid taking sides by staying away, it's been years since you went out alone, you're not on the pull but may look like you area and you don't know anyone else who's single.

It's a scenario familiar to many but still people feel lonely and confused and really don't know how to start again. One person very familiar with that feeling was Barbara Lonsdale, who lives in Coventry. . . . . .

This BBC article appeared 5th March 2008 to see the whole article click this LINK


Top

Belfast Phoenix

The Belfast branch of the National Council for Divorced and Separated People (NCDS) has been helping rebuild lives for 20 years. Two divorcees tell Jane Hardy how tough breaking up can be:

Rosie McIlvenny (57), a retired health administrator, lives in Belfast with her son. She says:

My son was just 11 when my husband left, he'd started at big school the month before. I think if we hadn't divorced or split up, my son, who's now 25, would have done better at school. At the beginning, he couldn't settle in the house at all and was very angry. . . . . .

This Belfast Telegraph article appeared 25th February 2008 to see the whole article click this LINK

Top


Disclaimer: Any information displayed on this site is provided in good faith, NCDS is not responsible for incorrect details supplied by any person or 3rd party and it is up to the individual to verify that the information displayed is correct.