Health: time to talk

Former All Black Steve Gordon will encourage men to talk to each other about their health at Te Awamutu Community Menz Shed’s inaugural men’s heath expo.

Encouraging men to talk about their health. Photo: Matthias Zomer, pexels.com

Gordon, a former Te Awamutu College pupil who was an All Black from 1989 to 1993, will give a half hour talk at the free event at the end of the month  the Baptist Church in Teasdale St.

Gordon’s July 27 talk will follow time to chat with representatives of health groups, experts in Alzheimer’s, dementia, and mental health as well as Diabetes New Zealand, Prostate New Zealand, and the Heart and Stroke Foundation representatives.

Richard Cato

Te Awamutu Menz Shed chair Richard Cato said although the concept of a Menz Shed health expo was new to the town, men’s health and Menz Shed went together.

“Men’s health is the gist of the organisation,” he said.

Menz Shed members from Cambridge, Hamilton, Ōtorohanga  Te Kūiti have been invited as well as members of service organisations such as Jaycees, Lions and Rotary.

Cato said everyone was welcome to the expo, especially men aged 50 plus, and wives.

“The greatest supporters of Menz Shed are the women who encourage their husbands to come to the shed,” Cato said.

“Nine times out of 10 they are lonely and loneliness and mental health go hand in hand. Men are terrible at talking about their health.”

Te Awamutu Menzshed members, front from left, Bevan Boddie, David Phillips, Malcolm Perano (at back) Graeme Watson and Bill Bailey last year..

Te Awamutu Community Menz Shed has been serving the community since 2010, a sort of Kiwi Repair Shop fixing much-loved family treasures, as well as taking commissions from the likes of Te Awamutu Scout Group for whom it is building wheel carts. The group started meeting in 2010 and more than 50 members now meet Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday mornings in Raeburne St.

Cato said Te Awamutu businesses were great supporters of the Menz Shed.

“This expo is our way of giving something back.”

Entry is free, although gold coin donations will be asked for cups of tea throughout the morning.

“Men talk shoulder to shoulder, while they are having a cup of tea.”

They will have more opportunities to chat when the expo ends with a sausage sizzle at noon.

Elderly person during drawing therapy. Photo: Jiun-Je Lin, pexels.com

 

More Recent News

International flights return to Waipā

Champagne corks are popping across the Waikato today with confirmation that direct flights between Hamilton Airport and Australia are back. Jetstar, a subsidiary of Qantas, has announced it will offer three return flights per week…

Media release in the gun

A Cambridge Community Board member has taken a swipe at Waipā District Council for championing debt rather than reducing rates’ inflation. Andrew Myers, who is also a member of the Fonterra co-operative council, was responding…

A better-off college

Pouring better-off funding into Ōtorohanga College is paying huge dividends, principal Lyndsay Kurth says. Ōtorohanga College received $1.64m of the first tranche of better-off funding allocated via the Ōtorohanga District Council as part of the…

Applause for Arikinui

News of the appointment of Te Arikinui Nga wai hono i te po as new leader of the Kīngitanga was greeted with joy amongst the tears from the tens of thousands at Tūrangawaewae, who farewelled…