Wednesday, 21 April 2010
Sunday, 4 April 2010
I shall be called Bag Foot...
New meds are going really well, I can still feel my hands and feet. It nice I can feel them, it's just the pain in my feet cause of the ulcers. I can't wear shoes at the moment but had to go out the other day to the shops. Just my luck it rained. I had a joke with my friend Dave about the bags on my feet. I shall be called BAG FOOT lol! You know when things like that happen, your going to see everybody you know right? Guess what, I did! Just made a joke out of it. Back to see the doctor on Weds at 4pm. Ill let you know....x
Thursday, 4 March 2010
Naltrexone 3mg My second week
I have had some werid dreams with these tablets. Nothing too bad. Ended up laughing at them most of time. They just seem very real.
With my legs, there is no change but like I said, Ive just got to give it some time.....
Friday, 26 February 2010
My story
From homeless drug addict to having my work hung in the Tate Modern and meeting Prince Charles!
My name is Kacey and I am now 32 years old. To look at me, you might not guess that I have been a drug addict. You might not guess that I have been in trouble with the police in the past. You wouldn’t think I met HRH Prince Charles either.
I was born in
I was pulled out of a school that I loved, where I had loads of friends and placed into a school where I was the ‘new kid’ and I stood out like a sore thumb because I was so much taller than anyone else. I was bullied- for my weight, and also because I had learning difficulties.
So I tried to fit in with people by playing the joker and giving the teachers at school a hard time. Being the class clown stopped most of the nasty comments- at least from the other kids. The teachers were another matter. My teachers ‘encouraged’ me by saying stuff like: “Why can’t you be more like your sister?” My sister and I are two very different people. She was always the ‘good one’- the one who was destined for ‘big things’. What did they predict for my future? ‘Encouraging’ things, such as “You will be dead by 18”.
I felt like I was nothing, By the time I was 11 I was smoking cigarettes to fit in with the older kids that I was hanging around with and because someone told me they would make me lose weight. Not long after that, I moved onto smoking cannabis- someone told me it would make me forget what was going on around me.
One bad drug leads to another and I went on to experiment with more illegal drugs as well as getting alcohol poisoning when I was 12- although thankfully that put me off it for life! I ended up getting kicked out of school permanently and by then, I was so far off the rails, no other school in the country would take me. Social services thought it best to put me into the care of Barnardos.
Barnardos had a place in Wokingham in
I left Barnardos when I was 17. I didn’t go back to
When I was 19, I decided to get away from the area and its problems completely, and moved to Bedford- but I knew nobody, I was back to being ‘the new kid’ and once again found myself hanging around with the ‘wrong kind’ of people. I was homeless and sleeping on the streets. Sometimes if I was lucky and there was a bed available I slept in the night shelter and sometimes I slept under a bridge.
By now I had developed a habit of developing a habit to try to escape what I was going through, but this time I turned to a much harder drug- heroin.
Drugs like heroin don’t come cheap and I ended up getting into trouble with the police and went to court for a burglary. I was lucky because I should have gone to prison but didn’t. This really woke me up and I got myself into the YMCA in
I got myself a flat and then even got into a happy relationship. I felt I took a lot from society when I was on drugs and wanted to give something back, so I started raising money for the NSPCC and took an active role in PLANB (Peer Led Active Network Bedfordshire)- going into schools. I was also an active member of the Pilgrims Housing Association residents’ board, arguing for better social housing conditions.
Then I got involved with the Princes Trust, and went on a ‘Sound Live’ music course, working with people who have worked for the really big names, like Tina Turner and the So Solid Crew! I was also given a development award, which funded my first ‘proper’ camera and started my photography career in earnest. The Princes Trust also helped me with putting together an art exhibition called ‘Running with the Herd’, which was about drugs and how they have affected people in
Life was suddenly good! I started talking to the trust about setting up a business as a photographer and they gave me a grant to do this. I was so grateful that I wrote to Prince Charles thanking him and I also cheekily asked if I may photograph him. Can you believe, he wrote back within a week! He said yes, he would love to meet me. In November 2003, I was granted a private meeting with the Prince and was allowed to take his photograph for my portfolio!
Life went from good to great! The following month, in December 2003 one of my photos was displayed in the Millennium Commission exhibition at the Tate Modern- I didn’t know at the time that the Tate Modern is a famous art gallery and that work by artists like Dali, Monet and Picasso was in there! “The exhibition was created to celebrate the projects which had been achieved with National Lottery funding... Ms Jones used her award to create a photographic exhibition and website promoting drug awareness”. (BBC news website)
Because of all the attention in the press I was getting, I was invited to the MoBO awards to take photos.
I told you life was good and great- there was, however, some bad news for me at this time, something that was going to change my life forever. In the last months of 2003 I was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is the most common disabling neurological condition affecting young adults. Around 85,000 people in the UK have MS. (mssociety.org.uk) MS affects the ability of nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord to communicate with each other- symptoms such being tired all the time, having problems with co-ordination and memory lapses (among others) will affect me for the rest of my life...
Despite this major set-back to my health, I continued in my quest to change my world.
In May 08 and 09 I was an ‘Adult Achiever’ finalist at the annual ‘Pride in
In November 08, I released my first track on download, called ‘Tightrope’. It went straight to No.1 and stayed for 3 weeks!
In conclusion there is so much more to my story. The next project I would like to do is to write my story in more detail “which I have started”. Something I feel that is very important to share with the world as I believe it would benefit others.
