B2B with a Twist Publication - Work • Stay • Play October Edition Work Stay Play Autumn 2018 Edition | Page 20

we left at 18 we had some money to back us up (this wasn’t the case). It was hard, very hard, but it made me tough. The time in the orphanages made me strong, determined, very stubborn and extremely wary of men. Evelyn Gardner 2 1/2 hours after I was born I was taken from my mother and put in an orphanage. I was made a ward of the state simply because I was born as a result of a sexual assault. That was in South Gippsland Victoria, in 1938. Over the next 18 years was regularly shuffled from one orphanage to another. One of the first orphanages decided that I had down syndrome, was mentally disabled and blind. Ttherefore I couldn’t stay there so I was moved to one for handicapped children. They soon realised their mistake and so I was moved once again. 20 During my time at the orphanages, from the age of three, I was subjected to physical, mental, emotional and sexual abuse from those that were supposed to look after me. I also witnessed other children in the orphanages receiving the same abuse. Life was hard, but I did n’t really know any different. We were seen, but never heard. No-one listened to our cries for help. At 7 years old a visiting doctor said he could fix my eyesight and so after 2 operations and lots of minor treatment four years later I could finally see at the age of 11. When I turned 16 I was transferred to a hostel and had to work. All our money was handed to the orphanage, some was to be taken for board and the rest saved so that when At 18 years of age left Victoria, with the 5 shillings they gave me (not the savings I should have accumulated) and headed to Cooranbong NSW. I went to college and studied dressmaking, tailoring, bookkeeping and music. To pay for my fees I did the laundry for the students in the collage and worked at Sanitarium. I was going to prove to myself and to the doubters that I would be a value to society and I was not going to end up a nobody as I had been told all my life. When I finished college I worked full-time at Sanitarium as a trainer. It was while I was at college that I met my husband, Wal. He proved to be an extremely patient man. It was five years before I felt comfortable with him even holding my hand. During the five years I watched him closely, saw how he interacted with his family and friends. Realised he was a patient and caring man and eventually the guard came down and I fell in love. Wal and I got married in 1962 and moved to his family’s farm in the Hunter Valley. Times were hard on the farm and couldn’t support two families, so Wal and I moved back to Cooranbong, and started working at Sanitarium again. By this stage we had 3 children, we would alternate shifts so one of us was always at home with them. Some 10 years later when the children were teenagers Wal and I started our own earthmoving and fencing business. We landed some big contracts and did work for a few developers. One developer ended up poaching us and I worked for them for over 40 years as a supervisor, overseeing the block clearing, landscaping and fencing contractors. Given the need to prove myself to the doubters and to further my value in society I went to university whilst I was working and studied bush regeneration and landscaping. All the while I seemed to be a magnet for underprivileged and socially marginalised children. Given what I went through as a child, those less fortunate seemed to gravitate towards me and as a result I gave my time to many kids in need. Mentoring, building their trust (no mean feat), making them realise they were worthy of love, it proved enough for them to turn their lives around. In 2016, I was contacted by a company called Open Place which helps “The Forgotten Children” – Wards of the State. They put in the hard yards and found my family and organised for me to connect with 5 brothers and sisters that are still alive, many nieces and nephews and great nieces and nephews. We still keep in contact and have become close. Today, at 79 Wal and I have been married for 56 years, have a son and twin daughters, 7 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren. I am still doing my charity work, helping out the homeless and disadvantaged. I am known as Mum to 100’s of kids and adults. I’ve helped setup and run soup kitchens for the last 10 years, organised clothing and support for those in need. None of this could have been done without the donations from local businesses. Do I see myself as extraordinary? No. What I have done is create a start for people that have been forgotten.