Story
Total Update
Dear all,
It's been a few weeks now since so many of us participated in the final fundraising push for Liz's Macmillan/Royal Free Appeal at the Royal College of Art.
I personally wanted to say thank you to all of you for your contribution in making this appeal such an overwhelming success and to let you know that the final figure for Liz's fundraising is an incredible £62,552.
More than 500 people have donated to the appeal and so many people organised events, shaved their heads, ran, swam and biked for Liz. I am truly humbled by the efforts of you all and I know Liz would be so proud to have smashed her target of £50k.
Most importantly the money we have raised will support Macmillan and The Royal Free Hospital in Hampstead to support people in the future. Your donations have been ring fenced so that we can fund a new Macmillan psychologist at the hospital. This vital role will help people like Liz deal with the emotional impact of cancer and will quite literally be a lifesaver for people who have nowhere else to turn.
I have been so touched by your kind support and I thank you from the bottom of my heart.
With love and best wishes,
Zoe
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On the 5th of November 2015 at the Royal Free hospital my partner Liz lost her battle with cancer.
One of her last wishes was for her fundraising campaign to continue until 50,000 pounds is raised.
Please pass the word on about Liz's story and her campaign for the Royal Free hospital and Macmillan.
Thank you
Zoe Papadopoulou
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I am writing to you one fundraiser to another, to ask for your help with a project very close to my heart. I am writing at a time when fundraising itself is being questioned, and I hope this will show what our profession is all about.
You will know, and as I have learned over my years as a fundraiser, that to make change and to help people, requires raising money. It is donors and supporters who make charities' work possible - very often because they themselves have personal experience of the need or benefits of the work they want to fund.
Now, after twenty years as a fundraiser within charities, like so many donors I find myself as someone both in need of help, and as someone wanting to help solve a problem.
Almost a year ago, I was diagnosed with something called high grade poorly differentiated small cell neuroendocrine cancer, and given then 12-24 months to live. Without advice, support or professional guidance, and amidst the initial shock, there was a lot of fallout.
As a charity person, I should have known to turn to an organisation like Macmillan, but we didn't; we were afraid, in shock and panicking. I now know that Macmillan could have helped me by handling some of the challenges for us, perhaps with a far better outcome. But, I didn't know then that there was a Macmillan centre in the hospital where I am being treated, and because I am seen in a different clinic than where they are based, the Macmillan team didn't know about me.
I want to make sure that no-one has to go through such misery and loneliness when someone can be there to hold their hand through their difficult decisions, advise or advocate for them. But the centre has some real barriers to being able to reach out and help all those in need, people like me.
There is little sign-posting via clinicians - many doctors still don't know that such broad help is available. Nor does the one centre staff member have time to work on building relationships around the hospital to ensure any cancer patient receiving diagnoses and treatment in any specialist department will be directed to and connected with Macmillan’s support services.
I desperately want to change this, as I know to my cost the impact of the 'gap'. I am asking you to help me raise money for something that will help many people. People who will be in the same situation as I have been.
I want to raise enough to fund a Macmillan Cancer Support staff member, to be able to work full time for one year at the Royal Free Hospital in London. At the end of that year, having demonstrated his or her impact, the post will continue as full time, funded by the NHS trust. This will cost £20,000.
If we are able to exceed that, and as a fundraiser I always like to stretch a target (!), then the team at the Royal Free will be able to do more work with specialist help for people with my type of cancer, and do outreach work to help people who don't or can no longer come to the hospital, via their volunteers.
I want and need to raise this money quickly, for reasons that are obvious. This is one of the most positive things I can do in the time I have left - to use my fundraising skills, and people I know, to make a difference that will help other people after me. In my situation I am sure you'd want to do the same - it's what makes our profession, and makes us so proud to be in it. A pride we don't often have the chance to show, and certainly not one recently reported.
I know as staff in charities, or in agencies providing the skill and capacity so desperately needed to fund the work of organisations like Macmillan, that you share this commitment and belief that a donation or funds raised can make all the difference. This belief has, so very wrongly, been called into question recently. As much as techniques and practice may change, what must not change is the simple fact that money changes, improves and save lives.
I am asking you if you would make a donation, or commit to raise an amount between now and Christmas. You will see we have begun, and raised a chunk already. The Management Centre kicked us off with a donation, and Open fundraising agreed to raise/ give £5,000. Over the coming weeks, I hope you will see many more agencies add their own names to this list - I'm already hearing of competitiveness, which is lovely, and very touching.
Our good start was helped in no small part thanks to the Chair, the Board and the senior team at Macmillan, who all wished to show their support for both this work, and for the fundraising for it. As we all know, finding a Board and non-fundraising colleagues prepared to make lead gifts, and then ask their contacts to do the same is rare, and I am grateful that they helped to kick this off.
In advance, I would like to thank you for reading this email, and for any donation you may make. I look forward to hearing from you soon, and may I wish you the best of luck in the future, and everything you wish for yourself.
Thank you, and warmest regards.
Liz
Liz Monks FInstF
07850 936940 / @liz_monks / lizmonks@me.com.