Wednesday 10 December 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight-Headford Sport

 
'Home for Christmas,' a gala evening of music will be presented on Friday, 19th December at 9:00 pm in Campbell's Tavern, Cloughanover. Proceeds will be generously donated to Solas Family Resource Centre. Admission is10 and tickets are available at Solas.



COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT - Playing the Field

So, it turns out that playing the field is a good thing. No, really.


A 2013 survey of 1,200 young athletes showed those who concentrated on a single sport were 70% to 93% more likely to be injured than those who played multiple sports. That makes sport one of the few areas in life where loyalty is actually a bad quality.


And if you ask Tommy Bane of Headford GAA, Tom Walsh of Moyne Villa Soccer, or Frank Hennahan of Corrib RFC, they’ll all confirm that fact.
Tom Walsh
MOYNE VILLA SOCCER
‘Our facilities are second to none,’ Tom Walsh says of Moyne Villa, which includes an indoor gym, outdoor gym, track, and even a bus shelter! And yet, many of the players at Moyne Villa also play down the road at Headford GAA. And vice versa.

The soccer club is comprised of 450 members, but, Tom says, ‘We’re not just a soccer club. We want to include the whole community. Everyone is more than welcome to use the facilities.’

Tom played soccer from the age of 18 to 43, but he started coaching in his 30’s. Now he coaches and organises materials and upkeep for the club. ‘We try to make the training interesting,’ Tom says, ‘and give the players as much game time as possible.’ Toward that end, though there are eleven players in a game, there are eighteen on each team. ‘And we have B teams, so every player gets to play.’

Girls usually play soccer from age 6 to 25-ish. Boys from 5 to 30-ish. As a coach, Tom has his priorities straight. ‘It’s important to learn how to get hit in the head,’ he says, with a smile.

Tommy Bane & Joe O'Donnell
HEADFORD GAA
Down the road, the GAA’s Tommy Bane, has 38 years of experience with the game and is the main organiser and coach for the Headford team. Joe O’Donnell, Chairman, says, ‘I was a cross-country guy.’ So there’s an excellent range of diverse experience in Headford. At the GAA, training is usually two nights a week. Kids start at about 6 years of age and, Tommy says, ‘We put no age limit to when you hang up your boots.’

But sport doesn’t come cheap. According to Joe O’Donnell, the price tag is over 40K to run the GAA club and maintain the ‘terrific’ pitch. There’s a lotto every week that helps pay for pitch maintenance, laundering the jerseys, transport, gear, and multiple insurance policies. 
Frank Henaghan
RUGBY – CORRIB RFC
When it comes to Rugby in Headford, Frank Henaghan is your man. After playing the sport for fourteen years, Frank is now President of the Headford organisation. The Corrib RFC formed in 1981. Its youngest member is 7 years old, the oldest is about 35, and, Frank says, ‘We’re always welcoming new members.’

Because rugby depends on a combination of strength, speed and strategy to move the ball, you’d think playing other sports would definitely come in handy. Frank says most of the Corrib RFC gang do play other sports, but usually GAA because soccer clashes with the rugby season.

‘Rugby is the best team game you can get,’ Frank says, ‘because it really takes a team effort to win.’
No one from Headford is set to play in the 2016 Olympics. Yet. But there’s still time!

Understandably, with all the talent and facilities available, sport is big in Headford. Studies have proven sports help develop physical and motor skills, but also psychosocial development and well-being. Even more importantly, sports can help overcome some conditions.
For instance, according to the National Library of Medicine, ‘the world’s largest medical library,’ being active, working out, and playing sports, help kids with asthma stay fit. In addition, sports can actually help strengthen breathing muscles, thus helping the lungs work better. Padraic Heneghan, an 8-year-old asthma sufferer, has first-hand experience of just how helpful playing rugby can be.
Padraic Henaghan, Headford Rugby Player
Refusing to commit is often considered an objectionable personality trait. But when it comes to sports, playing around, experiencing as many different games as possible, wins you points in multiple categories. And when you think about it, that’s how it should be. Because, while football, soccer and rugby are all team sports, the inner joy one experiences when playing these sports is one hundred percent independent.



Thursday 27 November 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight

This week, we'll start with a little movie. Click on the arrow at the center to watch:
16 Days of Action Campaign 
25th November to 10th December


In Ireland, one in five women experience domestic violence during their lifetime, and it is estimated that 213,000 women in Ireland are living with severe abuse from their boyfriends, husbands or partners.

Since 1996, Women's Aid has used the 16 Days Campaign to raise awareness of the reality of domestic violence and to push for positive change to increase women's safety. 


In Headford the campaign was launched this week by Jackie Carroll from Waterside House (Domestic Abuse Refuge & Outreach Service). John Middleton from Solas Family Resource Centre explained that by launching the 16 Days Campaign it is hoped that the silence surrounding domestic violence will be broken and that a greater awareness of the prevalence of domestic violence against women will be raised in the community. 


Solas Family Resource Centre has a window display for the 16 Days highlighting the terrible reality of this issue. At the launch, members of the Headford community released balloons in solidarity with abused women.
[photo by Johnny Ryan]

The 16 Days of Action run from 25th November, UN Day Opposing Violence Against Women, to 10th December, Human Rights Day. The campaign highlights the link between violence against women and human rights. Today, women and girls are subjected to many forms of human rights violations solely on the basis of their gender.

These are just a few of the frightening statistics: 
  • 1 in 5 women suffer from domestic abuse – This number has been validated by European research carried out in 28 countries.
  • 204 women have been murdered in Ireland since 1996. – 53% of those were murdered by a current or ex-partner.
  • 1 in 8 women have been abused while pregnant – Rotunda Hospital study
  • In just one day 22 pregnant women looked for safety refuge in Ireland.
  • 17,254 calls to Women’s Aid national free phone helpline 
  • One in four people across the EU knows a woman among friends or in the family circle who is a victim of domestic violence. One person in five knows of someone who commits domestic violence in their circle of friends and family. [Special Eurobarometer 344, Domestic Violence Against Women Report, September 2010]
As the only 24 hour service in the Western Region, Waterside House, Galway gave face-to-face service to 750 women and children in 2013. They also accompanied 75 women to court. 

Abuse takes many different forms. If you are afraid of your partner, if you feel like you have to walk on eggshells around him, if he loses his temper and raises his hand, almost hitting you; if your needs are not considered or ignored and he makes all the decisions in the relationship; if he controls your access to basics like use of the car, family finances, food, the internet . . . Any of these things are signs of an abusive relationship. 

If you or someone you know are experiencing abuse, contact: 
Waterside House Domestic Violence Outreach Service
091.565985
email: wateroutreach@cope.ie. 
OR
Women's Aid at 1.800.341.900 from 10 am to 10 pm, 7 days a week 

Please share this post with anyone you suspect might need help. Don't keep silent. Speak out. It's the only way to end the terror.