Featured image: Communify client Charlie Duhs (left) enjoys a meal with friends.
Healthy@home clients share their diverse life stories
LIFE didn’t quite turn out the way Charlie Duhs planned, but the 81-year-old considers himself blessed that the team from Communify came to his rescue. Charlie had bought himself a one-way ticket to Vietnam where he planned to live out his days. “I should have listened to the locals who warned me about a place [I stayed at], but I didn’t and I got food poisoning,” he says.
His kidneys failed and he lost 12kg in a week. Whe he was only six months into his retirement dream, he was on his way back to Brisbane so specialists could get his kidneys functioning again. That was at the end of 2018.
On his return, he stayed with his sister for a while and then moved into a tiny room in a boarding house at New Farm where shouting and fighting was the order of the day.
“Phones and credit cards went missing, oh, the stuff that went on,” he says.
A health care worker suggested Charlie contact Communify.
“I didn’t bother at first, but then I decided to try and I’m so lucky I did,” he says. “They interviewed me at the Community Centre at New Farm, but when they told me I was in line for housing, I took it with a grain of salt. People wait for years for housing.”
That was almost two years ago, and after that meeting his life changed. And, he says, Communify helped him every step of the way.
“They have been mighty. You wouldn’t believe it,” he says. “They got me a unit close to a train station where Bric Housing runs a tight ship. No fighting, no drinking or drugs, so I’m pleased with that. We are all single people and of course I’m the oldest.”
His unit is in a block of 24, and although he lives by himself, he says he has wonderful neighbours.
“I am so blessed, as I have got three neighbours who look out for me daily. One bloke takes me shopping or for a ride somewhere. We all get on,” he says.
Charlie has led a chequered life, from growing up on a farm in the Sunshine Coast hinterland to owning one of the biggest cleaning businesses in Brisbane.
He was an apprentice butcher, lived in Kingaroy for a few years and settled in Brisbane where he worked on machinery building roads, before moving into the cleaning business. During the 1980s, his business employed more than 100 people and counted corporations such as Woolworths and P&O among its clients.
After 18 years, he moved on and eventually opened a fruit and vegetable shop on the Gold Coast. He was driving a water truck, working on construction of the new airport, when he reluctantly retired at age 72.
“I just decided one day that I was ready to give up work, although I did always enjoy my working life,” he says. “I do miss it sometimes. I don’t get bored now though. If I want something to do I jump on a train and go for a ride.”
And he doesn’t mean to the next suburb or into the city. He rides the rails to Gympie and Maryborough and is looking forward to a trip to see the cattle sales in Rockhampton. Then he hopes to get to Cairns and maybe west to Longreach.
As well as finding him a place to live, Communify has helped Charlie keep active, something that is important to him.
He has come to love the weekly aqua aerobics classes where he has made a lot of friends and loves the Fun Friday activities.
He was surprised, on a recent bus trip to the Roma Street Parkland, that he had never seen it before. This is despite having lived in Brisbane for more than 40 years.
“These trips are really interesting to me,” he says. “They’re a good group. Companionship and meeting people are important to me. I’m not one to sit idle. I am out getting together with people twice a week. I’m not ready to go stale just yet.”
His little apartment is relatively new and easy to keep clean and although he enjoys pottering about in the kitchen – he has just put curried sausages in the slow cooker and makes apple crumble in his convection oven – he appreciates having a housekeeper come in every two weeks to give him a hand.
For the rest, he can manage himself with some help from his neighbours.
“I can manage on my own but Communify has given me a much better quality of life,” he says. “I want to stay active and continue looking after myself in my own little place here. I sometimes get a bit lonely, but I never get depressed. I don’t even know what that means.”
The Aged Care Diversity Framework
The Aged Care Diversity Framework aims to ensure a high quality aged care system that embraces the diverse characteristics and life experiences of consumers. Older people with diverse needs. characteristics and life experiences may be part of a group or multiple groups that may have encountered exclusion, discrimination and stigma during their lives.
The above article is part of a series that tells the real life stories of healthy@home clients. It has has been approved for publishing by the service provider and client.
Thanks for sharing your story Charlie. This highlights how dramatically life can change for anyone and the additional support we may unexpectedly find ourselves needing. It is wonderful to see that organisations like Communify can offer that support and this has the ability to have a profound affect on a person’s life.
We appreciate your feedback Stacey. Thanks 🙂
Charlies has been part of our group on Friday Fun Day for quite awhile now. He doesn’t mind a ribbing from us when he says something that we think is funny. We know how to have a great time on these days & never miss an opportunity to have a good laugh and Charlie laughs with us, he is a good sport. Charlie has lived an interesting life and he’s definitely an interesting person with lots of stories. We really like him, he’s a great person.
Wow, what a great change Communify has made to dad’s life. He’s happier, more active & he loves the trips in the bus. They have opened their doors to him & all of our family are so very grateful.
Hi David,
I was so pleased to hear Charlie was doing great things with communify. The phone number he gave me when he returned from Vietnam is inactive and I was hoping to sent him a copy of a book I have published on the revitalisation of the ‘Top of Town Ipswich’ that tells the story of how some small people and some great people (he included) saved the heritage precinct from the bulldozers. Perhaps you could send me his address to my email address so that I can forward a copy to him. With thanks, Shirley Byrne.