19.00 Thursday 5th
September 2013 was a historic day in the field of social care within Wales as
it saw the inaugural meeting of the Wales Social Care Curry Club. You can find the history background and
reasoning of the social care curry club here: http://bit.ly/17DH7Hg
but suffice to say the inaugural Wales event was hosted by Peter and Anne Marie who
had contacted the organisers of the Social Care Curry initiative and offered to
help organise one in the Welsh capital. The rest is now history and I am sure
will prove to be historical to boot. Wales joined a mix of such eat-ups that took place
throughout the UK in nine different locations on the same date in: Birmingham,
Bristol, Canterbury, Glasgow, Leeds, London, Manchester and Southampton. You
can learn more about curry club here.
The involvement of @ASCCCymru came from a random tweet received
from Professor Jonathon
Scourfield , which was a little ironic as eventually he could not attend
but @ASCCCymru is more than thankful to him for making us aware of this great
initiative. Like many an innovative idea this one is just SO simple. Just get anybody who is interested in social
care to get together in a room and share a curry #DOH. Those who might want to come along to make a
pitch or try to sell something were discouraged as that is not what the night
was all about. It was just about getting
to know each other and the sharing of knowledge and experiences between people
who are genuinely interested in social care and who also enjoy a curry. The
turn out to the first event was, shall we say, select with only eight
attendees, but the quality of those attendees was top class and as the night
progressed it very much turned in to a highly enjoyable and informative
evening.
I’m sure readers can appreciate that the prospect of walking
in to a restaurant to meet and spend the evening with potentially a crowd of
strangers can be a somewhat daunting experience. This was a little alleviated
for me as I had at least met the indefatigable Anne Marie Cunningham on one
previous occasion and had communicated with her on Twitter a number of times,
so at least I already knew one of the participants. Anne Marie did a fantastic job of welcoming
people on arrival and putting people at their ease. What was a very pleasant
surprise however was that on arrival, with one exception, I had either met
briefly or had knowledge as to who they were
with everyone at the table. Wales
has a tendency towards this and South Wales in particular. We are only a small country of three million and
not everyone is interested in social care. Even if you want to remain anonymous
in Wales, unless you never come out of the house or never engage in social media, it is
difficult. Having at least some
knowledge or contact with most of the people at the table this is where the
Social Care curry really came into its own, as it provided an opportunity to
build on those previous professional meetings and take them up to a new level
where we could actively consider closer collaboration and contact.
The social care curry provided the opportunity for people
from different areas of social care such as policy, practitioner, service user
and indeed academic to come together in an environment where no specific
outcome is expected, other than to eat a curry and have a chat. What could be more simple, what could be more
basic, but I think as the evening showed, what could be more enlightening and
what could be more enjoyable?
I am already looking forward to me next social care curry #NomNomNom :-)
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