Tag: Cars For Hope

  • 2016 ClubITR Annual BBQ – Lane Cove National Park

    2016 ClubITR Annual BBQ – Lane Cove National Park

    Really cool to attend to the ClubITR Annual BBQ yesterday. I’ve been a part of this community long before I could drive and what a privilege it is to be part of such a positive and fun community. These guys have been behind the idea of Cars For Hope since day 1 and yesterday they raised $1826 for the charity organisation. This enables us to keep doing what we do, like giving hope, connecting people to the help that they deserve, and investing directly into mental health research and treatment. Thank you for supporting Cars For Hope and telling people why you do. But most of all, thank you for caring about people.

    Check out all the photos from the event HERE.

  • Cars For Hope teams up with Motorsport Australia for Suicide Prevention

    Cars For Hope teams up with Motorsport Australia for Suicide Prevention

    This Saturday is World Suicide Prevention Day and there’s no secret that this is something very close to my heart. For the past month as part of Cars For Hope’s #IAMDRIVEN campaign we’ve been asking people to answer our question ‘What drives you?’. And you know it wasn’t until last night that I realised that I’ve never really answered that question.

    berty_s2000

    The last 5 years with Cars For Hope has been an amazing ride and I feel like it’s just such a privilege to bring my heart to work every day. I get to wake up every day and write things that I really believe and say things that I really believe. I get to be creative trying to encourage people and move people to know that it’s okay to be honest and that it’s okay to ask for help. And the other part of it is I get to hear the best stories and compliments, sometimes even people saying they’re still alive and getting help because of the work that we do. It’s so incredibly humbling and encouraging.

    cams_carsforhope

    Today, I’m also very proud to announce a collaboration between Cars For Hope and Motorsport Australia (Formerly the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport – CAMS) and Shannons Nationals this weekend at Phillip Island which sees over 120 competing cars wearing Cars For Hope stickers throughout the event in support of mental health awareness and World Suicide Prevention Day.

    Press Release: https://portal.cams.com.au/media/news/latest-news/cams-joins-cars-for-hope

     

  • The Story of Cars For Hope

    The Story of Cars For Hope

    Cars For Hope began as a way to tell the story of our friend, Annabel. It was our way to remind her that she matters and we love her. She was growing up and starting to figure out how our world works, how our world thinks, and what our world thinks is important. For a long time she struggled with self-injury and she believed the lie that the world had forgotten about her. The cuts on her wrist and thighs are images I’ll never be able to keep from my memory, but the most heart-wrenching feeling is seeing a loved one in a state where they have no urge to be picked up. It has to be one of the worst feelings one could ever experience.

    I remember sitting in the Doctor’s waiting room and not knowing what to expect. I was just 18 and failing to comprehend what was going on. I simply did not understand it. But it was a turning point for me because I realised that while there was still air pumping through her lungs, something more had to be done.

    We started out small. We placed a sticker on our car and we went racing. People came up to us wondering what the sticker meant and we would tell them the story behind it. These days there are thousands of stickers and tens of thousands of people helping to spread the message across Australia and the world.

    I think the reason the whole Cars For Hope campaign started to grow is because so many were pleased to embrace the message behind it.  They would be like, “Oh, that’s me. Annabel is me.” There are so many ways you can connect with her character and they always connect with her, no matter what place or what country they’re in. They feel the shit that she’s going through, and they’re living it. So they started giving that feedback and saying “I’m an Annabel because I’m depressed and I hate my family, or I’m creative and I love building cars but people don’t understand it.” I’ve been connected to the issue of self-injury for about four or five years, and I know that what people need to hear more than anything is that they’re not alone.

    There’s a mini message built into the story behind Cars For Hope. It reads something like: “Yeah, I’m scared, I’m depressed, I’m obsessed, I’m whatever, but I’m also an Annabel because there’s a million Annabels and they’re all going through crazy shit.” But it is our absolute pleasure and honour to say that hope is real and that recovery is possible.

    We have heard stories from all over the world.
    From all ages, genders and races.
    We have heard from people helping people.
    We have heard from those who were once confused with what depression actually is.
    We have heard from people taking the brave steps towards help and healing.
    We have heard from people sitting across from their doctor or counsellor for the first time,
    And we will continue to hear from people pursuing stability and full recovery.

    That’s what we’re all about.

  • Honda Nationals from the Pit lane

    Honda Nationals from the Pit lane

    You might be wondering why the title of this post is called ‘Honda Nationals from the Pit lane’. I mean what kind of photographer comes to a track focused event and doesn’t take on-track shots? What a lazy and incompetent photographer! Well this weekend I was ‘that’ photographer and I’ll tell you why I was. When the Honda Nationals was introduced back into the scene two years ago it was organised and promoted as a social event. In 2011 and 2012 I competed in the Cars For Hope Honda Integra; I had a great time at these events because I was very close to the Honda scene, almost everyone in the paddock was a friend and if they weren’t a quick conversation would fix that right up. Unfortunately our car wasn’t quite ready to compete this year but I was still very keen to make the trip down to Winton raceway to have a look. Usually when I’m on the job as a photographer I’d have a set brief that I’ve been assigned from my employer and I’d have to follow the brief meticulously. This weekend I could create this brief myself and that meant hanging out with mates, ALL DAY! I did make it out on to the track but I was simply too busy in the passenger seat shouting at my mates to get on the gas earlier at corner exits or driving their cars myself. There was almost no time to whip out the camera except for a few moments throughout the day and those moments are captured below.


    Overall Results:

    1. Brandon Lockwood BYP Racing – Integra Type R (DC2) – 1:31.3800
    2. Adam Casmiri JDM Yard – Integra Type R (DC5) – 1:33.3770
    3. Duncan Shiu – Integra VTi-R (DC2) – 1:34.9470

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