Why More Stories Need To Be Told
    
What's left of St Lawrence's, the Lifecare offices, is going to go. That's a good thing. But it's important that the books stay because that's a reminder of what's happened. Even if anything happened to me, the books must stay. And my records, they must be kept safe, I don't want anything to happen to them.

My story and a lot more will help people with a learning difficulty, and I hope it will learn them to tell their story of what happened to them. Other people too can learn from it like the people who came to our workshop in Kent [for practitioners]. They learn what things went on all those years and they learn to change: they listen and learn. It's not just my story and what happened to me, it happened to loads of people, it even happened to Gloria. It happened to my mum though she ran away and never went back.

I'm involved in People First, I was chair of Croydon People First. Before that I was chair of London People First, for four years, helping people with learning difficulties to speak up: enabling people to speak up, and educating other people to make that happen. Now I'm encouraging other people to tell their stories. I think it's good, and I think it teaches the public that people with learning difficulties are not going to hurt anyone and all the time we can get people to write their story and tell what happened to them, and publish it, or do a book for themselves like my friend, Doris, wants to do then it helps everyone. And Doris wants to show her book to other people, when it's done, so she can say, 'Look, this is what I've done, and this is what it's all about.