Change Makers | Lily Calderbank
Blog: The Brain Dialogues
Blog: The Brain Dialogues
UNSW Sydney Annual Giving Coordinator, Lily Calderbank, is a proud member of the CHeBA Change Makers workplace giving program. Change Makers are an exclusive group of next generation philanthropists supporting critical research into Alzheimer's disease and other dementias for a brighter future in ageing.
To be honest, not much. When I hear the word philanthropist I always think of someone like Bill Gates. I suppose I would label myself a supporter or advocate.
My hope is that it makes some small difference. My hope is that there are others doing the same as me so that that small difference turns into big change.
It might sound counter intuitive but I’m an avid boxer and boxing fan. It’s a dangerous sport with a long history of brain injury and many older boxers come to suffer from dementia and CTE. It’s important to me that CHeBA’s research continues so that we learn more about what contributes to healthy brain ageing and what the greatest risk factors are. I love the sport and I want boxers to be able to make an informed decision when participating but we need more research to guide that.
I have always used workplace giving to support causes I’m passionate about. For me, it’s the easiest way to give regularly. I set and forget then review my support roughly once a year.
I box 6 days a week and am currently training for my first amateur fight. I’m passionate about theatre and the arts. My first degree was in performance making and I’m in a performance collective that creates work that makes it difficult for the performers to present (such as building and sailing a raft with no expertise or materials in a day, walking 20km to get to the theatre, attempting to meet each other in our dreams, hanging from pinatas, exploring and re-enacting our friendship through impersonators). We also write Christmas plays and perform them for our friends each year just because we like the holiday.
Join the Change Maker – Next Gen Philanthropy program and advance CHeBA’s research
in ways to prevent cognitive decline, improve cognitive functioning as we age,
devise better care for people with dementia and to diagnose people at risk for dementia.
For more information, please contact h.douglass@unsw.edu.au