Gina's Women's Club - GWC

Gina's Women's Club - GWC Fortnightly, Monday evenings, 7.00 pm - 9.00 pm, The New Waterton Hall, Carlisle CA1 1LB

GWC is a free, wheelchair friendly space, where women (over 18 years-old) can connect, support and encourage each other, talk & draw on the experience of the group.

18/02/2026

Please listen to this reel - it’s relevant to us all 🌸

Wishing you all a very merry Christmas 🎄🙏🏼💐
24/12/2025

Wishing you all a very merry Christmas 🎄🙏🏼💐

07/09/2025

‘One Step’ is an inspirational poem written by Gemma Turner of Gina’s Women’s Club:

One step at a time is all that it takes
Laundry to fold and beds to make
Take your time for goodness sake.
One step at a time is absolutely fine
Even with a grumble, take it as a sign
That life isn't easy but tell yourself it is mine.
One step at a time is all it can take
Not forgetting to take a coffee break
Even if you don't feel fully awake.
One step at a time, just slow down
Turn your head and try not to frown
Even if you are feeling down.
One step at a time, you've got this
Its ok if some chores you do miss
Not everything will be bliss.
One step at a time, I promise it works
Even when those dark thoughts poke and lurk
You can stare your demons down and smirk.
One step at a time, please cherish the moment.
Those worries you have may seem potent,
But remember what is important.
One step at a time.

A super volunteering opportunity for anyone with spare time - your time will so help others 🌸
01/09/2025

A super volunteering opportunity for anyone with spare time - your time will so help others 🌸

01/09/2025

Little girl knocked on my door at 2 AM holding a half-dead kitten, asking if I could "fix her kitty like I fixed Daddy's motorcycle."
I'd never seen this child before in my life, standing barefoot on my porch in thirty-degree weather, her lips turning blue while she cradled this dying animal like it was the most precious thing in the world.
My Harley was parked in the driveway where I'd been working on it earlier, tools still scattered on the garage floor, and somehow this tiny frozen child had wandered through the dark to find the only house with a motorcycle because she thought bikers could fix anything.
"Please, mister," she whispered through chattering teeth. "Kitty's sick and Mommy won't wake up."
Those five words – "and Mommy won't wake up" – changed everything. This wasn't just about a sick cat anymore.
I scooped her up immediately, this tiny shivering stranger who weighed nothing, and she curled into my leather jacket like she'd known me forever. The kitten was barely breathing, clearly hit by a car, and the child's pajamas were wet from walking through frost-covered grass for God knows how long.
"What's your name, sweetheart?" I asked, my voice rougher than I intended.
"Lucy. This is Whiskers. She got hurt."
"Where's your house, Lucy?"
She pointed vaguely down the street into darkness. "Where the yellow flowers are. But Mommy won't wake up and I couldn't find the phone."
I grabbed my phone, calling 911 with one hand while wrapping Lucy in the heavy wool blanket from my couch. I gave the dispatcher my address and told them a child's mother was unresponsive somewhere down the street. But what this little girl said next made my blood run cold and realize we didn't have time to wait.
I asked her, "Lucy, why did you pick my house? Why a biker?"
She looked up at me, her eyes wide and serious, and said the words that would change my life forever. "My daddy… before he went to heaven… he showed me a picture of his friends. They all had jackets like you. He said if Mommy ever got the 'sleeping sickness' again and he wasn't there, I had to find one of his angel brothers, 'cause you fight the monsters."
A jolt went through me, so powerful I almost dropped the phone. Angel brothers. It wasn’t a little girl's fantasy. It was a call sign. My club, the "Heaven's Angels MC." Her daddy was one of us. This wasn't a random child; this was family. A fallen brother's little girl. And "sleeping sickness" was the code we used when one of our own had a wife with a serious medical condition—in this case, as I later found out, severe diabetes.
"Stay on the line," I barked to the 911 operator. "I'm going to the house now."
There was no time to wait. I wrapped Lucy tighter in the blanket, held her against my chest, and ran out the door. "Which house, Lucy? Show me now!"
She pointed to a small dark house three doors down, a bed of dead marigolds in the front yard. The door was unlocked. I pushed it open into a scene of quiet chaos. A woman was lying on the floor, pale and still. On the end table, an insulin kit was knocked over. She was in a diabetic coma.
With Lucy still clinging to me, I laid her mother in the recovery position, checked her airway, and relayed everything to the dispatcher, who guided me until the paramedics arrived. The kitten, Whiskers, had passed away silently in the folds of the blanket, a tiny, sad casualty of a much larger tragedy.
While the paramedics worked, my eyes scanned the living room and landed on the mantelpiece. There he was. A photo of a young man I vaguely recognized from a state-wide meet years ago, grinning, with his arm around his wife. On his leather vest was our patch: the twin wings of a Heaven's Angel. His name was Danny. He'd died in a car accident two years ago. I'd sent flowers. I never knew he had a family.
The paramedics saved her. They got her stabilized and rushed her to the hospital. When the police officer gently tried to take Lucy, she screamed and clung to me.
"No! He's my angel brother! Daddy sent him!"
The cop looked at me, then at the patch on my jacket, and simply nodded. He understood.
I stayed with her. I held her while she cried for her mommy and for her kitten. I held her until she fell asleep, exhausted, in the hospital waiting room. I never left her side.
When her mom woke up hours later, groggy and terrified, the first thing she saw was me, a hulking biker in worn leather, sitting by her bed with her daughter asleep on my lap. Tears streamed down her face. "You found one," she whispered. "Danny always promised one of you would come."
From that day on, my life had a new purpose. Lucy and her mom weren't alone anymore. They had an army. The Heaven's Angels descended on that little house with the yellow flowers. We fixed the leaky roof, stocked their pantry, and set up a fund for Lucy's future. I became "Uncle Sarge." I taught Lucy how to ride a bike, just like her dad would have.
She was right. Her daddy had sent her to me. She came looking for someone to fix her kitten, but in the end, we all ended up fixing each other. She gave a lonely old biker a reason to be more than just a man with a motorcycle. She gave me a family to protect. And I, along with my brothers, got to fulfill a fallen angel's last wish: to fight the monsters and keep his family safe.
Credit to the rightful owner~

04/08/2025

"I’m Peter. 68. Every Tuesday, I walk to the discount grocery store near my apartment building. Same time. Same cart. Same list scribbled on a torn receipt. Canned beans. Rice. Cheap oatmeal. Milk that’s about to expire (they mark it down).

Last Tuesday, three teenagers snickered behind me in the cereal aisle. One nudged the other, pointing at my cart. “Yo, grandpa’s broke,” he whispered loud enough for me to hear. “Look at that sad list.” His friends laughed. I kept my eyes down. Didn’t react. Truth is, it stung. But I got used to it years ago. People see an old man with food stamps, they assume the worst.

At checkout, my hands shook a little Parkinson’s, doc calls it. I fumbled the coupons. The cashier, Maria, she’s kind. Always gives me an extra smile. “Rough day, Mr. Peter?” she asked. I just nodded. Then I saw it. The teens were still there, watching. Smirking. One mouthed “loser” to his friend. My face burned. I wanted to vanish.

But Maria rang up my total. $28.76. I tapped my EBT card. Beep. Approved. I started packing my bags, slow, careful. That’s when the teens moved closer. The tallest one, maybe 16, leaned on the conveyor belt. “You really need all that government cheese, old man?” he sneered.

I stopped. Looked him right in the eye. My voice came out quieter than I meant it to. “Ain’t for me, son.”

He blinked. “Huh?”

I pointed to the bags. “Two bags of rice? That’s for Mrs. Gable upstairs. Her pension check got delayed again. Canned peaches? For the Henderson twins, they’re raising those grandkids alone since their mom got sick. Expiring milk? Old Mr. Peterson’s cat needs it. He can’t afford vet bills and cat food.” I paused, my throat tight. “I fix cars for folks who pay me in vegetables or socks. But sometimes.... you just see people hurting. And you carry what you can.”

Silence. The other teens shifted their feet. Maria wiped the counter, not looking up, but I saw her wipe her eye.

The tall kid cleared his throat. “You.... you do this every week?”

“Every week,” I said. “My list’s short ’cause my wife, Ellie, she’s sick now. Needs most of our food. But there’s always room for one more can.”

He stared at the cart. Then, without a word, he grabbed two heavy bags. “Where you live?”

I told him. Apartment 3B.

He nodded to his friends. “Come on.” They each took a bag. We walked out together. No jokes. No smirks. Just silence, heavy with something new.

At my building, they carried everything up the stairs, three flights, no elevator. My knees aren’t great. They set the bags down inside my door. The tall kid hesitated. “I’m Jamal,” he said. “This… this is cool, Mr. Peter.”

“Peter’s fine,” I said.

Last Tuesday? Jamal and his friends were waiting outside the store. With their carts. Jamal handed me a list. “We got Mrs. Gable’s rice. And peaches for the twins.” One kid held up a bag of cat food. “Mr. Peterson’s cat says thanks.”

Now it’s not just me. Kids from the high school take shifts. We call it “The Tuesday Cart.” We don’t leave food on fences or in fridges. We deliver it. Knock on doors. See the faces. Hear the “God bless you” from Mrs. Gable, who cries every time we come. Watch the twins’ eyes light up over peaches.

Ellie’s still sick. My hands still shake. But every Tuesday, my cart’s a little heavier and my heart’s a little lighter. Jamal’s applying to college now. Wants to study social work. “You showed me what real strength looks like, Peter,” he told me.

People assume food stamps mean broken. But sometimes? They’re just another way to carry kindness. One can of beans at a time.

You see someone struggling. Don’t assume. Ask. You might just find they’re carrying more than you ever imagined. And maybe.... you’ll find a way to help carry it too.”

Let this story reach more hearts...
Please follow us: Astonishing
By Mary Nelson

Here is a super volunteering opportunity 🌸
22/07/2025

Here is a super volunteering opportunity 🌸

Address

Carlisle

Opening Hours

Monday 7pm - 9pm

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