Blesma News
Latest news from Blesma, The Limbless Veterans
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'Resilience Breath' Course Open to all Members!
6 April 2020During this period of isolation, Blesma has teamed up with Emily Hightower, who many Members may know from Blesma’s Challenge Aspen Military Ops (CAMO) activity, to deliver a 6 week online ‘Resilience Breath Course’ so Members can connect, train and learn together how they can stay well on all levels from the safety and comfort of their own homes. This programme will continue developing skills to enable you to read and regulate the state of your nervous system using breath, body mechanics, and visual field systems
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Rita regains confidence thanks to Blesma family
5 April 2020With the help of the Association a Blesma Widow is beginning to regain her confidence following the passing of her husband. Rita Taylor was devastated by the loss of husband David in September last year, but thanks to the support of her Outreach Officer Jas Suller and Welfare Rep Chris Jones, she is finding a new support network in Blesma. In January, Rita attended the Gloucester Christmas Lunch – the first Blesma activity she has taken part in on her own. “If it hadn’t been for Jas, I might not have got dressed that morning. I might have just sat at h
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Andy Mudd rocks out for charity with Prince and Bon Jovi
4 April 2020Blesma Member and Trustee Andy Mudd has recorded a charity single with Jon Bon Jovi and Prince Harry. Andy, along with 11 other members of the Invictus Games Choir, was invited to the world-famous Abbey Road Studios in London at the end of February to record a cover of Bon Jovi’s track Unbroken for the Invictus Games Foundation. Afterwards, Andy was then asked to recreate The Beatles’ iconic zebra crossing photo outside the studio. “It was great fun! I couldn’t believe I was singing in the iconic Abbey Road Studios, which was
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Medicine and innovation in conflict
2 April 2020The blunt saw on display at the Museum of Military Medicine was state-of-the-art battlefield kit in World War I, when military medicine was tested like never before. The atrocities of The Great War still resonate more than a century later, but the horrific events also brought about some of the biggest advances in treating the wounded, with techniques and protocols that endured for decades afterwards. World War I’s conveyor belt of casualties challenged the collective ingenuity of the Royal Army Medical Corps, which had only been formed 16 years earlier, and th
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