“We provide a community adviser - Sharon Mesic - who goes out and supports people suffering from MS, along with their families and carers.
“She does an incredible job, and it’s so important.”
The organisation receives around 20 per cent of its operating costs from the Ministry Of Health, with the remaining 80 per cent coming from other sources.
Collins’ guitar was snapped up almost immediately.
He said he had now made 54.
“I was at tech school, and for my final year in woodwork, I didn’t want to make a chair or a table - I wanted to make a guitar.
“I went to Emmett’s [music store], got some plans, went back to woodwork and made one.
“It was an abomination, but it looked like a guitar. I still have it, actually.”
“One of the side effects is extreme fatigue. You have to listen to it and rest.”
Cawley said he still loved coming to work every day, despite being tired from time to time.
“It [MS] isn’t a death sentence at all. It’s a life sentence. I can still be here most days and I can still play guitar.
“What’s the point of just being at home, sitting on the couch?”
Mike Tweed is an assistant news director and multimedia journalist at the Whanganui Chronicle. Since starting in March 2020, he has dabbled in everything from sport to music. At present his focus is local government, primarily the Whanganui District Council.