by KAYNE TREMILLS
When I met Jim Stynes in 2002, I was a little fed up with the normal school system and was finding out other ways to amuse myself. I was told I should go and check out these workshops Jim and his mate Paul Currie were running. I did, and I never really left.
Those workshops were Reach, the youth (or as Jim liked to say, ‘Yoof’) program he started from the back of his car in 1994.
Jim, from very early on (even before Reach was established) had something in him that was quite unique. He cared about a lot about people; he saw his own background in them. He saw a lot of strugglers – particularly among the boys.
Jim was running footy workshops but he realised they weren’t working. Then he met Paul Currie (Reach co-founder) and saw drama workshops which focused on something else entirely. Paul went in, worked his magic and then the friendship, and Reach, was born.
They realised between the two of them they could combine something more universal and adaptable to the everyday lifestyle. It was more about the empathy and the social and the human side of life and they started to explore that and – badda bing badda boom – there it was.
Jim was a mentor. I’ve tried to sit down and think about what he meant to me. Jim was often viewed as the heart of the entire organisation. He led with his heart. He had that footy mentality; he was a bloke but he wasn’t … I never felt like you couldn’t approach him. He was such a big man and you could feel his energy in a room but he was always so gentle and willing to talk to anyone. He was an all-around beautiful man.
Top Comments
My boys LOVE Kayne on ABC3, I have a feeling he will go on to inspire young kids like Jim did. Beautifully written Kayne. RIP Jim xx
Kayne, thanks for your post. I never met Jim (and am really not an AFL fan) but have heard great things of Reach Foundation over the years.
I hope you, and others involved with Reach, can carry on as a tribute to Jim.
A very sad loss of someone gone too early, but inspiring to hear how well lived his too-short life was.