Global News Podcast - The Happy Pod: Learning to play the guitar one handed
Episode Date: March 1, 2025Tony Romaine has taught himself how to play the guitar with one arm, after a stroke left him unable to walk or speak. Plus, Ilona Maher on using social media to spread positivity and the 105 year old ...raver.
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This is the HappyPod from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson and in this edition...
Even if things seem almost impossible, we can do it.
We can do anything we want.
If it's something that important to you, just go.
Don't stop until you get somewhere you want to be.
The man trying to get his music career back after a life changing stroke.
You can be beautiful and wear lipstick.
I wear lipstick when I play rugby because I just feel like I don't have to sacrifice
one or the other.
Like I can be a beast on the field but also feel beautiful and wear lipstick.
The young female athlete trying to inspire the next generation to follow in her footsteps.
Plus, we find out why dozens of people have been queuing outside a funeral home in China.
And...
I think when I went to bed, because I can remember I was up at half past two talking,
yacking away, so it should be getting on for three o'clock before I went to bed.
Meet the woman raving on her 105th birthday.
We start with one man's remarkable journey back to doing what he loves.
Tony Romaine is a musician from Inverness in Scotland.
At the age of 49,
he suffered a stroke which left him unable to speak or walk. Two and a half years into his recovery,
Tony has resumed his music career by teaching himself how to play the guitar with one arm.
He wants to use his music as a way to raise awareness for other people on a similar journey.
He spoke to the Happy Pods' Holly Gibbs.
I mean, at first I couldn't move hardly at all.
I mean, it seemed pretty obvious I wouldn't play guitar again.
Now I can move a lot better,
but my left arm is still, well, pretty much useless.
But things have come on a lot, and I hope they continue to.
How did you inspire yourself to relearn how
to play the guitar and how to sing again? I never really think that I didn't think
I would if that makes sense. Just even when I was lying in the ICU, couldn't
move, I was still thinking about when I get I'm going to do this. I remember one of the people at
the ICU, one of the nurses saying it'd take months or possibly years for me to recover
enough to just get home. And in my mind that just said things will get better. So that
was it. I had no doubt at all that I wouldn't play music. I really just couldn't imagine life without it.
That must have been incredibly difficult when you were told that you
were going to have to relearn how to speak and walk again.
Yes it was and I think at the time as well because of the brain injury,
my emotions were all over the place.
Because of the brain injury, my emotions were all over the place. And not even my emotions, just my reactions to things.
I would start crying for no reason, even when I wasn't sad.
Or I would start laughing just at anything at all.
For no reason.
Quite often, quite often quite an appropriate moment. But when I realised
everything I had to do, it was hard to think about
but I wasn't gonna let anything get in the way.
How did you even begin to teach yourself how to play the guitar one-handed?
First of all I laid it on a bench in front of me and I tried to use one hand to do it.
That didn't work. I just kept trying everything I could. Eventually I've got it sat in my
wheelchair so it's supported by the armrest and I'll basically use obviously just the
one hand. I'll use a couple of fingers to press down on the strings and the other two fingers
I'll use to pluck or strum the strings.
How did it feel to be sat with your guitar again playing music?
It made me very sad but very happy at the same time. It was just things that I couldn't
do which I used to be able to do and then things that I could do which I never thought I would be able to do
at the same point.
How has music helped your recovery?
I think it's just given me a focus.
I mean apart from family obviously.
It's the one thing in life that I really love
and I just can't imagine giving up.
Even since your stroke you've gotten stage to perform,
how was that stepping back on the stage? What did that feel like?
It felt really good. It was almost like feeling like myself again if that makes sense.
What have your family said about you teaching yourself how to use musical instruments again?
Keep the noise down. No, they've been very supportive. Do you want to use music in future to inspire other people who have suffered a stroke to?
Help them in their recovery
Definitely. Well, I want to raise awareness for stroke. I would love to
Help encourage other people to keep on going
I would love to help encourage other people to keep on going and show them what can be done. Don't give up. Even if things seem almost impossible, we can do it. We can do anything we want.
If it's something that important to you, just go. Don't stop until you get somewhere you want to be.
And even then, don't stop.
Tony Romaine speaking to Holly Gibbs.
For many of the world's greatest athletes, success isn't just measured on the field.
It's also about inspiring the next generation.
And in recent months, interest in women's rugby has soared,
thanks in large part to one player in particular.
Olympic bronze medallist Elona Mar has become
a prominent figure on social media, amassing more followers than anyone else in the sport.
The US rugby star is now bringing her passion to the UK ahead of the Women's Rugby World
Cup. Ella Bicknell reports. And here is Elona Mar with a hooker and a fly-off to beat. Oh, she's going to do it!
It is quite simply marvellous.
Thousands of fans packed out Bristol's Ashgate Stadium, a record crowd for the South West
England team. That's because of a new addition to the squad, a social media sensation and
the new unofficial ambassador
for women's rugby, Ilona Marr.
Okay, thanks guys. Okay, I'm going to sign one more thing and then I've got to go take
a million pictures.
Honestly it's so exciting. She is the biggest name in rugby at the moment.
She's just really made it so much more exciting and accessible to like younger people as well.
She's really funny. She's like really inspirational for young girls and stuff.
Especially tall broad shoulder women like me who wanted someone like Alona to look up
to and we're just excited to support women's sports and support Alona. We're so happy to
be here.
After a bronze medal winning performance for Team USA at the Paris 2024 Olympics, the 28-year-old
Sevens player has moved to the UK to elevate her 15-a-side game, and
she's bringing her 8 million social media followers with her.
I'm so excited to join the Bristol Bears and play Premiership Women's Rugby with and
against some of the best rugby players in the world.
Just a question, is it going to be this cold the whole time?
It's got a little chilly.
It is.
They see me through an app all the time.
They see me that way and connect me through social media. really. It is okay." Marz performance on the field field combined with her humorous behind-the-scenes videos
made her one of the standout stars of last year's Olympics.
She's since been a contestant on prime-time American television show Dancing with the Stars.
She's been featured in magazines like Forbes and Sports Illustrated and signed multiple brand deals.
illustrated and signed multiple brand deals. What lipstick do you use?
Her motto, Beast Beauty Brains, reflects her unapologetic approach to life. She wants women
to be themselves, regularly jumping on TikTok to discuss body positivity and what it's like
as a high profile female athlete.
I want to talk to you all today about imposter syndrome and why people automatically assume
that successful women have it.
I have cellulite everywhere. It is completely normal, completely natural. It does not take
away from your athletic ability or how fast or how fit you are. We all have it.
Speaking to the BBC, Mar says it's an honour to be a role model for young girls, if that's
what's needed to make the sport grow. The thing is like athletes and women are so versatile.
You can be beautiful and wear lipstick.
I wear lipstick when I play rugby because I just feel like I don't have to sacrifice one or the other.
Like I can be a beast on the field but also feel beautiful and wear lipstick.
I also am smart. I have a nursing degree. I have a master's in business.
I think for those girls out there, rugby is a really sport that allows you to express yourself in the fullest way possible.
Alona Maher's contract with the Bristol Bears might just be three months long, but she hopes
to be back in England for this summer's Women's Rugby World Cup.
I want to make that World Cup squad next year and I want to be myself in the best and most
deserving position to make it. And I think for rugby as a whole this is just a shine line on this league as well because this is a semi-professional league hopefully
becomes professional league so these girls can play rugby can you know fill these stands more
and so little girls can dream of being professional rugby players someday. Ella Bignall reporting.
To southwest China now where food lovers have been flocking to an unlikely destination.
Cues of people have formed outside a small funeral home in Guizhou, some even posing
as mourners, just to try a popular noodle dish served in the funeral home's canteen.
Asia Pacific editor Celia Hatton told Oliver Conway more about this latest food craze.
These noodles, I've got to say they do look delicious. They're kind of these hand-pulled
noodles made in the canteen and they're served with pork, they're a little bit spicy,
they're topped with peanuts. It's a bit of a local delicacy but it just shows that
Chinese food lovers will go to great lengths to find good food. So word began to spread
that this little tiny cafeteria inside a funeral home complex was serving fantastic noodles
and people started pretending that they were attending funerals, pretending to be mourning
the dead in order to go and try the noodles. And it was said that at one point the lineups outside
the canteen were about two hours long. Some waited for two hours in order to pay about
a dollar for a bowl of these fantastic noodles.
Yeah, the pictures suggest the canteen is quite busy just seeing those people there
crammed in. Can it cope?
Well, they have said they've had to make a concession that they are willing for members
of the public to come and try the noodles. In fact, the chef says he will give 50 free
bowls of noodles away a day as long as those people, the noodle lovers, don't get in the
way of the actual mourners, people actually attending funerals. So they've had to make
some concessions. But I think they're seeing it as a huge compliment that people all over China are going to this one tiny location because the noodles
are so good. And this is a big thing in China. You hear about some good food and you do anything to
try and get there. That's right. I mean, Chinese people love really good food. So when word begins
to spread and social media has just amplified this, word begins to spread
that one particular thing is really, really good.
People almost enjoy the challenge of being able to track it down and to line up for huge
amounts of time and to really kind of put in the time in order to score this.
And I think the added challenge of having to pretend to be mourning and to pretend to
be attending a funeral was
just what some people just couldn't even ignore.
Celia Hatton. Fitness trends might come and go, but this latest one has raised some eyebrows.
Codrobics is a form of exercise which involves copying the movement of animals by walking
on all fours. It's also taken off as a social media trend in Russia.
However, some senior politicians there have threatened to ban it.
One Japanese man hopes to stop that and spread the benefits of these sport,
as Edward Maine reports.
I think it's utterly ridiculous for any government to think of banning
quadrobics, something that has so many benefits as a sport.
That's Kenichi Ito from Japan.
He's one of the fastest humans on four limbs.
On your mark, ready, go!
Kenichi held the Guinness World Record from 2015 to 2022
after covering 100 metres in a remarkable 15.71 seconds.
Kenichi lives in Tokyo where he's something of a celebrity. Now 42, he
devotes much of his time to training and promoting quadrobics as a sport. With a
war-y physique and collar-length brown hair, he was dressed in a tracksuit.
Despite the poor connection, Kenichi's passion for quadrobics shone through. So how did it all begin?
I've always loved monkeys. When I went to the zoo and saw Patas monkeys
running, I was struck by how agile and fast they were. I wanted to be able to
run just like them. When I got home I started researching running on four limbs on the internet.
It looked like nobody had thought of doing it competitively yet.
I started training and researching because I wanted to turn it into a competitive sport.
At the time, Kenichi was studying in the US.
When people asked, hey dude, what are you doing?
I told them that I wanted to be able to run quickly on all fours and was training for that.
They'd encourage me once they learned that.
Even police officers encouraged me after I explained to them what I was doing.
However, when Kenichi moved back home, he received a very different reaction.
There was a major cultural shift in the way I was perceived.
People would report me to the police or they'd avoid me on the streets.
In an effort to escape that hostility,
Kenichi headed for the countryside.
I went to go and stay with a friend who was a monk,
as he owned a hut in the mountains.
I thought I'd be able to roam around freely on all fours 24-7.
However, this almost proved fatal
when a hunter mistook Kenichi for a wild boar.
One day when I was going about my business on all fours, I heard a loud rustling noise in the distance.
And when I looked up, I could see the muzzle of a gun pointed at me. I sprang up and yelled, I'm human.
Kenichi rejects claims by Russian officials
that quadrobics has a negative effect on young people.
And Kenichi has this message.
QUADROBIX SPEAKS IN GERMAN
Quadrobics is such a beautiful thing
that shouldn't be stopped by any government.
I want you to be able to keep doing the quadrobics that you love,
despite all this.
We passed on Kenichi's message to Maria, the teenage quadrober from Moscow.
I would answer thank you very much for your support and such words. I think this will
be very important for many. I would like all quadrobbers to hear those words.
In the last couple of months, the outcry about quadrobics appears to have quietened down
a bit. A ban has yet to materialise.
And you can hear more on this story from BBC Trending wherever you get your podcasts from.
Coming up in this podcast. All of a sudden, I'm 27 years old, I'm living the American dream, I'm living in a 10,000
square foot mansion and I did like what I saw. The man who gave up his NFL career to become a farmer. In 2022, Canada became the first country to allow same-sex figure skaters to compete in
pairs at national level. But two former Olympic champions are attempting to spark change globally
in a sport bound by strict gender rules. All throughout last month, Madison Hubbell from the US and Gabriela Papadakis
of France performed as an all-female duo at a figure skating gala in Switzerland. Their
aim was to inspire other governing bodies to allow same-sex couples to compete. Chantal
Hartle has been finding out how this partnership came about.
For many years, Madison Hubbell and Gabriela Papadakis were rivals on the ice.
But during their time as competitors, they also formed a friendship.
After their retirement, the pair trained together in Canada
and posted videos of them skating together online.
Then, as Papadakis put it, one thing led to another
and they ended up performing at an ice gala
that took place in cities across Switzerland.
One reviewer described the performance as a work of art full of softness and intimacy
which breaks through the slick and polished surface of the sport.
The two former Olympians acknowledged that the inclusion of same-sex couples in competitive
skating would be a slow process.
But Papadakis, who is bisexual, said she hoped their pairing would at least start a conversation.
For young people, often times they want to do international competitions, they want to
go to Worlds, they want to go to the Olympics. So if it's not allowed, they're not necessarily
interested yet to participate at the national level. And I think a lot of young people too,
they're afraid of being judged. But I think for us it's nice to use our status in the
skating world to show that actually it's something that people enjoy." So having spent decades performing alongside men, does it feel any different to skate with
a woman? For Hubble, not so much.
"'It was really fun to skate with someone who's obviously a more fluid and soft style
than my partner had been. But it didn't feel like I had the cognizant thought I'm skating with a
female so I must change for a female it was just another person that I was
learning to skate with. For the former champions this wasn't just about
modernizing the world of figure skating they also want to inspire more women and
girls to pursue the sport competitively. Skating has been most of my life and
it's a big love of mine and sharing it with somebody
else that I'm close with and care about was a big motivator and I see a lot of young women
who want to pursue ice dancing in a certain way and there's not that many young boys or
men who are competing so I thought it would be nice to actually have a visual reference
of what it could look like for two women or two men to skate together on the ice."
Hubble and Papadakis hope their skating tour in Switzerland was the first of many projects
together.
In a recent blog post, Papadakis wrote that figure skating is at its best when it celebrates
grace, strength and harmony.
It is time, she says, to redefine what those words mean and
who gets to embody them.
Chantal Hartle reporting.
For many, a career as a professional sports star is what dreams are made of. Jason Brown
chose to play football in high school as a way to get a college scholarship and having
done just that, he made it to the NFL becoming the
best paid player in the position. But despite his success at the age of 29 he walked away from the
sport to become a farmer in North Carolina where he gives away tons of food every year.
Jason spoke to Katie Smith. It is a beautiful farm, a gorgeous thousand acre farm.
And here in North Carolina, more sweet potatoes grown here than anywhere else.
So that is one of our staple crops.
Most of our food that we have grown, harvested and donated, which to date is more than 2
million pounds of food, about 1.1 million pounds of that have been sweet potatoes.
I can hear the passion in your voice when you talk and you talk like someone who has
done this their entire life. But I wonder if you could take us back to the moment where
your career is going really well, you're in the NFL, for a lot of people you are living
the dream. Where was that moment where you saw, actually for me, I'm not sure I am living
the dream.
I was inspired by my older brother, Lensford Bernard Brown II. He was slain in service
over in Iraq. I wish that I could say that so much of my passion and being so tough came
from a happy place. Actually, all of my passion came from a really dark place of not wanting
to let my older brother down. Like no matter what it took. All of a sudden, I'm 27 years
old. I'm living the American dream. I'm living in a 10,000 square foot mansion. And I didn't
like what I saw because in reflection, Lunstead lived a life
of service and giving back. And I was living a life of fortune, fame, and selfishness,
a lot of materialistic things. And it hit me to my core. I knew that I had to give back.
And I always told myself, I'm never going to forget about where I come from. And you have to keep
a certain level of humility and a certain level of humanity and that compassion for
your fellow man.
You say that you don't want to forget where you come from, but actually you didn't come
from a farm, did you? So where did the farm come into this?
That was my grandfather. He was a large farmer here in North Carolina. I was inspired by stories
that my father would tell me about my grandfather, about how giving he was. Every Christmas,
he gave every single one of his family members and friends a 50-pound sack of beans, a gallon of molasses, and a salt-cured
ham or a shoulder, that's an awesome gift. If you're a family that's struggling and going
through food insecurity, that's the type of gift that can help you to make it throughout another
month or so. And all while growing up, I saw the miracles of agriculture, even just on
fruit trees. I would even make fun of my mother when I would ask her for some money. And she
said, hey, son, why are you asking me for money? What do you think? Money grows on trees?
I said, well, no, it doesn't, but food grows on trees. There's something of value that
grows on trees. That's why one of the first things
that we planted here at First Fruits Farm was as many perennial fruit and nut trees
as we possibly could. And my son, J.W., who was four years old at the time, he said, Hey,
Dad, when are we going to be able to harvest and eat some of these fresh nuts? I said,
what I'm doing right now, you
and your children are going to benefit from these trees more so than I ever will. I said,
but you have to learn right now what it means to invest in our future, what it means to
sow a seed, to plant a tree, but yet it's going to be beneficial and help to feed our
families for generations to come.
You know, look at all of your unique gifts and how you can give back in a unique way. There's
something that you can do to build a legacy. Jason Brown speaking to Kate Smith and you can
hear the full interview on Sports Hour, wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
If you were lucky enough to make it to 105, how would you celebrate?
One woman from Derbyshire in central England put on a rave with the help of her care home.
Harry Bly has the story.
A DJ, rave lighting, UV paint and glow sticks, it's the sort of birthday celebration
you'd have if you're a teenager. You might think, this party however was for Hilda Jackson,
who was turning 105 years old. Hilda is the oldest resident at Holbrook Hall residential home, which hosted the event.
Bit of dancing, a bit of raving, you know, whatever.
So why a rave? The staff at her care home who organise the rave say Hilda has always
been a big fan of dancing and living life to the fullest.
Well, I've been like it all my life. I can't be a person that just sits there and not says anything.
I like to join in everything that's going off, especially here where I am.
I speak to everybody that comes in and they just look at me and I think some of them think I'm not all right.
And here's how it went.
The reason we are all here this evening, can we make some noise for the birthday girl on her 105th birthday?
Happy birthday, Hilda!
Happy birthday to you.
Alongside the dance bangers, her celebration included traditional party songs and an array
of food and drink.
Happy birthday to you.
Ahead of the big day, Hilda received dozens of cards, including one from King Charles
and Queen Camilla.
What aid achievement. We send you our congratulations and warmest best wishes for your 105th birthday
on the 25th of February 2025.
Oh, I was shocked when I got that. That was an absolute surprise. I never thought I'd ever get that. So, I was
so pleased to have it. And it's wonderful.
So a big party for a grand old lady. But did she enjoy it? Here's Hilda the morning after.
Absolutely fabulous. I thoroughly, thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it. I think when I went to bed, because
I can remember I was up at half past two talking, yakking away, so it had been getting on for three
o'clock. And on whether she will repeat this next year for her 106th. Keep your fingers crossed as I'm still here.
From all of us here, happy birthday Hilda.
Harry Bly reporting.
And that's all from the HappyPod for now.
We'd love to hear from you as ever.
The address is globalpodcast.bbc.co.uk
This edition was produced by Holly Gibbs and Harry Bly. It was mixed by Rebecca Miller.
The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Alex Ritzen. Until next time, goodbye.