“For what felt like the longest while, Riley was pretty stable up until she was just over 3 years old”
That was until 2024, it was just an ordinary day for the family of 5,
“Riley woke not, not being able to lift her left arm.”
The concerned parents loaded their young family into the car, took their daughter to their local hospital, but were then told they needed to go to Perth.
So, they left.
Driving from their hometown of Margaret River, that 3.5-hour drive was riddled with the unknown.
What they knew was that their 3-year-old daughter had suffered a stroke.
What they didn’t know was where they would stay, how long they would be away or that this would be a trip they would make often.
Once on the ward, the family, stressed and highly emotional, was met with one seemingly little question: ‘ Do you guys need a room at the Ronald McDonald House?’
“And just like that, it’s just been such a game changer in the sense that we know that we can all be together, Henry can stay in the House with Kane, while I can be on the ward with Riley and Parker. Or the other way around.
With hotel rooms over $300 a night and given that I am unable to work full-time due to Riley’s condition, the financial pressure the House relieves is insane.It’s stressful to think about.
Legitimately, we wouldn’t have been able to afford all the trips to Perth, but its so much more than that, a lot of that stress would have come from not being together or even trying to organise dinners, things for the kids to do and a place they feel safe.”
And so began their journey with Ronald McDonald House WA.