Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsJesse trades it all in for caring career

Jesse trades it all in for caring career

By JOLENE OGLE

A LOCAL tradie has downed tools after 19 years to pick up the books and begin a career in aged care.
Following his father’s death last year, Jesse Sleeman, 33, enrolled at TAFE Queensland to complete a certificate III in Aged Care, incorporating a Home Care certificate.
A carpenter for the past 19 years, Jesse retired the tool belt when his father was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.
“The palliative care team at the time said Dad would need a full-time carer and when I walked into the room, he pointed at me,” Jesse said.
“It was highly emotional but just something that needed to be done. I was just going to let it be.
Jesse said he often clashed with his dad but the experience proved to be rewarding.
“Caring for him was amazing. We silently made amends and I got to see more of who he was and what he’s done and the same for him about me,” he said.
Following his father’s death, Jesse enrolled in TAFE, determined to use his career as a way of helping others.
Jesse, who graduated in November, said the switch from tools to books was challenging at the start, but support from TAFE staff helped him through the learning curve.
“The online computer work, submitting assignments, was a bit of a struggle for me at the start,” he said.
“But there was lots of help from the library staff at TAFE and even a tutor on a Tuesday afternoon to give support.”
Jesse said once he had made the decision to apply to study, he downed tools and put “120 per cent into TAFE”, and carrying books was much better than carrying tools.
For anyone thinking about a career change or a return to study, Jesse said “just do it”.
“Make the choice and do it. But, you have to be doing it for the right reasons,” he said.
“Definitely, in this industry, it’s not about money or what you’re going to own. It’s about what you can give to other people.”
Support is also important and Jesse said his family and friends have helped him through the study.
“A couple of my really close friends said it was probably the best decision I’ve ever made, so that was pretty cool,” he said.
“Having a friend who’s a nurse, she always said I’d be good as a nurse because I’m a people person, so she was stoked.”
Some people may wonder how people can work in palliative care, but for Jesse, there’s no better way to make people happy and give them the respect they deserve.
“It makes you feel good because they’re happy and it’s really rewarding to see them smile,” he said.
“Giving these guys a good day and respect and dignity they deserve is what I’m about.”
Jesse now plans to study for a Certificate in Disability at TAFE Queensland East Coast.
If you want to make the change, enrolments are now open for aged care courses at TAFE Queensland East Coast. Call 1300 656 188 or visit tafeeastcoast.edu.au for more information.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Noosa Pirates on the move

A recent flyer from the Noosa Pirates Rugby League Club reports that pre-season training is well underway - with robust attendance and enthusiasm as...
More News

Butter factory turns up heat

The Cooroy Butter Factory Arts Centre is set to showcase the Sunshine Coast’s next wave of creative talent when its much-anticipated biennial 40 under...

Christmas on the Rhine

With many families breaking away from traditional Christmas celebrations and exploring ways to connect so the whole family can relax, the idea of taking...

Discover India in comfort, colour and confidence

India is a destination that awakens the senses like nowhere else on earth. From the spiritual rhythm of ancient rituals to the grandeur of...

Gardens need plan for living collections

A living collection management plan is a vital component required in the draft Noosa Botanic Gardens masterplan to address a lack of focus on...

Our People

The Noosa Dolphins Rugby Union Club is a prime example of an amazing success story in sport. Now, Jerry Lewis guides us through...

Noosa happenings

Seeing across our electorate the joy emanating from residents celebrating being an ‘Aussie’, with flags, snags, music and family, was a powerful reminder of...

Big Jack gets and A-Day gong

The late, great Jack McCoy received a well-deserved Order of Australia in last week’s Australia Day honours list, for “significant service to surf cinematography”. Not...

Working the graveyard shift

Troy Andreassen has literally been working the graveyard shift for more than 32 years. Troy looks after Noosa’s cemeteries in Cooroy, Tewantin and Pomona, helping...

Turning up the love

Love is in the air at Noosa Chocolate Factory — and this Valentine’s Day, it’s also dipped in pink chocolate. From Monday, February 9, one...

Ready for anything

It was an emergency. Floodwaters had cut off the North Shore ferry. A woman was in labour. Paramedics couldn’t get across. And time was running...