At the. College the. At the. Risk . Pool back at the. School ask us with the at the. School to. Keep the a cool at the a school at the rule of. Law school is cool. And you can hear that a little later we'll start with Toby and again another amazing story national stress day was Wednesday we ended up talking about stress on the Breakfast Show phone and while listening was a guy called Dennis from Doncaster them he listened to the show then he emailed as it read regarding this morning show I'm 64 I've been off work with stress and depression since April I went to my G.P. And she was brilliant I now attend low esteem courses and also a program called working when his suggestion if you're feeling stressed still depressed go and see a G.P. He concluded his email stress is frightening I'm just off to the gym now for an hour which helps we contacted Dennis and he spoke to Toby on the phone the following day one of us mean up now with the signals recess depression. Honestly I'm really early. I've got a full time job. I got to the point that basically I can go on the mark couldn't go any further I was so at that that Polly thought that the gentleman that stated regarding the G.P.S. I knew it was me 1st outlet so I went along and sat down and brought now and explained it all and ready 6 I'm not saying now 6 months ready and ready slowly getting the doctor was really really thought I just got down and say to weigh it out to me and he said. That mission in a cycle cycle of depression he said you need care of and know what I can do to get you. And that's where it all started what started what's been the path. Well they. Are still not right this sequence online basically sent me for counselling. And. Counsel to be on the study I couldn't really get on with it I just don't know why and she said I think I'm the wrong person you need to see someone else and I actually went and saw another counsellor that basically put it all C B T Yep cell I have those old a C B 721 when there were sessions and then I had to stop because of the length of time and being going and then when I went from not see absolutely recommended waking which was mentioned yesterday. So I've been along with him when. I see them every few weeks. and Ready also face basically I didn't you see B A I went to Wiki when this was in them so talking Schildt them now sent me on the low esteem cause we are seeing the progress of doing now a mouse in the fine Scotsman health center in Doncaster the big mom. Usually leaves me just a lot of therapy twenties when I was a cognitive behavioral therapy where do you stand still and then he said you know all dogs you know combining was just one of those things where something this is this being the real to this woman something that happened basically in last few years is really really to get the of and of sort of bottle the tilt. A lot of the film out the bullying. When all school and also because I'm a weight I was overweight and I got a lot of bullying from that. And so basically downstream from when there was a child and know where it's being fought me you know it was built up and built ill and then something something happened on this particular incident ready and I just thought were that were to get this not to me all over again and then it just went downhill from there so how do you feel now compared to back in April I'm still not right tell that family some book adult is today a good match for not to say no to. The precious side still no account can take it. And there were actual day to cull in the self now because of that like so have been doing the self-esteem cause basically tells you to take this. You know what's and how to move forward and there's even they say to you I mean there's no magic pill told the recent He can just take a tablet and say that see Amber apply strong yet and basically this is the low esteem course it's actually. Trying to move on from meat and you know this and that day is the say whatever are things has happened it's already gone you can't change things you've got to move on things for say say so long to help. Me self the moment surely. To wake him when my son may get well call us. Also found out I had really really high blood pressure and about going to medication then found that I prayed diabetes and he ended that then going on to a course that the pre-diabetes as well as and ready that I'm now losing weight of actually just started going but that you did in Chile. and Ready in fact that was one of the listen if your program ready yesterday morning and ready. Are down go to jail probably 5 times we now live and saw it myself time to get me so. How will the full get the weight down ready and hopefully move on being ready a horrible Jenny ready to you know me still be it still no. I still get very emotional. And he's really really nice not 7 but I mean out to me on the soundstage 4 year old. I'm not I'm not. Anymore and. As somebody said the thing to note is or even to pull you up and say. I'm not well if. You know if you built like that then that's different when it starts in the side he had just isn't a C. Stennis from Doncaster I think that pretty much sums up what we do we talk about subjects we talk about stories we let you listen and then if you want to get in touch and give us your story then we'll listen to you Danny from Doncaster speaking with typing. . Early this week Roni was crowdsourcing your knowledge about the stuff we make around him in South Yorkshire and of Top Chef glass bottles tins and wine which is some of the things that got a mention and freelance photographer Sean Colborne wanted to give local newspapers like the Sheffield Star mansion as something that gets made in South Yorkshire when producer Rob called him back Sean has just stumbled across a rather poignant discovery of a man very much made in Bond's Li This is Sean good afternoon to you. Well. I'm absolutely made a real only a made up now with cold which she would delight why. Well I've just come into the archives department of. Downtown know and to do a photo shoot believe it or not. Bonzi remembers. World War one roll of honor and the man a bit of apprehension in the voice of the gong I want to call it the of just seen a photograph of my gun that. Tell us about. Who was killed. 18 to July 970. And my mother was born 23rd July 17th 17. And I've just seen a picture a new a new we look in on the 1st World War course my mother never knew went out and I obviously never knew a ground now. For this book together and a smack in as I'm back my next on though because I've just seen the photos in the 1st time. I can see I can see. How would. You a wonderful forgiven in church about it was he looked like. Well. I can seem them over to New York and genuinely see more than. I'm not going to off last well was only. An ominous occasion when the lonely did you know you seen his face his face and indeed your both his face and. What difference will it make sound Saturday oh well. They would bounce a comic about about. Him but what do we make a win is a win at best newspapers going calmly. But needless to say well well in the intervening time almost to rob and you've got BACK IN CHURCH OF com to do this job in. The spring one on me I just want to say is that a man in there called Thomas and the blues the founding absolutely gobsmacked spin that all the time with without you knowing any such places these days yet these people of Greece. You know obviously this. Country have a quilt. Element is in the role of the. 3000. 3. $1795.00 names and. 1994 to us just happens to be. They want to see I thought that lost his records in the bombing of the public records in London during the 2nd World War So you know what I went on usual thing to try and find him but well I'm at a truly wonderful story and it's the best story on a wonderful morning and afternoon stories with short what'll take a photograph of the photograph to Kate I don't think you're going to stop me putting I'm. Sure Colborne and his story on RHONY last week. He's from. She's fine. It's. Hello from it well so. I'm taking you through some of the good stuff of the past week on B.B.C. Radio Sheffield Paula talks to a lot of famous people a lot of famous people. The latest one at the opera singer world renowned Lesley Garrett was in the studio with Paul at last way the Doncaster born singer has been in Sheffield performing in the Messiah at the Lyceum along with actors Hugh Dennis and John Mark with let's talk about he when John Mickel John I remember John Mark has his that's right Sue was the copper in Doc ma still is the copper he got Martin he's one of the the main characters in that and he is just so funny and my piggies problem Paulette in this whole show is sitting there trying not to laugh I have to hold me sides I'm a cheeks and everything to stop myself laughing and I've heard these lines you know 50 times now and the way it is the way you tell it yeah a huge any so and John Mark has it's like a master class in comedy timing I've learned so much just from from watching them which is one of the main reasons I wanted to do the show to be honest because opera singers are often accused of you know over acting and being too big and grand and I just thought I really want to learn how to be still and quiet it doesn't come naturally. There is a lot of comment there is comedy in opera of course there is yes there is but it the but often the timing is prescribed by the music you know so you know but the comic timing isn't of your own making and in a way. I just wanted to learn how you do it when you've got the you've got the freedom of of not being tied to another agenda if you like when it's your your timing and just it's just been it is just amazing and it's every night been different yes every night is different because they they mix it up the bodies they don't always tell me they like to try things a bit differently and OK then so you know but it keeps it fresh and all are even and I love my character Mrs flight Leo board a flight because basically the story is that Ronald Bremer who's played by Jordan Marquez and Maurice A Rose who Maurice Brahms Grove played parts of our rolling played by Hugh Dennis they form the Maurice Rose players and Maurice has kind of. Written his version of the nativity story and he's actually very beautiful you know and this is Patrick Barlow the group the playwright who's again just the most amazing person to work with he's very respectful of the story he just. Funny because basically they're putting on the show and everything you can imagine goes wrong including the fact that they have a client that Maurice has a nervous breakdown and. Ronald played by John. Is a claustrophobic and he ends up running off the stage because Maurice kind of makes him feel he's in a very dark place. Doesn't sound funny but he really did I mean I am Mrs flight. Is the guest star and I'm there to raise the tone. And they've they've employed me to give it a little bit of star sprinkle you know. Just costumes as looking as I do gorgeous costumes and you certainly gorgeous gorgeous going to one point yes we do wings but the lovely thing from our point of view is that all the music I sing and I think quite. Quite a lot it's nearly all from Handel's Messiah so again there's that wonderful respect for fall for the story I'm for I'm for the title The Messiah but I cannot tell you how many just kind of burst blood vessels with that I see in the audience from laughing every night because you know I sort of sit in a chair at the side and then get up to sing and join in I have to I have to be a wise man at one point we all play lots of different roles John is the best mother best Mary that I've ever ever seen in my life he is just so beautiful as the mother of Christ B.B.C. Radio Sheffield as the garrets with we're talking about her role in the Messiah which is currently on at the Lyceum do Hugh and John sing as well there yes I've been coaching them I know they're doing. Decided they should stick to the day job though but you know they do sing they read they do we do a little trio together which is wonderful because well I will tell you because it'll spoil it but it ends up falling apart you though of course are performing in your neck of the woods this time with you has not here it's lovely being back in Geoff we'll a lot of Sheffield because I come up here quite often to perform with the door male voice choir of which I'm patron my lovely boy but we don't walk in door and I've also been up here a lot recently cos both my kids came to university here so we've all got degrees from Sheffield University now which is very very except my husband. For is that he actually did get a place here but you didn't get in. So we did tease about that and he ended up at U.C.L. Which is you know pretty good. University because he's a doctor which is fantastic so we never worry about getting sick you know allowed to be sick either you know relative or docs or you know there's got to be a lot of have to be horizontal and unconscious before you leap and say oh you know me very well there you go you know. I've grown up to be very very healthy and very fit. And I need to be because I. Just me to myself back at the moment Paula as we say in Yorkshire there's just so much going on but he's great I'm just so happy to be so busy and so well the lovely Lesley Garrett Speaking with Paulette. So before us that why do we have still the photocopied blue a 3 page but who even has a 3 page but in blue who is it that the baby say that just is prepared to buy you think of any snake you're going to get while walking about the new photocopies where you have to introduce yourself to them I don't have to print something I have a more intimate relationship with that photocopies not do with my wife we're going One of the news stories we covered last week was 3 sites in Sheffield including Paul kill flowers have been added to a list of historic buildings that are at risk the list has been going for 20 years this time around $240.00 have gone on it more than $300.00 have been taken off as they are no longer considered to be at risk of being lost Louise Brennan is from historic England she explained to Harry last week why Park hills in danger well if you know Sheffield at all which I do as my husband is the Sheffield man then you know Park Hill because it's been such an iconic structure at 950 with built to play slums after the war a very sort of utopian ideal that we were going to create streets in the sky a groundbreaking council housing estate but then you know made it declined very sadly and became something of an I thought and I think a huge problem for the city and then ever surgeons of regeneration we've been splash have been doing but there are still parts of our thought that need saving so it's because of that we're adding it to the at risk register this year and the beehive works from Milton Street in Sheffield's Devon she quarter also appears on that list Yes And you know if you think of Sheffield You obviously think of cutlery fantastic quality cutlery and this was the purpose built cut of the works a lot of work again it's been done on the front range bring it back into offices got recording studio workshops but the real workshop ranges are in a very perilous situation poor condition structural movement water damage and it's again it's because of that we're adding it to the at risk register this year so why does the at risk register exist then we set it up 20 years ago this year 20 year anniversary as a means of really identifying what was a. Risk of being lost to the nation and targeting action so that we can all come together and think like these of our priority sites these are the things that we really need to concentrate on before they are lost forever and how do you compile that list we work with lots of partners we have our own in-house hot heritage it with teams which include architects and surveyors So we rely a lot on local intelligence for people to say we think this there's a problem with this site or this building and then we will go and look at it and work together and assess does it need to go on the at risk register so condition is obviously a key part of that and water ingress is you know the biggest problem if water starts getting into a building you're in big trouble well what kind of work do you have to do to save these buildings on all sorts of things because it's not just enough to simply repair buildings that might be the approach of a ruin to get it stable and repaired with a building you want to get it repaired but you also want to get it back in use so it's got a purpose because the best way to to look after any historic building is to people to be in it and to love it and for it to have a real real purpose so it's looking at repairs and we can go on aid some of those repairs and work with partners like Heritage Lottery Fund to go on aid repairs but it's also finding it a good use for that place doesn't work then other any buildings that have been recently prevented from crumbling away yes you know actually if you look at our headlines statistics for this year across England we have removed 318 sites from the register so that's a big success story we've added 242 but as you can see there's a you know there's a a success story there because we're moving more than we're adding So yes there's all sorts of success stories nationally there's a milk in 1st drink stone mill which we grant aided to the tune of almost $200000.00 pounds and that building is now safe and off so you know there are lots of success stories so it doesn't look pretty rosy for having to risk across the nation. Louise Brennan from historic England speaking with. We're back with. The 8. Now I want to road these things last week was on stage stories about people who've taken stuff that's happened to them and put it on stage one of his guests was field he's been in Sheffield this week with a show called The Netherlands What was it all about them OK The Netherlands is a piece that I reach 10 years ago in the mail when I was artistic director there. But I was never kind of felt that a sat right in 10 years on it felt like an appropriate time to revisit the show with my new performance company because the last 10 years is saying very very significant social change. And the world. Is About To Go out who is an adult she was a child obviously when the pieces originally done as an adult seems like a very different place so I wanted to write a. It's about that I'm very clear the play's not about the child who plays about being the parent of a child with a particular condition what is the condition it's called Prada Philly's syndrome it's a chromosome disorder it's. The problems with probably center around the hypothalamus So Robyn has very low muscle mass which means she can walk she's she's ambulant. She finds it very difficult to be particularly dextrous with her hands she does find walking kind of difficult but the thing that people know most about Prada villi syndrome is that people with a syndrome are driven to eat and eat and not. So she needs about 2 thirds of the color ific intake of a regular person her age but has the desire to eat all the time how do they deal with that how do you deal well we were fortunate in a way I mean one of the one of the things that keeps coming back to actually is just you know life is life has been incredibly tough in many ways but we're really really fortunate actually. Partly because we're educated middle class people we can we have the language to fight for what we fought for what we have to fight for but we were also fortunate because as Robin was born the 1st kind of genetic day and a test had just come in so we were able to find out within the 1st 3 months of her life really Prada Philly's syndrome and consequently you can put in place kind of eating regimes and patterns of behavior a