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Sandra : Inspirational Ambassador The Dream

The Dream

Posted on Apr 20th, 2008 by Sandra : Inspirational Ambassador Sandra
Catonpiano

Andrew Johnston is 13 years old. He get's bullied at school, because they don't like what he sings.

Andrew's dream is to sing on stage. It's a dream of mine too, and watching him makes me feel he's fulfilled my dream for me.

Here he is, on "Britain's Got Talent".


Britains Got Talent 2008 - Andrew Johnston






Access_public Access: Public 15 Comments Print Send views (581)  
Enlightened.thinker : Light-plerker
20 minutes later
Enlightened.thinker said

Sandra..this was marvelous! And to watch all of the audience and their reactions was even more wonderful!

This is an inspirational post…thanks for sharing it!
love, Aley

Ramsses : Pharaoh
32 minutes later
Ramsses said

Thanks!

crow : alive
about 1 hour later
crow said

Sandra, I really needed something like that, today. It was beautiful. And I wandered off and found another youtube that touched me in the same way. Have a look if you want. A young man who does baton twirling (and suffers the danger of bullying over that too) who really really does a splendiferous job.

We need these stories, don't we.

Thanks so much.

HeyOK : Bridgebuilder
about 5 hours later
HeyOK said

Having bullied and been bullied…
It all comes back to believing we have the right to be here and share what we have to share.

Nice to see talent supported - and that guy has a voice.  (Energy out from me that that hormones and growth help him to continue growing it).

Thanks for the share and hugs,
David

Mushin : We-full
about 5 hours later
Mushin said

O wow!

If ever you find something more by the boy… the most incredible voice I've heard for a long, long time.

Thank you.

Donan : inwit
about 6 hours later
Donan said

having been a boy soprano myself once–and understanding a bit of the bullying too–i am thrilled at his sound…there are not many like this in any time. Congrats Andrew-you will be heard–i am sure the agents are already calling.

Thanks so much, sandra, for posting this!

Sandra : Inspirational Ambassador
about 14 hours later
Sandra said

:-) So lovely to see you all here, I thought “oh people will think this is a silly thing to post for a blog” !!

I'll try to keep an eye on his progress on the TV show ( have to rely on youtube, don't have a TV) and let you know if he wins. I found the following article, however:

Britain's Got Talent: Andrew Johnston exclusive
Sunday Mirror
By Lara Gould Tv Editor Uk 13/04/2008

With his angelic voice and cherubic looks, teenager Andrew Johnston looks like he has the world at his feet.

But Andrew, who was the big hit on the first episode of Britain's Got Talent last night, has had a tough journey to the brink of stardom.

A childhood spent in dire poverty saw him surviving on a diet of bread and milk.

And if that wasn't bad enough, he has endured hell at the hands of bullies because of his love of opera.

Prodigy Andrew, 13, was one of a handful of acts, including contortionist Iona Luvsandorj, funnyman Craig Harper and girl group Scala, to make it through to the next round on the ITV show.

His breathtaking performance of Pie Jesu wowed judges and left panellist Amanda Holden in tears.

Mum Morag Johnston, 48, has told the Sunday Mirror how she walked out of the family home with Andrew when he was just eight months old and struggled single-handed on the breadline to raise him and her three other children.

Andrew, the youngest, was in her arms when she left after her relationship with his dad, Andrew Snr, fell apart.

“I had no job, no income and no home to go to.” she said.

“The kids had to make do with bread and milk for dinner because there was no money.

“It was the blackest time of our lives. At the lowest point, I had to go without food because there wasn't enough money for us all to eat. When we did have money for food, I had to make it last. I could make a pound of mince last for days.

“All the kids wore hand me-downs or clothes I made myself. We didn't have any heating, and even if we had I couldn't have afforded to pay the bills.

“Instead we had to go out and collect wood for the fire just to keep warm. I went to sleep every night praying life would get better.

“If you asked me to describe a living hell, that would be it.”

Morag - whose three other children Kelly, 27, Jodie, 25, and 22-year-old Daniel are from her first marriage - suffered another blow when her father died a few months later.

“I hit rock bottom then,” she said. “Everything seemed to be happening at once but my kids got me through.”

Morag kept her family together by taking low-paid jobs. She said: “I've worked in factories, delivered sandwiches, packed eggs at a farm and delivered Indian takeaways.

“Andrew would come with me on jobs because I couldn't afford a babysitter. He would sleep in the back of the car while I took food to people's front doors at all hours. It taught Andrew that nothing comes for free.”

Andrew's amazing singing voice was discovered by a teacher when he was seven.

Morag explained: “Andrew has always been very quiet and shy so we had no idea he had this incredible voice. His primary school teacher suggested I took him to the cathedral to join the choir.

“They auditioned him and saw his potential immediately - he is now head chorister at Carlisle Cathedral.

“But I still hadn't heard his voice. The first time I heard him I cried. His voice just blew me away. Even now I get emotional when I hear him sing because it's such a beacon of hope.”

But Andrew's success has come at a cost, as he revealed on last night's show. He told judges Simon Cowell, Amanda Holden and Piers Morgan how his love of classical music had brought him problems with bullies.

And Morag said: “Andrew comes home from school in floods of tears and runs up to his room to cry because of the taunts. Kids call him gay just because he's in a choir.

“He's too frightened to go out and play in the street in case the bullies come out and start. He's been physically threatened too, but it's the words that cut deepest.

“Physical scars fade. And as his mum I can help make them better. Verbal comments leave no visible mark but last forever.

“It is heartbreaking to see my own son so upset just because he has been born with a God-given talent.”

She added: “Lots of times Andrew has begged me to let him quit singing to stop the bullying. It would be such a waste if he threw away this incredible talent.

“It's easy to fall into the wrong crowd and there's always the threat of drink and drugs where we live.

“Andrew is determined to make something of himself and I hope Britain's Got Talent gives him the confidence to believe he can do whatever he wants in life.”

Andrew now lives with his mum in a three-bedroom housing association home in Carlisle, Cumbria. He has little contact with his father, who only found out about his son's success on Britain's Got Talent from his local paper.

Morag, who works as a researcher for the Office for National Statistics and supplements her income with benefits, said winning the show's £100,000 prize money would give her son financial security.

She said: “It would give Andrew the kind of start in life I can't give him.”

kcidybom : Manager - Bank of Cosmic Connection
about 21 hours later
kcidybom said

OMG Sandra - this is wonderful.  Childhood bullies only hold sway for so long, and then the objects of their fear transcend them.  Or that is my prayer. Thanks so much.

otter : Spiritual Off-Roader
1 day later
otter said

I have no words to add.  I was brought to tears.  I am going to show this to my 13 year-old girl who gets bullied at school.  He is an inspiration.

HeyOK : Bridgebuilder
1 day later
HeyOK said

I think kcidybom has said it!
Childhood bullies only hold sway for so long, and then the objects of their fear transcend them.
It's more than a prayer, it's a reality… at least in my case.

Ethan : Learning to fly with grace
9 days later
Ethan said

I currently live with an adult bully in my family.   Thanks so much for posting this!  He is such an inspiration.  : )

crow : alive
9 days later
crow said

Sandra,

The article about Andrew and his family has me tearful. Talk about perserverence in the face of hopeless odds. What an incredible story. I hope that all the family will take courage from it, and that each of them walks away believing they can do what they want to in their lives.

Ethan, there are many words used to describe (and obfuscate) the phenomenon of the adult bully. But “bully” is still the word that tells it like it is.  Whether they can change or be helped is mostly up to them. But their victims can to take courage and inspiration from stories like Andrew's, and by letting others stand by them. There is strength in numbers, and in believing in your own life. I know you are courageous. And I know people will stand by you : )

Any of you ever see About A Boy?  It's a beautiful movie (I've seen it three times) that tells a story rather like Andrew's.

People grow, and grow strong, by standing together, and by focussing on what is beautiful and true inside themselves—and by not letting the weaknesses and cruelties of others smother their dreams.

HeyOK : Bridgebuilder
10 days later
HeyOK said

Ethan a shout out — Ditto to Crows comments above.  Bully's are still everywhere and we all have trouble dealing with them.  Yet together, we the people, rule!  Hopefully the disagreements can be solved without a fist fight.

Blessings, David

Sandra : Inspirational Ambassador
13 days later
Sandra said

Ethan, I'm touched that you shared here. Wish I could say something to help.

Everyone -

I haven't managed to find out if Andrew has gotten further in the competition, but there is a lovely youtube of him singing the same song off-stage, and tonight I watched an old (well 2004) Swedish film that was about a young boy, a brilliant musician, who was bullied as a child. It's a beautiful, sad film, worth seeing – called (in English) As in Heaven…(Crow.. I loved About a Boy!)

love to all,
Sandra

Satya-Seer : Mischievious Biscuit
21 days later
Satya-Seer said

This was so beautiful, and even reminded me of my life growing up.  I play the flute, and I play it beautifully, and you can imagine the bullying that I endured as well.  Not only was I a young gay boy, but one who played flute.  But something inside just kept going on, welling up in me, and it was all I knew to do, and the only way I knew to be.  And there was recognition from others of this great talent inside me.  And there was one who said, you will encourage people as you have been encouraged.  Today I AM THAT and so much more.  I give each day the gift of who I AM - all of me.

Thank you for sharing this with us.  We are so much more if only we enlarge ourselves and see that we are and identify with MORE.  We live in, as and through this vast sea of possibility.

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Sandra : Inspirational Ambassador Posted on April 20, 2008
by Sandra

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