On the twenty-ninth of March, 2020, a ten-year-old boy named Max Woosey set up a tent in the back garden of his family's house in Braunton, North Devon, and climbed inside.
The tent had belonged to his next-door neighbour, a seventy-four-year-old man named Rick Abbott who had died of terminal cancer six weeks earlier. Rick had given Max the tent before he died. He had told Max to use it for an adventure.
Rick had not asked Max to raise money.
The translation of the personal token into a fundraising mechanism for the institution that had cared for Rick in his final months was Max's own institutional invention.
By the time he was thirteen years old, he had funded fifteen nurse-years of hospice care.
Rick Abbott had been a kayaker, a paddleboarder, and a gym-goer. He was a close neighbour of the Woosey family. When he received his terminal cancer diagnosis at the age of seventy-four, the North Devon Hospice arranged the palliative care that allowed him to die at home rather than in a hospital ward.
The Woosey family โ Max, his mother Rachael, and his father Mark (a serving Royal Marine) โ were close to Rick throughout the final months. They observed the hospice care directly. They saw what the institutional infrastructure of community palliative care could do for a man who wanted to die in his own house surrounded by the things he loved.
Rick Abbott died in February of 2020.
Before he died, he gave Max his camping tent. He asked Max to use it for an adventure.
Six weeks later, on the twenty-third of March, 2020, the United Kingdom entered its first national lockdown under the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions. All in-person fundraising activities for UK charities were cancelled overnight. UK hospices โ which are not part of the National Health Service and are largely charity-funded, with the average UK hospice receiving only approximately thirty percent of its operating budget from the NHS โ were among the worst affected. Their fundraising infrastructure depended on community events, charity shops, and in-person gatherings that were no longer permitted.
The North Devon Hospice โ the institution that had just cared for Rick Abbott โ was, by late March of 2020, looking at the loss of substantially all of its normal fundraising revenue for the foreseeable future.
On the twenty-ninth of March, 2020, six days into the national lockdown, Max Woosey set up Rick's tent in his back garden and posted a fundraising page online.
The page set a goal of one hundred pounds.
The page text explained that his friend Rick had given him a tent before he died and had asked him to have an adventure, and that an adventure was what Max was doing.
He did not come back inside that night. Or the next. Or the night after that.
He continued sleeping in the tent for the next three years.
The fundraising page raised one hundred pounds. Then five hundred. Then five thousand. Then fifty thousand. Then five hundred thousand. By the time Max ended the challenge on the twenty-ninth of March, 2023 โ exactly three years after the first night โ the page had raised more than seven hundred and fifty thousand pounds for the North Devon Hospice.
Through the three years, he slept outside in storms, in snow, in hail, in torrential rain, in baking summer heat, in freezing winter cold. He slept outside on his birthdays. He slept outside on three consecutive Christmases. He slept outside when he had COVID-19. He went through approximately fifteen separate tents as the weather destroyed them one after another. On one documented night, his tent collapsed in heavy rain and high winds at midnight; he stayed inside the collapsed shelter because he could not find a replacement tent in time.
He camped in places other than the back garden when the schedule permitted. He spent a night on a hotel balcony at London Zoo. He pitched the tent in the garden of Number Ten Downing Street and met the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Boris Johnson. He camped at the Sandy Park stadium of the Exeter Chiefs rugby club. On the one-year anniversary of his challenge, he organized a worldwide children's camp-out called Max's Big Camp Out, which inspired approximately two thousand other young people to raise money for their own local charities through their own backyard camp-outs.
In the 2022 New Year Honours List, Max was awarded the British Empire Medal for services to fundraising for the North Devon Hospice during the COVID-19 pandemic. He was twelve years old at the time of presentation. The medal was presented to him by the Lord Lieutenant of Devon, David Fursdon, at the Royal Marines base at Lympstone in May of 2022. He was among the youngest BEM recipients in the country. He was also recognized with a Pride of Britain Award, a Spirit of Adventure Award, and the Bear Grylls Chief Scout Unsung Hero Award.
On the twenty-ninth of March, 2023, Max ended the challenge. He held a final celebratory festival at the Broomhill Estate in North Devon on the first of April. He then slept in his own bedroom for the first time since the lockdown began. He was thirteen years old.
Guinness World Records confirmed Max as the holder of the world record for the most money raised by camping by an individual.
The North Devon Hospice translated the seven-hundred-and-fifty-thousand-pound total into the institutional terms that mattered. The chief executive, Stephen Roberts, said publicly that Max's fundraising had directly funded fifteen nurses for a whole year. The hospice estimated, in its own subsequent statements, that those fifteen nurse-years had supported the at-home palliative care of approximately five hundred patients โ patients who, like Rick Abbott, had been able to die at home rather than in hospital wards because the institutional infrastructure was funded to be in their houses.
The structural reading of Max Woosey's three years in the back garden is that the promise Rick Abbott extracted from him in February of 2020 was personal. It was a promise from a dying older man to a ten-year-old neighbour to use a tent for an adventure.
Max's translation of that personal promise into a three-year institutional fundraising operation for the hospice that had cared for Rick was not in the original promise.
The translation was Max's own work.
The fifteen nurse-years and the approximately five hundred at-home palliative patients were the institutional yield of a ten-year-old converting a personal token into community infrastructure.
Rick had asked for an adventure.
Max delivered an institution.
If his story moved you, drop one word in the comments โ Max, Rick, tent, anything that comes to mind. Tap the like button so more people find this story. The page is small. Every reaction helps us keep telling the stories where a ten-year-old converted a personal promise into community infrastructure.
This is Lucy Stemp from Tonbridge in Kent. She is missing in Paris. No one has heard from her in a week. Her family are desperate to locate her. The police and interpol are involved. Please share. @pinkladies_uk
Can any of you lovely people who are in the Cornwall area please look out for this little dog. My friends are on holiday and he's run off
Please retweet and see if we can get him home
โ ๏ธ We are appealing for the publicโs help to trace a teenage girl who has gone missing from #Watford.
Maya, aged 14, was last seen yesterday morning (Wednesday 3 June) at her home address.
She is described as being approximately 5ft 2ins tall and of slim build with long hair dyed red and brown eyes.
Maya was last seen wearing a Superdry bomber jacket, a navy-coloured jumper and black trousers.
Officers are growing increasingly concerned for her welfare.
Please repost