"Hello you've called the Dock. This is Ben speaking."
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"Benny! It's Campo! Mate, are you keen to fight me for charity?"
"Did you pick me because you think you can flog me?"
"Hahaha ... Yes!"
"Yeah righto. I'm in."
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And that was as much thought that went into agreeing to a boxing match against Canberra Raiders legend and former captain Terry Campese, who scaled the heights of rugby league with NSW and Australia.
We will be raising funds for Capital Region Muscular Dystrophy and The Terry Campese Foundation, that supports disadvantaged people living in Queanbeyan and southern NSW.
Fight promoter Rob Oakley is a terrific bloke who sadly has muscular dystrophy.
Before meeting Rob, I didn't know anyone who had muscular dystrophy, so to say that I was fighting for a personal cause would have been a stretch.
But just before the pandemic hit, Rob invited Campo and I to watch some kids with muscular dystrophy play powerchair soccer and to see how the money we're raising will be spent.
Powerchairs aren't cheap, but with some luck and your support we're hoping to raise enough money to buy a few more, so more kids with muscular dystrophy can join in on the fun.
Professor Ian Alexander heads up the Gene Therapy Research Unit, a joint initiative of the Children's Medical Research Institute and Sydney Children's Hospital.
Ian is also my Dad.
Dad is one of the pioneers of the research that lead to the diagnosis and cure (ZOLGENSMA) for spinal muscular atrophy, a similar disease to muscular dystrophy which use to be a death sentence for young children.
There are many people fighting far more important battles ... where the consequences are far greater than what Campo and I will face.
- Ben Alexander
And as I watched the kids zip around in the high-speed wheelchairs, it hit home how important my father's work is and how there's still more to do.
I can't imagine the pain if one of my girls were diagnosed with a condition like spinal muscular atrophy or muscular dystrophy, and I believe anyone who is working hard so families don't have to experience that pain, deserves more recognition and support.
I'm so proud of him for saving so many young lives and I see the fight against Campo as an opportunity to shed some light on him and his team's amazing work.
Before the era of vaccines, about a third of all children died from various infectious diseases and never reach adulthood.
But thanks to incredible people like my father, this no longer the case and to a point where many of us can't even imagine how bad life was without vaccines and various cures.
I hope that when the COVID-19 pandemic is in our rear view mirror, the medical researchers who worked around the clock to produce a vaccine in record time are praised as heroes.
Their tireless work will save millions of lives and enable the rest of us to get on with ours.
And while the pandemic will be an overwhelming sad chapter in human history, I think there's a silver lining in the knowledge that there isn't much our medical researchers can't tackle, should they be given enough resources to tackle it.
Resources that can now be directed back towards cancer, mental health, and other unfair childhood diseases.
I'm happy to report that training is going well under the watchful eye of Garry Hamilton at the Stockade Training Centre in Fyshwick
Garry is one tough old bugger. Even though I've kept active in retirement, the fitness sessions have been tough and I've left the gym many times with my tail between my legs.
But at the end of the day, it's all for a good cause as there are many people fighting far more important battles. Battles where the consequences are far greater than what Campo and I will face on May 1.