Healthcare Assistant Jodie Older

I think about those who have lost a parent

Jodie Older is a Healthcare Assistant currently serving in the Queen Alexandra’s Royal Nursing Corps.

Jodie Older with her husband and daughter

Wearing a poppy

Jodie has worn a poppy for as long as she can remember.
Story of the Poppy

Share this page with someone

When she was at school, she wore the poppy for those that fought and died during the First and Second World Wars.

“I remember seeing the old veterans marching,” says Jodie.

“I wore the poppy because we wouldn’t be here today if it wasn’t for the people that served and died for us.”

Healthcare Assistant Jodie Older

Changing perspective

Though she’d grown up in a military family, it wasn’t until she went on the Battlefield tour to France and Belgium that she felt a personal connection to the poppy.

“We went during basic training. Seeing all the graves while being surrounded by the people I was training with, I felt a connection between those serving alongside me and those who served a hundred years ago.

“When I got to my first regiment, it was during the conflict in Afghanistan, so people were going out to Afghanistan and some weren’t returning. So it gave me more of an insight into the poppy and what it meant."

Two minute silence

“It changed what I thought about during the Two Minute Silence. Before it was more about the veterans and the older generation, but now I think about families and children that have lost their father or mother. I think about the people who have been injured, I think more about the variety of it all."

The poppy is a symbol of life.

"It’s not just about sacrifice, but the possibility for support and new beginning for those who have been wounded or become sick.”

“When you’re standing there during the Two Minute Silence, you don’t know what the people around you have been through. If they have a family member, or if they themselves were part of it. Everybody’s different, with different experiences, so not every act of Remembrance is the same but the poppy is same.

“So I’d ask people to just stop and think of the people around them, of their own experiences and what they’ve seen.”

Get involved

Donate and support the Armed Forces community.
The Poppy Appeal

Discover more

Back to top