Voice of Real Australia is a regular newsletter from Australian Community Media, which has journalists in every state and territory. Sign up here to get it by email, or here to forward it to a friend. Hopefully you might get some quiet time on Sunday to enjoy some handpicked content from across the ACM network. Hopefully, you might get some quiet time on Sunday to enjoy some handpicked content from across the ACM network. Today meet five people our journalists have spent time with this week. Among them, two people who walk serious (SERIOUS) distances for distinctly different personal reasons; a man facing down life's challenges; a doggedly determined man who wanted answers from history; and a woman who is entirely comfortable with her career choice, much to the disillusionment of others. TJ Porter was a member of the defence forces but found herself looking for a new career when she was medically discharged. The 25-year-old now describes herself as "a touring companion", which means she will often travel around NSW rather than stick to her home base in Canberra. Other people call her a sex worker. Either way, she proud of herself. READ ON Simon Morris lost 15 kilograms and wore through three pairs of shoes on his four-month hike from Springer Mountain, Georgia, to Mount Katahdin, Maine: the 3500km that make up the United States' Appalachian Trail. He spent the majority of that time in the drugged-like state that comes from exhaustion, exposure to the elements, and severe calorie-depletion. And he loves it. READ ON Leyton is in housing limbo. It is an experience of living filled with feelings of uncertainty and frustration - one that is emotionally draining and has required an extensive amount of persistence and patience. A drug addiction caused Leyton to lose his job. His landlord sold the rental property he was living in after he fell behind in rent, leaving him homeless. But he has hope. READ ON September 30, marks the 20th anniversary of the day that the Broken Hill Proprietary Company closed its Newcastle steelmaking plant after 84 years of production. The passing of time means there is now a generation of young Novocastrians - as well as the thousands of people moving here in the meantime - who have never known the smoke and noise from 300 hectares of some of Australia's heaviest industry, just a few clicks out of the CBD. READ ON Lucy Barnard went in search of adventure, but it was more than just a long-term holiday that took her halfway across the world. She has spent the past two-and-a-half years with one goal - to be the first woman to walk the length of the world - from the southern most tip of South America in Argentina to the tip of North America in Barrow, Alaska. She estimates she has about three years to go. READ ON A Port Kembla WWII pilot's dog tags have been found in the Irian Jayan jungle 76 years after his plane went missing. Greg Ellis spoke to his nephew with the same name who says his family now has closure. READ ON Enjoy Sunday.