Today, having returned from a brilliant week in Spain with my husband, daughter and two beautiful granddaughters I scurried about opening mail, ringing friends, washing, shopping visiting my neighbour and finally driving to ‘The Crown Hotel, where I am a member of the gym! As I swam I reminisced…. the turquoise sea…. helping Naomi jump through waves whilst hanging on to the tiny hand of Alice, almost two years old, who, fearless, simply wanted to dive into the water! Who would have thought I could be so lucky!
‘You were just very unlucky!’ Terry, my partner, whispered as I lay completely motionless in hospital. It was August in the year 2000 and we had returned from another Spanish holiday. Although I was in excellent health generally, I had been troubled by an irritating cough throughout our visit and while we were away I’d had a serious stomach infection for two days. I put this down to either the local water or some chicken we had on a barbecue. This infection had cleared up but this day, as I had tried to unpack, my hands became tingly and so eventually I drove to the surgery where my doctor assumed I had taken too much cough medicine. Within hours my whole body felt weak and I could only just manage to pick the phone up to ring again. Still diagnosing this as a ‘virus’ my GP suggested I go to bed. By the end of the day my legs would no longer support me and I was unable to move my fingers to phone for help. Luckily, as I lay by the phone, Terry came home and immediately rang 999 but when the ambulance driver rang my doctor she told them to carry me up to bed and she would come down to the house after her surgery. By the time she arrived I was completely paralysed and I was taken to hospital. My condition rapidly deteriorated and after a lumbar puncture was diagnosed with possibly having GBS and I was given a transfusion of immunoglobulin. I remember the terror as they monitored my breathing which was becoming increasingly weak and eventually it seemed like a relief when I was given a tracheotomy.