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I was driving at night. It was night in the mountain road in Wales and it came to at a temporary traffic light on this road. They were repairing it and I spent about 40 miles an hour and suddenly I didn’t know where I was and I crashed over the barrier and I ended up on top of the stone wall. My cargo is right off and my safety balloons didn’t come out. But somehow I never have scratched on me and I thought, “What happened?” I mean I was perfectly alert.
Well the doctor said I probably have an epileptic fit. He said, “You could have fit that actually last seconds, you can’t do anything about your epileptic fits. You could take your drugs” and the doctor says, “It should be okay, it should either eliminate them or reduced the severity of the fits”. I certainly would never leave my house even when I’m walking down the passage without my wallet.
The emergency services could go into my wallet and they would be told who I am, who to contact, what my condition is, what my symptoms are and as much medical history as the paramedic with me to know. The independence obviously is a factor for the first four months after pulling on the new drug. I couldn’t live alone. I wasn’t allowed to fly. So unfortunately during that period my mother died and I couldn’t go to the hospital. I can’t drive. Of course because when you're epileptic you can’t drive.
Do you know I think when you get old these things happen, what can you do about it? I mean you know, that human body is so complicated and I’m surprised that I haven’t got a lot other things but what I’m happy about is that in my life and that they were able to take care of it and that I remember as of those. We walked in front of a bus and none of those I did and I regret. So I’m thinking about it right now.
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