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The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
National
Jane McLeod

Cyclist couldn't remember her own children after collision with car

Emma Feesey, 48, suffered a brain injury after being involved in an accident

A CYCLIST who was unable to remember her husband and children and even how a mobile phone worked after suffering serious head injuries when she was hit by a car has spoken about how her recovery has given her a new way of life.

Emma Feesey, 48, suffered a brain injury after being involved in an accident as she cycled home from work. When she came round she did not know if she was married, or had children – despite having two daughters with her husband Colin, 49.

But, almost five years on from the accident, she told how she had learned that “what matters is being happy, healthy and doing good things”.

The mother of two, from Edinburgh, said: “The important thing is survivors know that no matter how strange or hard things seem, life gets better.”

She spoke about her injuries, and her recovery from them, ahead of taking part in the Edinburgh Head Injury Information Day, hosted by the law firm Digby Brown.

At the time of her accident in August 2017, she was a criminal justice social worker and was cycling home from work when she was hit by a car at the Deans Roundabout in West Lothian.

Despite wearing a helmet, she suffered a subarachnoid haemorrhage after her head struck the ground.

She was treated at the Western General hospital in Edinburgh for three days, before being transferred to the Astley Ainslie Hospital in the capital, which offers specialist rehabilitation services for adults who have suffered brain injuries.

She recalled: “I was asked if I was married and I didn’t know. I was asked if I had children and, again, had no idea.”

Speaking about her husband, she said: “Colin was really worried. Firstly, to think I died and then to realise I had no memory of him and the girls.”

But she added: “Then when I remembered my husband and my daughters I wanted them there all the time.

“I’d think, ‘I love Colin. Colin should be here. I want to see Colin’. There is a simplicity to your thoughts when going through trauma.”

She continued: “I felt physically OK and I only knew I had a brain injury because people kept telling me I had one.”

However, the accident also left her unable to perform some tasks, such as sketching simple objects, and she failed to recognise her mobile phone.

She recalled that “everything was very slow and detached” after the crash.

She stated: “I’ve learned through all this, especially during the pandemic, that what matters is being happy, healthy and doing good things.

“I look after myself and focus on my yoga and other workshops and I still cycle when I can.

“The hardest part is simply adjusting to a new life.”

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