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07-10-2003, 02:39 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2002
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Man Wakes from 19 year Coma
This is some crazy stuff! I can't imagine suddenly waking up and being told almost 20 years had gone by.
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Man wants Pepsi after 19-year coma
AP (AP) — The last time Terry Wallis was conscious of the world around him, Ronald Reagan was president, Bill Clinton was the governor, the Soviet Union was the enemy and the World Trade Center still stood.
Coma victim Terry Wallis talks with his mother Angelee Wallis at Stone County Nursing and Rehab Center Wednesday.
By Danny Johnston, AP
Thrown into a stupor after an auto accident in 1984, he recently spoke his first words in 19 years: "Mom. Pepsi. Milk."
Only in the last two weeks has the 39-year-old Wallis realized that Reagan no longer is president, answering "I don't know" when asked who is in office now.
"He's beginning to realize he's in a different place now," said his physician, Dr. James Zini. "We never thought he'd regain this kind of cognitive level."
Wallis and a friend were in a car on July 13, 1984, when it ran off the road. Both men were found beneath a bridge the next day. The friend died; Wallis was left a quadriplegic and fell into a coma for three months.
He soon emerged partially from the coma. But for 18 years, he could communicate only by blinking his eyes or grunting.
Then, on June 13, he called out "Mom" to his mother and later asked for a Pepsi. While home from the hospital for a weekend, he said he wanted milk with his breakfast. Since then, he has steadily increased his vocabulary, and he is considered fully emerged from his stupor.
Wallis is eager to learn, now that the world is opening up to him again. Propped up in bed Wednesday at the nursing home where he lives, Wallis clutched small blue cushions that have kept his withered hands from closing shut over years of disuse.
He tells a visitor that he loves to talk and is happy, but he doesn't acknowledge, or isn't able to explain, the long gap in his life.
"I never had no accident," he said.
A speech therapist works with Wallis three days a week, and his doctor wants to give him more intensive physical therapy now that he can better comply with instructions. Nurses have been told to ask Wallis open-ended questions to help him develop answers beyond just "Yes" and "No."
Wallis has re-entered a world where so much was different. The World Trade Center, Pentagon and the Oklahoma City federal building were all attacked by terrorists. The Berlin Wall is gone, as is the Soviet Union.
The Internet in 1984 was a loose affiliation of computers of interest only to academics. National League and American League baseball teams never played each other until the World Series. Roger Maris was still the home run king.
Wallis' daughter, Amber, was 6 weeks old at the time of the accident. Wallis said it is his goal to walk for her. During a visit with her last month, he was able to tell her, "You're pretty" and "I love you."
His long-term memory is keen. He remembered the telephone number of a long-dead grandmother and recalled driving a car whose transmission had failed, forcing him to drive in reverse.
Over the past 19 years, the Wallis family would pick him up at the Stone County Nursing and Rehabilitation Center and take him home or to family functions.
Zini said that probably aided in a gradual recovery that began with him reacting to a six-figure doctor's bill.
Eighteen years ago, Wallis shook his head violently when a doctor told the family that medical bills were running about $125,000 — as if to say the price was not acceptable, said his father, Jerry Wallis.
Later on, Wallis would react to Chevrolet TV commercials.
"He wouldn't drive a Chevrolet and when the commercials would come on the TV he'd have a fit. He'd shake his head from one side to the other and give some kind of hollering," Jerry Wallis said.
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07-10-2003, 04:28 PM
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I cant imagine ever having such a big gap in my life, to wake up and everything be different. I wonder if his wife remarried.
Amazing, this world is full of miracles
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07-10-2003, 04:44 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: Counting my blessings!
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Quote:
Originally posted by MoonStar17
I cant imagine ever having such a big gap in my life, to wake up and everything be different. I wonder if his wife remarried.
Amazing, this world is full of miracles
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I hope she didn't buy a Chevy!!
__________________
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♥Proud to be a Macon Magnolia ♥
"He who is not busy being born is busy dying." Bob Dylan
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07-10-2003, 10:00 PM
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Join Date: Dec 1999
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I heard on the radio this morning that his first request to a nurse was "Make love to me." Dirty dirty man.
I don't understand how they can call it a coma if he was able to communicate somewhat and be taken to family gatherings.
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07-10-2003, 10:59 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2003
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I live in the same town as Terry, which is a small and rural town in AR.
No, Terry's wife, Sandi, never remarried. This is what she said about him, "He's my husband, I married him for better or worse, thick or thin, ‘til death do us part." There was just no way I could give up hope on him. I wanted so bad to communicate with him."
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07-10-2003, 11:14 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2001
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Quote:
Originally posted by sunsets2
I live in the same town as Terry, which is a small and rural town in AR.
No, Terry's wife, Sandi, never remarried. This is what she said about him, "He's my husband, I married him for better or worse, thick or thin, ‘til death do us part." There was just no way I could give up hope on him. I wanted so bad to communicate with him."
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But did she buy a Chevy?
__________________
~ *~"ADPi"~*~
♥Proud to be a Macon Magnolia ♥
"He who is not busy being born is busy dying." Bob Dylan
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07-11-2003, 01:51 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2002
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That's insane. He was in a coma (or semi-coma!) for my entire life.
Sarah
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07-11-2003, 02:51 AM
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Join Date: Sep 1999
Location: NY
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She deserves a fucking medal.
Quote:
Originally posted by sunsets2
I live in the same town as Terry, which is a small and rural town in AR.
No, Terry's wife, Sandi, never remarried. This is what she said about him, "He's my husband, I married him for better or worse, thick or thin, ‘til death do us part." There was just no way I could give up hope on him. I wanted so bad to communicate with him."
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07-11-2003, 05:30 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: UC Riverside/Alameda, CA
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i would do the same thing if my wife was that way. You love them no matter wat. What a story though.
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