All posts by Russ

From a colleague. Nice to hear it wasn’t a figment of my imagination. :)

Hi Russ,

Just reading your blog from the 19th and I can reafirm from what I saw that you treated all the elderly patients with great dignity and respect.  You do indeed have a ‘following’ with your Staines patients and they are always asking after you and wanting to see you.. 
All life has dignity, we are quite lucky in our job as we see the whole cross section of society.

We are all thinking of you at work and hope you have a lovely Christmas with your girls.

Cath

Had to post this. Written by Harry, aged 16. Hope he doesn’t mind. The world, as viewed by a bright teenager, in West Wales :)

Christmas Newsletter 2013 – By Harry again (oh sh*t again)

After last year’s newsletter I swore never again to attempt to write something funny. This is it.

So, we have navigated safely through the rocky passage of Christmas and sail into the doldrums of another year.  After what seems like a cliché, life continues strange as ever in our house. ALED: (arguing with dad) For God’s sake dad this isn’t a courtroom! DAD: I’ll be the judge of that!

And things of that ilk. School continued on for me and Al, new knowledge pushed in one ear, forcing last year’s knowledge out the other. The school BLT is still fondly known as Botulism Leprosy and Typhoid, and the rugby pitch is still short of 1 pair of rugby posts and half its quota of grass. The council wants to improve the school, but they haven’t managed to close it yet. Mum has not been doing so much rowing, but more of that later. We’re still playing rugby, sigh, I am not playing hooker anymore and thus I have grown to 6 feet. It has been very expensive buying all those shoes.

Grandparents Diamond Wedding AnniversaryMe in my Prom suit

Spring. Twas the week before Easter and it was mum’s turn to throw a spanner in the proverbial works. She had a particularly bad bout of sickness and vomiting, and ye slow minded doctor men, after prescribing a course of leaches, hit on a lucky guess and took her appendix out. She then proceeded to tell everyone she ever knew and anyone she talked to thereafter the gripping story of how the doctor daringly removed the appendix and how she made a full recovery. While mum was otherwise unavailable for shopping etc. Dad became quite good at foraging…. in M & S.

As time went on something strange began to happen, we didn’t expect it, nor did we have any idea what to do with it. We had never encountered anything like it before. The temperature rose slowly but steadily, and a strange bright orb rose in the sky. Was it? Surely not! But yes it was! Summer was here! We had read about it yes, but never had we seen the real thing. The good weather meant that dad and I had many great trips out in the boat fishing. There was some kind of mackerel apocalypse in Pembrokeshire, meaning we caught about ten times more 5lb+ bass than mackerel. One evening we tried filming a sunset fishing trip, and from about 3hrs of film we managed to stitch together about 90secs of useable video. We had an excuse though; we are totally inept at filming. We would include the video here but this paper is so damn old-fashioned.

Exams next. All went well apart from additional maths, which I utterly fudged due to not knowing any answers and when asked to ‘show all my workings’ wrote down ‘Never! A man’s workings are his own private affair!’  

Next, I broke the habit of a lifetime to attend a social gathering. We had a year 11 prom, which meant I needed to blitz my spots. A bottle of azure liquid; ‘Dermatologically tested to fight 100% of spots’. Or is it ‘Dermatologically spotted to test 100% of fights’? I went to the prom,where I had a fun evening of sitting down watching the few people who were actually dancing. I won the ‘most likely to win master-mind’ prize. Which I hope was a reference to my intelligence and not my habit of annoying people with nuggets of useless knowledge.

As we roll into July and August, dad reached significant annoyance with his job to start looking for a new one. He sent his CV in several directions, and I found a top tip that may explain why he didn’t hear back from some. ‘Employers. Avoid hiring unlucky people by throwing half the CVs in the bin straight away.’ That cheered him no end. He did find a new job, and described it as having pluses and minuses but 12,000 pluses for a start.

Lo! I spy the words Duke of Edinburgh Expedition on the calendar. We were in the Preseli mountains, where facilities where primitive, but so were we. There were five of us in the group, but it took only one to break the tent pole. The assessors were not pleased, I don’t know why,our only crime was our only crime. But the tent was fixed (ish) and all was well.

  

2 bass for Harry (dad says his were bigger)Midsummer sunset from Trenifed (1 of Al’s photos)

We had finally found a use for this newfangled ‘summer’ thing. We had gone to north Wales to the beach and to see Ruth’s mum, who (after hearing about mum’s appendicitis) informed us that ‘You should go to Chester Cathedral, it’s got a cafe now.’ She is going deaf, which provides some interesting conversations. MUM (annoyed) : Sploge (cat) keeps weeing in the fireplace. NAIN: WHAT?! Rodge keeps weeing in the fireplace!?

September, and after the brief foray into summer, we were back to reliable autumn. I had entered into sixth form and Al into his GSCEs. I had chosen English, History, Religious Studies and Chemistry. On hearing the last three, a friend of ours asked ‘What did I want to be? A terrorist?’  Al has chosen Art, Catering, Geography and RS, which begsthe question, did he want to be an arty vicar who cooks and knows the capital of Lithuania? School again bombarded us with the ‘most important years of your life’ ‘do as we say not as we do’ etc.

I am alerted by a call from downstairs, mum is on the phone ‘And then you see, they saw my appendix needed taking out so they had to… yes I’ll order, I’ll have two kormas and a Rogan Josh.’ Aled is looking sad. It was going to be a bad year for the cat, she was dead. L

So, we have come full circle, back to good old Noel, Saint Nick and eating yourself silly season with intermittent rain. We are nearly at the end of the year, but you dear readers, will never know what happens in this magical period between me writing the newsletter and you reading it. It could be anything, but will most likely have intermittent rain. We hope you all have a great Christmas and New Year with intermittent fun.

An exchange between me, and Ruth. Not seen her since Uni in Cardiff. Great girl.

Hey Ruth!

F’ing nice to hear from you!

Firstly, I’ve read the newsletter and it’s bloody funny – really reminds me of how we were in Uni. Everything was funny and nothing was offensive. 
We’d do horrible stuff to eachother all the time, and laugh our heads off. 

Adam reminded me that Gronw was handcuffed to the lamp post outside the Woodie (?) and I wandered up and asked him what he was doing.., while he was answering I had a pee on his leg…
Bad right?! 
I’ve absolutely zero memory at all of that, as I guess it was the sort of thing that happened almost daily!
Poor Gronw. Feel bad now 🙂

Didn’t I lock you in a room with Hartley til you were forced to pee in his basin?
Er, sorry bout that… 

Thing is, I was still doing terrible things like that right up til June this year. 
Then, all of a sudden, well you know the rest. 

Make the most of every day Ruthy, you never know when you won’t be able to. 
Tell your boys to keep misbehaving, keep being irreverent, avoid conforming ( except maybe in work ), as life is for living. Stay fit and stay up late a lot.
 Never think you’re past it either. 

Say hello to The RangeRover for us. 

Xxxx

Sent from my iPhone 7 prototype. 

On 21 Dec 2013, at 12:36, “Ruth’

Hi there Russ,
 
Have been in touch with Charlie recently who told us about your accident. He’s sent us your email address so hope you don’t mind us contacting you. I know we didn’t stay in touch with you & Danielle over the years – but UWIST doesn’t really feel that long ago & after reading your blog it feels even shorter! It’s a hugely inspirational thing to read, & a brave thing to do – I’m sure that Dani, your girls and all your family are so proud of you for tackling such a huge challenge head on.
 
Roger & I are tucked away near St Davids and have two sons, Harry (16) & Aled (15), somewhere similar in age to your lovely girls from the photos posted on your blog.  Rodge is just about to start a job in the Orkney Isles (R has just told me to add ‘2 weeks on, 3 weeks off’ as it looks like he’s going to be there permanently!!) and we run a holiday cottage. Charlie thought you’d enjoy reading Harry’s Christmas newsletter – so have attached it for your amusement (hopefully!) – he fancies himself as a bit of a writer so we never have to nag him to do this job!!
 
I don’t know what else to say really – only that we really hope you enjoy this holiday with your family – it must feel great to be out & about and away from hospital.
 
We are thinking of you and will be keeping up with the blog.
 
Love and very Best Wishes to you & Danielle and your girls,
 
Ruth & Roger

Been awake for 3 hours. 
Seen people ski past the window. 
Made me cry.
I so wanted this to be our family, all skiing together, 15 of us, kids to grandparents, a bit of friendly competition thrown in. 
I guess when I’ve cracked sit skiing (?) that’ll be possible. Maybe not this year though. 
It’s still great to be here, to see and hear my girls messing about and laughing. Last night during my first sit on a sofa,
Lily cuddled into me for about half an hour , her legs over mine. I couldn’t feel them, but I could see them, and feel the love flowing from her to me. 
That was just brilliant , even tho it hurt, her shoulder pressing into my painful ribs. 
The appartment booked by Alwyn and Nadia couldn’t be better   It’s ground floor and one level, and everyone else can ski right out of the patio doors onto the slopes. 
The girls are gonna have a brilliant time with their cousins. It’s the first time all the Dawkins have ever been together. 
There’s a great sense of happiness in the air. 
And it’s an awful lot better than being in hospital. 
Happy Xmas to all the wonderful staff at Stoke Mandeville , especially those on St David’s Ward. National Spinal Injuries Centre. ( NSIC ) 

Result!

I’ve just made the brilliant discovery that I can delete ‘comments’ from my blog. 

So, as my Nan used to say ‘ if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all ‘. 
Otherwise I’ll delete it. 
Merry Xmas. 🙂

Charity.

The last time I came to NY was to run the marathon. 

It was around 2002, and I’d run London 6 months earlier. 
I remember I went through halfway in 1 hour 31 minutes and was heading for a personal best, feeling really strong 
At 16 miles my right knee started to hurt, and I started to slow. The pain wore me down and I began to stop and walk for 30 seconds every half mile or so. 
I finished in 3.14, equalling my London time six months earlier, funnily enough, but in far worse shape this time, limping badly. Anyway, the pain disappeared pretty quickly, I met Dani back at the hotel ( she’d run it too ) and then we hit the bar in the W Hotel. 
It was a fun night. 
We raised quite a lot for charity too, I forget which cause, possibly Breakthrough Breast Cancer. 
Every time I took on a challenge I tried to raise something, including Headway ( brain injuries ), Alzheimer’s , various cancer charities and Shooting Stars hospice. 
I never imagined I’d be afflicted by a condition that other people would raise money for though. You don’t, do you, when you’re fit and well?
My own charity, Back on Track Trust, should be up and running before too long  , and I hope we can help men and women like me to rebuild their lives through sport/ fitness. 
If any of you want to raise money for a cause over the coming years, I’d urge you to consider spinal injuries charities, as the whole thing is very poorly funded by the state, as so few people ( relatively ) are affected.