A dad who had half his skull removed after a sudden stroke has beaten the odds to walk, talk and ride a bike again.
Geoff Smith, 54, had let his dogs out into the garden when he suffered a middle cerebral artery stroke and fell and hit his head.
His wife Jo Smith, 53, found her husband unresponsive in their living room and realised he was having a stroke.
Geoff was rushed to hospital and the family were told his chances of surviving were just five per cent - and if he did he'd be left severely disabled.
He underwent a decompressive craniectomy to remove a large part of his skull to allow for his swelling brain to expand.
Geoff spent five and a half months in neurological rehabilitation and was miraculously back walking nine weeks after his stroke.
Jo has continued to find intense therapy for Geoff and says he is "70 per cent back to the old Geoff" and is back to work one morning a week, walking and talking.
Geoff Smith, 54, had let his dogs out into the garden when he suffered a middle cerebral artery stroke and fell and hit his head.
His wife Jo Smith, 53, found her husband unresponsive in their living room and realised he was having a stroke.
Geoff was rushed to hospital and the family were told his chances of surviving were just five per cent - and if he did he'd be left severely disabled.
He underwent a decompressive craniectomy to remove a large part of his skull to allow for his swelling brain to expand.
Geoff spent five and a half months in neurological rehabilitation and was miraculously back walking nine weeks after his stroke.
Jo has continued to find intense therapy for Geoff and says he is "70 per cent back to the old Geoff" and is back to work one morning a week, walking and talking.
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FunTranscript
00:00And they drossed, and they paid. And they drossed, and they paid. And they drossed, and they paid. And they drossed, and they paid. And they drossed, and they paid.
00:17What did you find out today, Jack?
00:19Um...
00:21Do you remember? What did Alex tell you?
00:24Uh...
00:26Oh dear me.
00:28Where are you going, Sam?
00:30Uh...
00:32Uh...
00:34Uh...
00:36Are you going for an ass...
00:38Assessment.
00:40Assessment in...
00:42London, yeah.
00:44In London.
00:46Yeah.
00:48Go on, go on, go on.
00:50He's got it!
00:52There you go.
00:54Nice pillows.
00:56It's hard, but it's good.
00:58You did it though, didn't you?
01:00Well, thank you.
01:02Ha ha ha!
01:04No more bedlifts today. No more exercise bedlifts today.
01:06That's enough.
01:08Good night, Sam.
01:10Good night, Sam.
01:12Can you keep your shirt on?
01:16There you go.
01:20What did you make?
01:22It's a making-do, a making-do.
01:24You made that? What is it?
01:26Hanger, I think.
01:28Kind of.
01:30Kind of.
01:32What do we hang on there?
01:34Wall.
01:36We put it on a wall, we screw it on the wall,
01:38and we put our...
01:40It's called a...
01:42Coat hanger.
01:44Coat hook. Yeah, they're coat hooks.
01:48That is amazing.
01:50You've been making that for about three weeks, haven't you?
01:52Two or three weeks.
01:54That is fantastic.
01:58Shall I take that home today?
02:00Yeah.
02:02Are you chuffed?
02:04Yes.
02:06Are you proud of yourself?
02:08I'm proud.
02:10You should be proud.
02:14Nice job, Jeff.
02:16Thank you, my dear.
02:18Brilliant.
02:32Hiya.
02:34Take the two, please.
02:36Yeah, no worries.
02:38That's a wonderful...
02:40Two crisps this morning.
02:42It's from the allergies.
02:44Oh, thank you.
02:46Water, please.
02:48That's £12.98.
02:50Is that by card?
02:52Yeah, card.
02:54I've got quite a million bottles today.
02:58Is there any ices with your water?
03:00Ice of yours as well?
03:02I don't actually. Do you want ice in it?
03:04No, I'll just...
03:10Do you know, I would have got him to carry that glass
03:12with his right hand.
03:14That would have been a challenge.
03:18Remember these ones.
03:24Nice. Grip it.
03:30Nice. Grip it.
03:32Grip it.
03:40One and done.