By Neil Myers
Last August I posted on edhat to say I was the biker in the bike-versus-truck accident on Gibraltar. I posted it from the hospital on day 3 and never checked back. With all the drugs they had me on I have forgotten most of the first two weeks after the accident. I came across the post by accident and read through the 47 comments wishing me well. I thought it would be good to share how my recovery has gone.
Last Saturday was six months and the short answer is I have made it all the way back. It has taken lots of treatment, rehab and exercise, but I am walking, biking, swimming, running and working out again in the gym. I have no permanent effects except for a lot of difficulty remembering names. I remember people just fine, but that part of my cortex that associates names with people just doesn’t work very well. It might recover, but if not … I can get by.
I have started riding back up Gibraltar again. It is 100 percent clear that I was riding too fast that day (and all the previous days). I used to descend at an average speed of 30 mph. I now descend at 12mph. I used to think that as long as I stayed in my lane I was safe, but that isn’t true. I now ride at a speed that allows me to stop if the unexpected is around a blind turn. “Never show up somewhere your brain didn’t show up 2 minutes earlier”.
I said before I had almost no permanent effect, but that’s not really accurate. The biggest permanent effect is GRATITUDE. Thanks to the first responders I went from hitting the windshield to Cottage ER in 30 minutes. That saved my life. Since then more 300 people (mostly from Cottage, but elsewhere as well) have worked to get me back. My health insurance (United Healthcare) paid for virtually all of the costs (nearly $500,000). There is a great video on the Cottage Facebook page that gives you a sense for how much help I got. I have no illusions … I am a very lucky man.
I also want to share how grateful I am for the support I got that day I posted on Edhat. True, I forgot and didn’t check back until now, but it was still as powerful to hear. It brought me to tears.
I know that not everyone would ride Gibraltar again. I thought long and hard about it. But riding was what made me strong enough to survive the original accident. It is my sport and my Zen. I will work to make it safer. I needed a new bike (mine was in three pieces), so I bought the BRIGHTEST bike I could find. I also added a Garmin Radar … a device that alerts me to cars coming up from behind. AND … disc brakes. I’m not repeating this accident!
Above is a shot they took for the Cottage video. I am back, healthy, happy and grateful.
Past Articles
- August 4, 2018: Bicyclist Struck by Vehicle on Gibraltar
Glad to see he’s still around, but this is such an obvious commercial for our local hospital monopoly, Cottage Health, it would take some convincing to prove that edhat wasn’t paid for this.
Who cares? I’m happy to hear the conclusion. And if edhat made a buck off of it, good for them. Doesn’t read that way to me, though!
I often wondered about you through the months… I thought you were a goner, It’s hard not to assume I hear so many accidents listening to the Scanner. I’m very happy for your Update, Cottage Hospital has some wonderful Folks working there I met some a few days ago myself. I lost the ability to remember some peoples names during my last drunk it’s embarrassing sometimes for me but I just let people know and hope they don’t get too offended when I call them “Whatsyourname” Welcome Back Neil you have another chance to live….
MONKEYBOY – Even if t was… I am glad to know he survived, and is doing so well. And, that he has learned that it’s better to take longer getting down the hill 😉 It is also good to know that our local health care system worked so well for him.
Glad you made it!!! And that you got back in the saddle and didn’t let your fear get the better of you. And I’m really happy to see you being more careful on that road; I hit a deer on my motorcycle on that road back in October. Totalled the bike, split the deer in two, but luckily walked away with minor road rash (ATGATT, y’all) . And I was back out there a month later, on my new bike, facing my apprehension and fear and conquering it, just like you. Cheers!!!