Why was February a strange month? Well here is the story and also the reason why I haven’t had the opportunity to update this blog.
The first four days of February were like any other month busy with photo shoots etc. Since just after Christmas day Maria had started coughing and it was just passed off as a cold. Two weeks later I said that she should go to a doctor and have it checked out, which she did, and the doctor just asked to take some cough mixture. A week later the coughing continued night and day which meant that by now she was losing hours of sleep every night and beginning to get quite rundown.
Off to the doctor again only to be given some antihistamine tablets which didn’t seem to work. Another week passes of sleepless nights and constant coughing, Maria goes back to the doctor following week (the last week of January) and the doctor decides to prescribe some steroid tablets. This diagnosis appears to work at first and she continues to take the tablets until around midnight of 5 February she has a particularly bad bout of coughing after which she starts to feel very strange. She wakes me up saying that she is sweating profusely and her left side feels strange. She also complains of having a headache on the right side of the head. What was also worrying was that she couldn’t swallow water.
Within 15 minutes we were in the reception of the John Radcliffe Hospital A&E department. To cut a long story short Maria was diagnosed as having a mild stroke. She spent the following two weeks in the neuroscience ward at the John Radcliffe Hospital and was allowed to be released home when she could start swallowing on her own, liquids, which up until now she had been fed through a tube from her nose into her stomach.

Maria on 5th Feb John Radcliff Hospital A&E department
Here is a photo of Maria in the John Radcliffe A&E department.
So we are now into the month of March and Maria is making a remarkable recovery from her stroke. To say the least I was as scared as hell when this first happened but keeping a cool head and making the right decision to take at a hospital immediately she displayed the symptoms of having a stroke, was the best action to have taken. Having seen the adverts on TV describing the symptoms of someone having a stroke and taking the appropriate action (I believe it was televised as F.A.S.T. Facial weakness, Arm & Leg actions, Speech and Time) saved vital brain cells from being permanently damaged.
I firmly believe that giving 110% support as her husband and also the determination and positive attitude of Maria has helped speed up the recovery from the stroke. Being my muse and also the most beautiful woman on the planet in my eyes, I wanted to document her recovery progress over the past month and last weekend I was able to have the opportunity to take some more photographs of Maria in a more glamorous way and here is one shot from the photo shoot.

Here is Maria 22 days after the mild stroke
In conclusion all I can say is that Maria certainly had an angel watching over her on the 5 February at night.
I would like to thank all of our friends who visited Maria in hospital and for all those who prayed for her to recover as soon as possible.
I would also like to thank all of the medical consultants, doctors, nurses and healthcare assistants for all of their dedication and care of Maria while at the John Radcliffe Hospital. If you would like more information about F.A.S.T and stroke then please head on over to this website:
http://www.stroke.org.uk/campaigns/raising_awareness/act_fast.html