Biker who defied odds says safety gear saved life
Steve JonesA motorcyclist who suffered a life-changing brain injury after being knocked off his bike into a water-filled ditch is encouraging other riders not to compromise on safety gear.
The last thing Steve Jones, from Norwich, remembers is riding his motorbike in north Norfolk in 2018, before waking up in Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge five weeks later.
He spent the next eight years recovering, including having to re-learn how to walk.
"It was so bad my wife and my loved ones were told to prepare for the worst because the odds were so against me," he said.
Steve JonesOn 23 June 2018, as Jones was overtaking a car, he was catapulted head-first through a wall and into a water-filled ditch.
A fellow biker who had been riding with Jones jumped into the ditch and was able to hold his head above the water until the emergency services were able to arrive at the scene 21 minutes later.
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"The next thing I remember was waking up in Addenbrooke's Hospital being told it was five weeks later, which was a bit of a shock," Jones said.
"Surviving the impact was only the beginning."
His rehabilitation also included narrative therapy where he documented his life before and after the accident.
Eight years to the day of the accident, he has published a book titled, Back From The Brink.
'The reason I was alive'
Steve JonesSpeech and language therapist Lauren Flannery said: "Steve is a real example of the resilience and courage - it takes to work hard every day to put your life back together after such a significant event."
She said that rehabilitation can often be a "long journey".
At the time of the accident, Jones was in the final stages of finishing a PhD thesis and joined Suffolk Police as a cyber security advisor before fulfilling his dream of being a university lecturer at the University of East Anglia.
East Anglian Air AmbulanceLooking back on the accident, he is encouraging other bikers to make sure they invest in proper safety gear after he was left "shocked" seeing other riders in short-sleeved T-shirts and flip flops.
"I get the draw of the bike," he said. "Honestly, there's not a day that goes by that I don't miss it, but my wife has decreed I'm not to get on two wheels again.
"If you are a biker and heading on the roads please, please invest and do not compromise on safety gear.
"The doctor said to me when I woke up, that is the reason I was alive and there was a body for them to put back together."

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