Improving life after brain injury Need to talk? 0808 800 2244

Join
Home About brain injury Individuals Brain injury and me

Peter Holmes

Share your story with us to help others affected by brain injury

Peter Holmes

Peter Holmes

What we fail to understand, we tend to fear

Peter Holmes, from Leeds, had been promised a thrilling but safe experience riding on a jet ski along the river Sava when he visited Serbia with his family on 14 August 2011.

Unfortunately, despite being accompanied by an experienced instructor, Peter crashed at speed into another vehicle, leaving the teenager lying unconscious and face-down in the water, with blood streaming from his head.

Three years on from that fateful holiday, Peter has battled to rebuild his life. This year, he even took to the streets of Newcastle for the Great North Run to raise funds for Headway. Now 20 years old and determined to help others affected by the devastating consequences of brain injury, Peter shares his inspirational story here.

On a hot and sunny day by a Serbian river three years ago, I put fear aside and leapt on to a jet ski for the first time

"I'm not a great swimmer, but I'd been given a lifejacket. My family shouted "go for it!" and that's what I did. Seconds later, my jet ski and another machine crashed at speed on the busy river, and my life was turned upside down - literally and figuratively.

"I have no memory of the accident. I was found face-down and unconscious in the river. The other rider suffered a broken leg, but when my sister, Vikki, found me floating in the water surrounded by a large slick of blood, she feared I was dead.

"I was pulled to the shore and held by my mother in her arms until medical help arrived.

"I spent the next ten days in a coma, seven of them at the Belgrade Emergency Health Centre. Doctors believe my head struck the second jet ski, causing me to sustain an 'extremely severe' traumatic brain injury.

Peter spent 10 days in a coma following his brain injury

Peter spent 10 days in a coma following his brain injury

"I was later flown by air ambulance to Leeds Bradford Airport on 22 August and admitted to the intensive care unit at Leeds General Infirmary.

"Doctors pulled no punches, telling my parents there was a long road ahead with no guarantee of a full recovery. Surgery was ruled out, but my brain needed to slowly reboot and I would have to learn things, like walking and talking, all over again.

"I was told of this 18 days before I spoke my first words to a speech and language therapist, who rang my Mum to break the happy news and handed me the phone.

"I said: "Hi Mum, it's Peter," and, with a bit of prompting, I added: "I'm fine". 

It was hardly Shakespeare, but it got Mum screaming with joy. I took my first unaided steps later the same day.

"My rehabilitation continued in a specialist unit at Chapel Allerton Hospital in Leeds, followed by weekly appointments with a psychologist at St Mary's Hospital in Armley to help me cope with increased anxiety, fatigue and difficulties concentrating and thinking flexibly.

"The accident happened in the middle of my A-level studies at St Aidan's School in Harrogate, where my twin brother Alex was also taught. My studies were put on hold for a year while I relearned the basics. It was tough seeing Alex, my shadow for so many years, going it alone and winning a place at university ahead of me. School staff showed great patience and understanding, and I was gradually re-acclimatised to the world of academia.

"I stumbled plenty of times, took far too long agonising over essays and worried constantly about what fellow pupils thought of me, but I persevered and Hull University offered me a place to study geography, while promising to support me in my quest to make sense of my new life. I overanalyse, suffer from paranoia and bouts of depression, as doctors warned I would, but I do my best to put on a brave face and smile.

Peter went on to complete the Great North Run for Headway

Peter went on to complete the Great North Run for Headway

"The accident wreaked havoc for me and my family, and I am still very much a work in progress. I keep saying to myself that I'll not allow a few seconds on a jet ski to determine the course of my life. Inform my life, yes; determine my life, no.

"I have made a relatively full physical recovery - apart from a slightly bashed nose and a few small scars. Earlier this year I busied myself training for the Great North Run to raise muchneeded money for Headway. Head injuries are little understood and what we fail to understand, we tend to fear."

In September, Peter celebrated his successful completion of the Great North Run, which saw around 40,000 people descend on Newcastle to tackle the challenging but beautiful route to South Shields.

Peter finished the race in an impressive one hour and 44 minutes, raising £1,000 for the charity.

"It was very hard and tiring at times, but it has been an absolute privilege to run for Headway," said Peter after the challenge.

"There is an enormous number of people living with the long-term consequences of brain injury. To wear the Headway t-shirt and raise awareness and hope for those people was just amazing.

"Nobody likes talking about head injuries. The scars are often mental ones - invisible but very real and painful - and ones that often lead to embarrassed or awkward silences, particularly among well-meaning friends.

Sadly, we hear 'head case' often used as a term of insult. I am a head case in the true sense, but I now see light at the end of a long tunnel and hope that, by supporting Headway, I can give encouragement to those facing similar challenges.
 

Share this page

Headway - the brain injury association is registered with the Charity Commission for England and Wales (Charity no. 1025852) and the Office of the Scottish Regulator (Charity no. SC 039992). Headway is a company limited by guarantee, registered in England no. 2346893.

© Copyright Headway 2024  -  Site designed and developed by MEDIAmaker