Linda7NJ
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Jan. 28, 2006 For 26 years Joyce Urch of Coventry, England, listened to her family grow five kids, 12 grandkids, three great-grandkids.
She listened, but she couldn't see them. Blinded by a hereditary illness, Joyce was resigned to a life of blackness.
Then one day, she was rushed to the hospital with chest pains. Doctors described her as lifeless. She had suffered a heart attack and kidney failure.
Then Urch woke up after a lifesaving operation and opened her eyes. She could see.
"I shouted, I did," Urch said. "I said, 'I'm back, I'm back.'
more at link:http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Health/story?id=1551891
She listened, but she couldn't see them. Blinded by a hereditary illness, Joyce was resigned to a life of blackness.
Then one day, she was rushed to the hospital with chest pains. Doctors described her as lifeless. She had suffered a heart attack and kidney failure.
Then Urch woke up after a lifesaving operation and opened her eyes. She could see.
"I shouted, I did," Urch said. "I said, 'I'm back, I'm back.'
more at link:http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Health/story?id=1551891