
Photo: GoFundMe

Photo: GoFundMe
The Australian mother-of-two says that this second accident didn’t feel as bad as the first, but it did leave her unable to move her head again, and the injury was apparently bad enough that doctors had to use a neck halo on her. This is a metal device that screws into the patient’s skull and stops them from moving their head. “I’ve had two kids and getting the halo is worse than childbirth,” Monique said. “I can lie down but I sleep sitting up in a special bed. The halo completely supports my head and my neck. All the muscles in my neck are wasting away but I don’t have to hold my head up because it’s being held up by the bars and screws.”
Photo: GoFundMe
She will have to wear the neck halo for six weeks, after which she will undergo months of physiotherapy and rehab to strengthen her neck muscle, but because she has already suffered this type of extremely unlikely accident twice in five years, the chances of it happening again is really high. So if the therapy proves unsuccessful, doctors may have to perform surgery to “fuse” her C1 and C2 vertebrae, so they can no longer collapse. “It’s not terminal, I’m going to be fine, but it does suck a bit. You just have to laugh about it,” an optimistic Monique said.
Photo: GoFundMe
Monique and her husband Sam both work full time to support their two children, and her having to be hospitalized for months is going to be tough on the family, financially. Her sister set up a crowdfunding campaign on GoFundMe, where people willing to help them get through this ordeal can donate. The $8,000 goal has already been met, but if you’d like to make a contribution, it would definitely be appreciated.