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Woman given 50/50 chance at survival after putting her feet on car dashboard before crash
Featured Image Credit: Gráinne Kealy

Woman given 50/50 chance at survival after putting her feet on car dashboard before crash

Gráinne Kealy gets 'shivers' when she thinks about someone having to 'go through anything like' what she's had to

Warning: This article contains graphic images which some readers may find distressing.

A woman has spoken out after being involved in a car accident while her feet were on the dashboard and the horrifying consequences.

Gráinne Kealy was 22 years old when she and her boyfriend at the time were driving from Galway to Laois in Ireland on 16 December 2006.

However, the pair's journey didn't go as anticipated, with the Jeep skidding on a patch of black ice.

Kealy tells LADbible the vehicle 'crashed into a wall' but the accident wasn't actually that 'terrible,' with her ex walking away with a broken nose.

However, despite the crash not being as severe as it could've been, Kealy's injuries were far more concerning as she'd positioned herself in the passenger seat with her feet 'up on the dashboard' because she thought it would be 'more comfortable'.

She continues: "I probably would have walked away from it with very little injuries had I not had my feet on the dashboard.

"So, because my feet were on the dashboard, they were literally resting on top of the airbag so when the airbag opened up - and an airbag opens up quite fast, it's like about 120 miles an hour, it has to, to save you.

Kealy was 22 years old at the time of the accident. (Gráinne Kealy)
Kealy was 22 years old at the time of the accident. (Gráinne Kealy)

"It pushed my knees into my face and broke every bone in my face.

"I had a CSF leak so spinal fluid was leaking out through my nose, [I] lost teeth, had brain seizures after it."

John Hopkins Medicine explains: "CSF is Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is a clear liquid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. It provides a cushion for delicate brain and spinal tissue.

"Reduced cerebrospinal fluid, as in the case of a leak, requires immediate care by a trained expert."

Kealy's parents were told by doctors they 'couldn't even' give Kealy a '50-50 chance'.

Gráinne Kealy had to have her forehead removed. (Gráinne Kealy)
Gráinne Kealy had to have her forehead removed. (Gráinne Kealy)

Kealy then underwent surgery which was a staggering '10-and-a-half hours long'.

"They pretty much put my face back together," she says. "I like to say it was a little bit like Humpty Dumpty."

However, five months later, Kealy's forehead bone or 'bone flap as they like to call it' developed an infection.

Kealy didn't quite understand what this meant at the time, noting when her neurosurgeon recommended head scarves she questioned why, saying 'that's like what older women would wear'.

Kealy was left without a full forehead for two years.  (Gráinne Kealy)
Kealy was left without a full forehead for two years. (Gráinne Kealy)

Kealy remembers questioning: "How bad is this going to be? Like a headscarf, right?"

"I woke up and I was still very swollen, so the effect - I didn't notice it straight away," she says. "I don't think I was fully prepared."

Kealy soon discovered her forehead was 'just sunk in' with no 'bone there to hold the skin'.

Kealy says she's 'still coping' with what happened to her, noting as a young woman it 'obviously did affect' her and left her not wanting to leave the house, not wanting people to look at her and not even wanting to look at herself.

She continues: "I had no forehead for two years, even to say that, to think I lived through that is just crazy to me. I don't know how I did it."

Kealy has a ceramic forehead. (LADbible)
Kealy has a ceramic forehead. (LADbible)

Now, Kealy has a 'beautiful Italian ceramic forehead' - she notes it's 'not normal ceramic' and was made specially for her through 'a lot of 3D CAT scans'.

She says she still has 'bad days' and 'neck and shoulder pain because of years of putting [her] head down' so people can't look at her face, but resolves she 'had to speak up'.

Kealy concludes: "I see it [feet on car dashboard] so often and it scares me and to think someone might have to go through anything like what I've had to go through. I have shivers just thinking about it.

"It's obvious, but people still do it. And it's so dangerous. Even if the car's parked, it's just not worth the risk. I promise you."

If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available through Mental Health America. Call or text 988 to reach a 24-hour crisis center or you can webchat at 988lifeline.org. You can also reach the Crisis Text Line by texting MHA to 741741.

Topics: Cars, Health, Ireland, Mental Health, World News