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The nurse called 999 and Francesa was flown to Cork University Hospital (CUH) by a Coast Guard crew.
Then it was discovered that Francesa had indeed suffered a stroke.
She said: “I couldn’t speak, I had paralysis on the right side and couldn’t move, I couldn’t swallow, had to be spoon-fed and had a catheter in.
“I remember the doctors around the bed saying I had had a stroke. It was horrible.”
More than 100,000 people have a stroke in the UK each year, and those over 55 are more at risk.
However, one in four occurs in younger people.
Francesa’s stroke was so severe that she spent a month with stroke and physical therapy teams learning to walk, undergo speech therapy and restore her vision.
Francesa said: “I don’t think I understood the gravity of it. They let me walk from one end of the bed to the other and then to the hallway. I could only walk a few steps before resting.
“Losing my peripheral vision meant that instead of walking straight, I would walk to the right.”
She was then transferred to St James’s in Dublin and now only relies on medicine as part of her recovery.
The ordeal has given Francesa a “very different outlook on life”.
She’s gone from managing just a few steps in her hospital room to signing up for a 10K charity marathon next month.
Francesa said: “I’m almost there. Now it’s like working on myself, I joined a gym and I’m reclaiming my life.
“You have to remember how lucky you are every day.
“I decided to do the mini-marathon on June 5 to raise money for CUH Charity because CUH are the ones who helped me get back on my feet.”
Glen Arrigan, one of Ms. Murray’s clinical nurse practitioners at CUH, who sees more than 600 stroke patients a year, described her recovery as “incredible.”
“What she has accomplished in the past two years is an incredible story and we need to hear more stories from people like Fran,” said Arrigan.
“Courage, courage, resilience; she managed to get through this frustrating and uncertain time and came out on the other side.
“Hopefully by telling her story, it will raise awareness about stroke and reduce the risk of it happening to someone else.”
You can support Francesa’s fundraiser by clicking here.