Don’t know if I will ever walk again, says Chris Cairns

‘I hope I will be going back on family holidays with the kids’

December 04, 2021 03:01 am | Updated 03:01 am IST - Auckland

Lifestyle change:  Cairns is facing the possibility of spending the rest of his life in a wheelchair.

Lifestyle change: Cairns is facing the possibility of spending the rest of his life in a wheelchair.

Former New Zealand all-rounder Chris Cairns does not know if he will ever walk again but says he is lucky to be alive after a series of life-threatening surgeries left him paralysed waist down.

The 51-year-old suffered an aortic dissection — an often fatal rare heart condition — in August and was on life support. He was saved by four open heart surgeries but he had a spinal stroke on the operating table.

Four months later, he is living at the University of Canberra hospital in a special rehabilitation facility.

“I don’t know if I will ever walk again and I have made my peace with that,” he was quoted as saying in stuff.co.nz .

Will be different

“It is now about understanding I can lead a full and enjoyable life in a wheelchair but at the same time knowing it will be different.”

Cairns, who played 62 Tests and 215 ODIs for New Zealand between 1989 to 2006, is facing the possibility of spending the rest of his life in a wheelchair but he said he is simply “lucky to still be here”.

“It has been 14 weeks since I had my injury and it feels like a lifetime when I look back. I have zero recollection of the eight or nine days when I had four open heart surgeries.

“My wife Mel was with me the whole time and I have to refer back to her constantly with regards to what was going on. I was completely out of it.”

Cairns feels his sporting career is helping his recovery as he hopes to be able to walk again.

“I will try and squeeze everything I can in over the next 12-24 months. Having been in a career when bones and muscles take six weeks to repair, there is no timeline here.”

“I hope I will be going back on family holidays with the kids but I may be wheelchair bound for the rest of my life. At least I have the chance to be here and live life in a different way if that happens.”

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