Jamaican Woman Speaks With Only British Accent After Waking Up From Coma (Video)

33-year-old Montego Bay resident, Deana-Rae Clayton, has never been to the United Kingdom, but a tragic car accident she had in 2019 left her with a British accent days after waking up from a coma. A right-handed person before the car crash that left her friend dead and two others also critically injured, Clayton is also now left-handed.

Currently blinded in one eye and unable to walk, doctors say Clayton, who also suffers from memory loss as a result of the accident, has foreign accent syndrome โ€“ a speech disorder that โ€œcauses a sudden change to speech so that a native speaker is perceived to speak with a โ€˜foreignโ€™ accent.โ€

The brain disorder is usually caused by a stroke or a traumatic brain injury.

โ€œIn the accident, my head trauma caused a stroke and that gave me brain damage,โ€ Clayton told The Sunday Gleaner. โ€œThe swelling that the brain damage caused is between my language and motor skills, so my accent has changed and I am now left-handed instead of right-handed. I am unable to speak the Jamaican accent now.โ€

Initially fluent in patois, Clayton also revealed sheโ€™s unable to sometimes understand the language popularly spoken in her home country.

โ€œBased from what I gathered, I am the only person in Jamaica with the foreign accent syndrome,โ€ she said. โ€œThe brain damage is getting worse as far as I can see. I am not always able to understand Patois any more. I have long-term effects and I have a whole new life that I have to get used to.โ€

Clayton, however, told Mirror Online she wants to keep her newly acquired accent.

โ€œThe doctors have offered me speech therapy so I can learn to speak patois again but I want to keep my accent because my family and friends have told me it suits my personality,โ€ she said. โ€œSome people say I sound like Iโ€™m from Birmingham and some say I sound like a well-spoken Jamaican โ€“ but no one has said anything negative.

โ€œOnce I feel up to it I would like to get work doing voiceovers as everyone loves my accentโ€

Though grateful, Clayton admitted her road to recovery has been challenging, with some setbacks along the way.

โ€œI am still learning to walk. I cannot walk without any aid. Even turning on the bed is a struggle for me. I spent one month in the hospital and Iโ€™ve done four surgeries. My entire life has changed because I can no longer work a 9 to 5,โ€ she told The Sunday Gleaner. โ€œThey said it would take one to two years in terms of recovery to a point that I will be able to walk like nothing happen [sic]. However, because of COVID-19 and the delay in my left femur healing, thatโ€™s now looking like three to four years.โ€

Clayton has set up a YouTube page to document her journey and new life.

โ€œIf at any point you have your own trauma and you feel like โ€˜Why me?โ€™ and โ€˜God is punishing meโ€™, He is not,โ€ Clayton said. โ€œHe is building you up for something better โ€ฆ . The reason may be unclear, but eventually, you will see why it is it that you went through the trauma in order to be better at whatever results you get.โ€

Source: face2faceafrica.com

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