ME sufferer Jessica Taylor, from Cliffe Woods, goes on sponsored bed-push around Bluewater Shopping Centre
13:00, 09 July 2014
updated: 16:06, 09 July 2014
Most young women would jump at the chance of some retail therapy at Bluewater, but for ME sufferer Jessica Taylor it proved an emotional and gruelling challenge.
Jessica, 23, from Cliffe Woods, has completed a sponsored bed-push around the shopping centre for the children’s charity she founded.
Apart from hospital appointments, it is the first time Jessica has been out of her home in Cliffe Woods since she was struck the down with the chronic fatigue illness eight years ago.
Jessica has fond memories of shopping trips to Bluewater before ME turned her life upside down. She is now bed-ridden and confined to one room where she works on raising money for Share a Star, now a registered charity which helps seriously ill young people in hospital.
After being pushed around the centre by her father Colin Taylor a paramedic, and brother Tom, on Sunday she said: “It was like climbing Kilimanjaro for me. The light, noise and motion was incredibly difficult to deal with when you have severe ME because it is a neurological condition.
"When I had finished, in the back of the ambulance, I crashed. I couldn’t move of speak for a while for I had pushed my body to the extreme.”
But Jessica added the highlights were the reaction from and going to a shop.
She said: “I bought a cookie and lemonade and it was the best drink I have ever had.
“For a moment, the whole of Bluewater stopped and was still. It was an incredible awareness for severe ME, which is still greatly misunderstood.”
A total of £2,850 was raised for Share a Star which creates individual stars for desperately ill young patients under the age of 21. Jessica has spent the last 13 weeks in hospital while the family home in Woodside Green is adapted.
She said: “My plan is to make the most of this time. I am looking to launch ‘From a Star to a Star’ to get celebrities who are particularly special to the youngsters to design a star for them.
“We use the term ‘star’ for people we respect. With the charity we have many superstars who are living with life-threatening illnesses.”
Latest news
‘I spend three hours at A&E every other day because my GP can’t see me’
Rolexes and crypto: How dealer selling drugs from bedroom hid ‘massive profits’
Park pledges to reopen iconic cinema building as another blockbuster film lined up
High street’s oldest shop to finally reopen 18 months after roof collapsed
Features
Most popular
- 1
Pedestrian killed in M2 crash involving ‘number of vehicles’
3 - 2
‘This Christmas market is truly magical - but there’s just one problem’
17 - 3
Inside Kent’s newest B&M store in former Wilko
5 - 4
Lorry bursts into flames on roundabout approach
3 - 5
Delays after tank strapped to lorry hits railway bridge
6