Ali's story | | Courageous story - Ali Johnson |
Sixteen months ago, Ali Johnson broke his neck playing rugby for Tynedale when the scrum collapsed. Ali spent seven months in hospital and is now paralysed from the shoulders down. Inside Out follows his progress as he comes to terms with his injuries and continues on the slow road to recovery. Tough journey Ali Johnson is a born optimist. Despite sustaining a broken neck, he is determined to defy the doctors. His brother Keith is amazed by Ali's determination. He was there when Ali broke his neck and he has seen the extent of his brother's injuries:
| "I just remember him dropping to his knees and being in the second row and looking right across at us and saying I've broken my neck... I remember standing with my hands on my head and thinking this just can not be happening." | | Keith Johnson on the accident |
"Ali never ceases to amaze us - he is so positive - he still talks about when he can walk again, when he can drive again. But despite Ali's optimism, his consultant is not optimistic about his chances of recovery. "It is unlikely he will get any better. It is very likely that he will require a wheelchair for life," says Mr Munawar Mecci, Consultant from the Regional Spinal Injuries Unit.
Despite this Ali believes he can prove the doctors wrong - with the help of a self-styled "mind instructor" called Hratch Ogali.
"I haven't any doubts. I have always believed in myself. The more I do the sooner I will get better, says Ali. "You've got to believe you can get better because if you didn't believe, you might as well lie in bed all day. "And at 25-years-old I'm not prepared to do that, and I'm going to try everything possible to walk again."
Journey of hope
Inside Out follows Ali on a train journey to Hratch Ogali's clinic in London.
It's takes Ali and his carer nine hours to make it down to the clinic.
 | | Ali receiving treatment in London |
Hratch Ogali is not a doctor. In fact, he has no medical training at all, and there are no studies that substantiate his approach. But he does have an unshakeable conviction that the mind can achieve things far beyond the imagination. Two years ago, Hratch Ogali made headline news around the world when one of his patients - a teenage girl who'd been told she'd never walk again - defied all medical expectations and took her first steps. Ali believes one day he'll do the same: "It's like intensive therapy and mind work. He relaxes you by introducing different techniques
it's helping me a lot
As long as I put the work in, he thinks it's down to me
"He makes you believe you can actually do things
which may not seem much but it doesn't half help me as a person."
But is Hratch Ogali a miracle worker or a charlatan? Slow improvement
Ogali gets some reaction to his treatment from Ali what does it tell him?
Hratch says, "It tells me there is a connection now - we activate the unconscious memory - now when I touch his feet, he will start to react. And now he will get stronger and stronger".
But some people think that Hratch is giving people false hope. Hratch disagrees: "There is no such thing as false hope - it is either there or it isn't - they feel it. I tell them it is possible. I don't force them I don't mislead them
everything I tell them will happen, it happens. "He will get up and walk again
. Now he is managing to push and pull. There is nothing to stop him completely recovering.
"I consider myself different. It is too long that we have been dependent on the medical profession. When you utilise the power of the mind they always find a way because it's fact not fiction." Hratch.
It may not seem much but Ali appears to be getting stronger - but there's no proof that Hratch Ogali can claim the credit. After all, it could've happened anyway, and at £200 for each session that's a lot of money. Back home Inside Out finds out more about Ali's life in Northumberland and speaks to those who know him best. Father Ken thinks that the trips to London are beneficial:
"Well I think they're doing him good
his breathing is definitely better and he is off his pills. His arms and legs are built up. He's put on three stone in weight." Ali has had a cow shed on his parent's farm converted into a gym. He spends around four hours a day in there following a strict exercise regime set him by Hratch.
 | | Motivated - Ali Johnson is positive about the future |
Ali is highly motivated, "I think if anyone had to spend a week not being able to do anything for yourself then that would be motivation enough
There is so much I want to do with my life and that is motivation enough."
Ali says his care at the Regional Spinal Injuries Unit in Middlesborough was excellent - but now he's home, he feels abandoned by the NHS:
"I feel quite badly done to. I came out of hospital. They offered an hour's physio. Well, that's not good enough... That's why I've gone to Hratch.
But his consultant says that more physiotherapy at this stage will not help Ali get better: "We never abandon our patients. The care we establish with them is from cradle to grave.
"When we plan discharge we don't send them home until we are happy that they have established their plateau. Intensive physiotherapy is unlikely to lead to improvements.
"We do not operate on hope. We do not function in the NHS on miracles. We have to be pragmatic. We have to be sure about what will recover and what will not." Mr Mecci.
Ali now sees his consultant once every six months. We showed Mr Mecci shots of Hratch Ogali treating Ali but he isn't convinced: "What I have seen on tape is what I would have expected anyway. I don't see any evidence that Hratch Ogali has made any difference". Mr Mecci says it would be wrong to waste public money on Hratch Ogali's treatment without proper proof that it works.
But his consultant's scepticism has done nothing to dampen Ali's hope that he will one day be able to walk back into the ground at Tynedale to watch his former team-mates play. Fund raising Inside Out takes Ali back to the rugby club for only the second time since the accident. The response from the club and the wider community to Ali's accident has been truly remarkable - more than £200,000 raised for his Trust Fund - and the money making still goes on.
| "He's a tough guy
he's certainly a hero - he is a pure inspiration - he won't let it beat him. One day he will walk again
" | | Keith Johnson |
"I would like to see the day when he walks in here and buys us a pint. That would be quite nice," says one of his club colleagues.
The uncomfortable question is whether Ali is right to spend tens of thousands of pounds that these people have worked so hard to raise on Hratch Ogali's treatment? There's no doubt that Hratch Ogali has really helped Ali become more focused and determined to get back on his feet - and Ali is getting stronger.
But the NHS won't pay for that treatment because he simply can't provide the proof that what he does really works.
But if anyone has the strength of character to prove the doubters wrong - then it's Ali. Donations: Payment by cheque, made payable to 'Ali Johnson Trust' to: Supporting Ali, Catraw, Stannington, Morpeth, Northumberland, NE61 6AZ. Links relating to this story: |