US band Mötley’s Crue was silent about Vince Neil’s condition for a long time.

Mötley Cruen Vince Neil got a stroke. Mattias Ericsson, AOP

In the spring, it was reported that Mötley Cruen’s singer Vince Neil, 64, has disappeared from publicity. It was known about the mysterious disappearance that he encountered some kind of adversity that the band had had to cancel a lot of his performances.

Now Neil reveals In a recent interview, he received such a great stroke in December last year that he was believed to even lose his walking ability.

The singer went to bed normally on Christmas day. When he tried to get out of bed the next morning, he didn’t seem to succeed.

– My entire left ended, Neil says.

– I had to learn how to walk again. It was tough. Doctors believed I would never perform again. I just said just wait, I’ll do it. Just look, Neil says in the interview.

Rehabilitated against expectations

Neil needed help with everyday things like going to the bathroom. He could not walk, but had to use a wheelchair. At some point, Neil’s condition healed to the extent that he was able to walk with the walking stick.

– Now I no longer need any aids. However, there is still a long way to go to the situation where I find it good, Neil says.

– It takes time for the brain to start moving your feet again and takes time to obey your feet. You try to walk, but it just doesn’t seem to go well, Neil continues.

Neil now says he is almost at the point of his health in which he was before the scene.

The reason is revealed. Mötley Crue canceled his performances last spring so that Neil could be rehabilitated in peace. For example, the band’s large performances of Las Vegas were postponed directly this fall. The band still stated in the spring that this was a medical operation for the Neil and the instructions for doctors.

Neil returned to the stage in August. Now the band has played their first Las Vegas concert.

Mötley Crüe is a band founded in the early 1980s with one of the most famous songs Girls, Girls, Girls, Dr. Feelgood, and Live Wire.

Source: Las Vegas Review-Journal

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