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charla nash’s

Charla Nash, the woman who lost her eyesight, lips, nose and hands in a vicious chimp attack, says she feels at home in her new skin two years after her face transplant.

Charla Nash, 58, who nearly died in the horrific mauling, told the Hartford Courant exclusively that she feels no different than she did before the attack.

“I just feel like it’s my face,” Charla Nash said.

“It’s just not working real good.”

Charla Nash, a single mother from Stamford, Connecticut, told the Hartford Courant that she’s regaining movements in her face and can express herself with various motions.

“Every day, my muscles get better,” she said.

Sandra Herold, Charla Nash’s friend and owner of the 200-lb chimp Travis, died of an aneurism in 2010. Charla Nash said that if she could say anything to her former boss and friend, she would say: “Sorry that all this happened. And, nothing we can change now.”

However, Charla Nash added that Sandra Herold was “a trouble person” that was more worried about her pet – who was shot and killed after the attack – than she was of her.

Charla Nash says she feels at home in her new skin two years after her face transplant

Charla Nash says she feels at home in her new skin two years after her face transplant

In past interviews, Charla Nash revealed that having a new face allowed her simple human pleasures – she has regained her sense of smell and can eat again.

Charla Nash is even regaining sensation in her forehead, cheeks, eyebrow, and nose.

But most of all, she’s learning how to smile.

“It creases up here,” she told the Hartford Courant as she pointed at her mouth.

In the interview, Charla Nash also spoke of long years of rehabilitation, and the hope of regaining some semblance of independence.

“I don’t know what the future’s doing (sic) to bring… so I don’t get my hopes up,” she said. Though she added that she wants to progress far enough that she can again ride horses and live in her own house.

Charla Nash said she misses simple things – like being able to bargain hunt, bask in the sunshine, or even look at her 20-year-old daughter, Brianna.

“I have to depend on a lot of help,” Charla Nash she said.

“My life depends on really not being alone. I used to be very independent.”

Charla Nash also gets phantom pains in her hands, despite the fact that they were removed after the 2009 attack.

Transplants added in surgery later had to be removed because of dangerous complications.

In an interview with ABC 7 last month, Charla Nash – who likes being called Charlie – said she doesn’t want anybody’s pity.

“I don’t want anyone to feel sorry for me,” Charla Nash said.

“I want to be like everyone else.”

There are very real financial concerns as well. Her surgery, care, and rehabilitation have cost millions.

According to the Hartford Courant, there is a $150 million case pending against the state of Connecticut for allegedly not protecting its citizens from an unsafe creature.

One state employee reportedly wrote in a memo that Travis’ attack was “an accident waiting to happen”.

“I hope that I do get my day in court,” Charla Nash said.

She has been told by doctors that she needs to work on bulking up, as she is still quite thin for her 5ft 10in frame.

Charla Nash, who was blinded in the 2009 attack, was fitted with brown glass eyes and hopes to get a double hand transplant after the first one failed.

She received a revolutionary full-face transplant at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston nearly two years after the attack.

The operation – performed by a team of more than 30 surgeons and nurses – and subsequent recovery were widely covered.

Prior to the surgery, Charla Nash hid her face under a veil, saying that she chose to wear it “so I don’t scare people”.

 

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Charla Nash, the woman who had her face and hands ripped off in a horrifying attack by a pet chimpanzee has spoken publicly for the first time since she had a face transplant.

Charla Nash, 55, is single mother from Stamford, Connecticut, nearly died after the mauling in 2009.

The woman tried to catch her boss’ escaped pet ape Travis, when the 14-year-old male chimp went berserk.

The chimp attack left Charla Nash terribly disfigured, but a 20-hour operation earlier this year that involved scores of doctors has given her a new face.

Charla Nash has decided today to bravely face the cameras.

Charla Nash has spoken publicly for the first time since she had a face transplant

Charla Nash has spoken publicly for the first time since she had a face transplant

 

Charla Nash’s interview is part of a documentary series called Extraordinary People.

Charla Nash said: “A lot of people tell me I look beautiful and I never had anyone tell me that before.

“I look OK now and I don’t have to worry about scaring anyone.”

The chimp attack has left Charla Nash blind, but family members have been doing everything in their power to help her through her ordeal.

Charla Nash before the chimp attack

Charla Nash before the chimp attack

Charla Nash spoke of her disappointment that her hand transplant was unsuccessful, but she’s optimistic she may one day get a successful hand transplant.

Charla Nash’s recovery will take years and she will always have to take anti-rejection drugs.

One of her doctors, Bohdan Pomahac said it would be a gradual recovery.

“Nine months to a year is typically when they can control the face and smile,” Dr. Pomahac said.

Charla Nash’s twin brother, Mike said: “I saw her and I said <<wow>>. It’s amazing, the miracles of science.”

Despite her trauma, Charla Nash remains determined to lead as normal a life as possible.

“I think in the beginning, I always wondered <<why me?>>

“But then again, my whole life has not been easy but I never gave up.”

Charla Nash’s face transplant operation was carried out in May, when more than 30 surgeons, nurses and anaesthetists at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, led by Dr. Bohdan Pomanhac, worked to rebuilt her face.

The team kept the date secret to protect Charla Nash’s privacy.

The doctors took the donor’s skin, underlying muscle, nerves and upper palate and transplanted the whole face on to Charla Nash’s skull.

Charla Nash’s hands had to be removed after she developed severe complications, including kidney failure and pneumonia, which caused low circulation in the new hands.

She has hidden her face under a veil for the past two years.

Charla Nash bravely revealed her disfigured features in an interview with Oprah Winfrey just a few months after the attack, when she said:

“I wear (the veil) so I don’t scare people. Sometimes other people might insult you, so I figure maybe it’s easier if I just walk around covered up.”

The chimp that attacked Charla Nash two years ago was later shot by police. Sandra Herold, the chimp owner speculated the pet was trying to protect her and didn’t recognize Charla Nash because she had changed her hairstyle.

Sandra Herold died of an aneurysm in 2010.

Charla Nash’s family are suing her estate for $50million and wants to sue the state for $150million, saying officials failed to prevent the attack.

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