The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

The Day I...

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lost everything to a tropical fever

Iwas born in Dundee but I grew up in Montrose. I stayed there until I was 17 when I went to Edinburgh, the base of Scottish Squash. After the Delhi Commonweal­th Games in 2010 I moved to Leeds to work with a coach who was training the world number one male and female squash players. I had already reached my highest world ranking of 38 when I went to the Malaysian Open in 2014. I was feeling physically and mentally the strongest I had ever felt. I managed to qualify, eventually losing out to the world number one. I had a smaller event further north in Perlas, where I was number one seed, and gunning for my first world tour title. But I started to not feel great.At first I thought I was dehydrated. Then, about four days before the event, I began to see two balls at training instead of one. I was travelling to Perlas alone by taxi. Everything was remote, and I was worried about being ill and not near civilisati­on. The night before the match started, I was throwing up and had a high fever. I started to panic. I got a taxi straight to the airport and booked a flight home. Getting on the plane was the last thing I can remember. When we touched down I was taken straight to Leeds General Infirmary by ambulance and put in quarantine. The next thing I can recall is waking up to see someone in a contaminat­ion costume. Doctors didn’t know what was wrong but took some blood samples. I had to wait three days for the results. Those few days were the worst. I suffered hallucinat­ions and on-and-off blindness in one eye, fever and vomiting. I couldn’t move. I was told I had contracted dengue fever from a mosquito bite and there was no medication to treat it. I was given intravenou­s fluids and just had ride it out. I was sent home and told to be patient and it would get better. But I

was left with debilitati­ng fatigue. I moved back to Montrose to be looked-after by my parents. After a month of being bed-bound, my GP did some tests that showed I had an autoimmune condition as a result of the dengue. That kept me bed-bound for a further 18 months. As an athlete who is completely reliant on prize money to live, when you can’t compete you’re not making any money at all. I had to sell my car and give up the flat in Leeds. I was back to square one. In my mind, I had lost everything. Once Lisa Aitken the squash player had gone, I felt strangely empty and lost. But it was a blessing in disguise. I realised that life just can’t be about the game. Over the years I had made it that way and that had created pressure on my performanc­e. I had also lost sight of what is important, what you stand for and what you’re grateful for. Everything had been about winning or losing and becoming a better squash player – not a better person. Now I could get the old me back, resume my hobbies and spend time with my family. The time I had off was full of peaks and troughs. I went from thinking I would never get back to squash to telling myself “I will do whatever it takes to make sure I am at the top of the game and represent Scotland again”. It took three years to get back to full fitness. I have gained a new appreciati­on for life and having a clean bill of health.That has made training, competing and performing to my best a lot easier. This month it has all come full circle as I have again achieved my highest ranking – back to 38th in the world. It was tough, but in a good way. Getting to 38 before the dengue fever wasn’t that hard – I hadn’t had any great wins to get there.When I came back to the sport after my illness I found there were more players playing full-time and more depth to the game, so it took a lot of hard work. This week I was ranked 37 in the world – my highest ever. I have beaten ten players who are ranked above me, and I have won six Profession­al Squash Associatio­n tour titles in the last 12 months. I’ve had some great wins this season and being among the world’s top 20 is where I see myself heading. I am also starting a degree in Brewing and Distilling at Heriot Watt University in September. Scottish Squash is based there so hopping across for a lecture shouldn’t be too difficult. The dengue fever was awful but, looking back, I wouldn’t change a thing.

They said I had dengue fever. And that there was no medication to treat it

 ??  ?? Lisa Aitken, 29, Scottish Squash Champion, Edinburgh
Lisa Aitken, 29, Scottish Squash Champion, Edinburgh

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