Dayton Daily News

Oregon District fixture fights back after devastatin­g illness

Changes in the weather transform the very feel of the world’s presence, altering the medium of awareness in a manner that affects every breathing being in our vicinity. We sometimes refer to such weather phenomena, taken together, as “the elements,” a phr

- Amelia Robinson Smart Mouth

Brad Darrell made a New Year’s resolution many among us take for granted: to walk again. That’s no small feat, but the 39-yearold Oregon District fixture says he is working on it.

The fact that he could “say it” at all speaks to the work Darrell has put in since suffering a severe stroke nearly two years ago.

“My aortic valve collapsed. They had to replace it,” Brad explained in a slurred but confident voice. “I had hemorrhagi­ng on both sides of my brain.”

His journey started on a morning just like any other.

Brad, then the main pierce and longtime manager of Glenn Scott’s Tattoo Team in the Oregon District, woke up at his home in Dayton’s Belmont neighborho­od to go to work.

The day, as it turned out, was anything but typical.

“I couldn’t get out of bed,” Brad said. “I couldn’t use my leg at all. I yelled for my roommate to call an ambulance.”

Before that day, Brad said he generally felt fine despite being a little ill a few days before.

“The day before it happened, I ran two miles,” he told me.

Brad woke up in the hospital a week later.

“My voice had gotten better,” he said. “In the beginning, I couldn’t speak at all.”

Glenn Scott closed his downtown shop in January 2017. He cited Brad’s illness among the reasons for the decision. Brad was treated at Miami Valley Hospital before being taken to Christ Hospital in Cincinnati. He has also received care from Atrium Medical Center in Middletown, where the Middletown High grad is now staying with relatives.

He had an infection in his heart, the cause of which is not clear. Brad was hospitaliz­ed five months.

“I was put in an infection control unit,” he said. “They want me to get rid of infection around my heart and get stronger before open-heart surgery.”

He called the ordeal a “pride buster.” He relies on the support of his friends, parents, Vickey and Steve, and younger brother, Brett Darrell. His friend Kristin Todd, a bartender at Tumbleweed Connection in the Oregon District, helped organize the all-day Brad Darrell Day in the Oregon District on March 25, 2016.

Nearly $30,000 was raised to support Brad through donations and specials at Oregon District businesses.

Posters and stickers of Brad can still be seen around the district. Brad said he was grateful for all the support. He said he always strived to pay it forward and treat people the way be wanted to be treated.

“Whenever I saw someone who needed to be helped, I would help them,” he said.

Among other things, Darrell helped launch the Tumbleweed’s Critter and Car Wash for Charity more than five years ago. The wet and soapy event started due to a bet Brad lost to his friend Troy Murrin.

As Kristin Todd explained, Brad told Troy he would wash his car in a bikini if Troy grew his beard out for six months.

Brad doesn’t know how long it will take him to recover from the health crisis, but he says he is working hard to do so. He has regular rehab and is exercising more and is down 200 pounds from about 500.

The stroke taught him lessons more of us should resolve to remember.

“Don’t sweat the small stuff,” he said. “Don’t get mad at stuff. There is no point of it.” Contact this reporter at 937225-2384 or email Amelia. Robinson@coxinc.com.

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 ?? ROBINSON PHOTO BY AMELIA ?? Stickers are being sold in the Oregon District to support Brad Darrell. The longtime manager of Glenn Scott Tattoo suffered a stroke.
ROBINSON PHOTO BY AMELIA Stickers are being sold in the Oregon District to support Brad Darrell. The longtime manager of Glenn Scott Tattoo suffered a stroke.

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