Ray Davies' well being by means of the years - together with lifelong situation

"What will be will be," The Kinks musician mentioned in a candid interview. "I try to enjoy the moment."

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The singer-songwriter of well-known hits, resembling Sunny Afternoon (1966), seemingly nonetheless feels the consequences of a severe altercation that occurred again in 2004.

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Walking together with a feminine companion in New Orleans, the place he was dwelling on the time, a mugger grabbed his buddy's purse and ran off.

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"It was fight or flight," he informed the Daily Mail. "I wanted to smack him."

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Chasing the mugger, Sir Davies was shot at, with the bullet going by means of his proper thigh, breaking his femur.

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"There was a bloody great rod in there for a year or so," Sir Davies recalled. "That’s been taken out now."

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Elaborating, Sir Davies mentioned: "I used to be a runner, but now I have to work out at the gym, and if I don’t go three times a week the leg gets pretty stiff."

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Despite his "gammy leg", the musician nonetheless performs soccer within the park together with his granddaughter, Lily.

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Having remained bodily lively, it may very well be one of many the explanation why Sir Davies remains to be making music at 79 years previous.

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And whereas songwriting has been his "release" in life, the artistic did try suicide in 1973, and was later identified with bipolar dysfunction.

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Bipolar dysfunction is described by the NHS as a "mental health condition that affects your moods, which can swing from one extreme to another".

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People who expertise bipolar temper might alternate between melancholy, feeling very low and torpid, and mania, which is "feeling very high and overactive".

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The NHS provides: "Unlike simple mood swings, each extreme episode of bipolar disorder can last for several weeks (or even longer)."

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As for the life-long, painful situation he has needed to stay with, he informed The Sydney Morning Herald: "I’ve got scoliosis, a muscular skeletal thing."

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He added: "I’ve had it all my life. I toured America for five years on and off in the 1980s and had to take synthetic morphine."

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The NHS says: "Scoliosis can sometimes irritate or put pressure on the nerves in and around your spine, causing pain, numbness and a tingling sensation."

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Watch The Kinks on the BBC on Saturday, July 15 at 9pm on BBC Two.

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