“I was doing a ceremony for my father the night that I hurt my arm - it
was a ceremony of remembrance in a sacred place to me,” he said.
“So I did the ceremony and these horses were in the field, the horse
that I tried to ride was rubbing its nose up and down my back.
I’ve ridden horses all my life and I thought this horse has been ridden
before and it’s looking to be ridden.”
He added: “I ended up on the horse and the horse bolted because it
hadn’t been broken.”
Tomas, who works as an artist, suffered a badly broken arm and a dislocated shoulder and had to be rescued by the police and ambulance service after his adventure. “I shouted for help and lay in that field for three hours,” he said. Tomas, originally from Kircubbin, got the idea for the ceremony after spending time at a spiritual community based at an eco-village in Scotland. “I did a healing thing with them earlier in the year.
"At some point I was to find a sacred spot of my own to do something for my father and my father’s father,” explained Tomas. Tomas said he grew extremely close to his father, also called Tomas and the former owner of Finnegan’s Bar in Kircubbin, as he cared for him before his death from cancer four years ago. The owner of the field recalled the strange incident. Patsy King, was alerted by the police who wanted access to his field to help an injured man. Describing the scene, Patsy said: “He (Tomas) was lying along the wall, completely starkers and there was a police woman shining a torch on him while the ambulance crew were treating him.”
Tomas, who works as an artist, suffered a badly broken arm and a dislocated shoulder and had to be rescued by the police and ambulance service after his adventure. “I shouted for help and lay in that field for three hours,” he said. Tomas, originally from Kircubbin, got the idea for the ceremony after spending time at a spiritual community based at an eco-village in Scotland. “I did a healing thing with them earlier in the year.
"At some point I was to find a sacred spot of my own to do something for my father and my father’s father,” explained Tomas. Tomas said he grew extremely close to his father, also called Tomas and the former owner of Finnegan’s Bar in Kircubbin, as he cared for him before his death from cancer four years ago. The owner of the field recalled the strange incident. Patsy King, was alerted by the police who wanted access to his field to help an injured man. Describing the scene, Patsy said: “He (Tomas) was lying along the wall, completely starkers and there was a police woman shining a torch on him while the ambulance crew were treating him.”
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