"I'll be walking around the supermarket doing my food shopping and I
have to put my earphones in to listen to my own music just in case it
comes on.
It's the same with most shops. I have to walk in with my ear phones in
at first just to make sure they don't have Ne-Yo on.
If he ever releases a greatest hits album it's going to be a nightmare.
Whenever I hear the first few beats of the song I have to drop whatever I
am doing and run.
People might think it is funny - and I can laugh at it myself - but it
has taken over my life. It's ruined my life."
Zoe, from Retford, Nottinghamshire, had her first seizure on New Year's
Day in 2006 after a long period of sickness and doctors put it down to
tiredness and stress.
But when her seizures increased to six a DAY her GP booked her in for a
brain test and doctors diagnosed her with epilepsy in 2008.
But it wasn't until she heard Ne-Yo's 'Give Me Everything' featuring
Pitbull - which topped the charts in May 2011 - that she had her first
music-induced seizure.
"It took me a while to realize that they were being triggered by his songs, and I think it wasn't until I had heard it for about the 15th time that it finally twigged what was going on," said Zoe, who hasn't been able to work for six months. "The song was really popular and I went to my consultant and I said 'I know this sounds extremely bizarre, but every time I hear this song I have a seizure'. He said it was fascinating and that he had never heard anything like it, and I said that while it might be fascinating, I was really struggling - the song was everywhere at the time." She was referred to Sheffield's Hallamshire hospital where doctors played her Ne-Yo songs and were amazed when they induced a seizure. Her doctors notes from the time say: "We recognized a few musicogenic seizures arising from the right temporal lobe stimulated by songs sung by Neyo." Another added: "During her admission she was listening to the radio on [her] iPhone when a specific song came on the radio that triggers her fits (Pitbull Ne-Yo - Tonight). She called for assistance at this point and she was noted to be shaking and looking rather anxious and acting a bit confused.
"The following day we deliberately played the song and exactly the same
symptoms arose."
The music attacks got more difficult to manage as the singer became more
popular with every song he released, including top ten hits 'Let's Go'
and 'Turn Around' in 2012.
The 15 second seizures, which happen in her right temporal lobe, leave
her 'staring blankly' and after they pass she will vomit, be very
thirsty and feel extremely sleepy.
In June this year Zoe endured a six-hour long operation to remove a huge
chunk of her left temporal lobe where doctors thought all her seizures
may originate.
But while the number of fits were dramatically reduced, she still has a fit every time she hears Ne-Yo's voice.
She said a recent holiday to Majorca - just after the singer released
his song Play Hard with David Guetta - was a 'nightmare' with the song
playing in every bar.
"I have had to go up to DJs in places and say 'look can you not play
Ne-Yo' and they just look at me like I'm an alien," said Zoe.
"[Doctors] are saying it could possibly be something in the tone of his
voice, something like that, but it doesn't happen when I hear Usher, or
people like him who have a very similar sound. It is only him, only
Ne-Yo.
Our holiday this year to Majorca was a nightmare. Honestly it was like
being at a Ne-Yo concert - the song was everywhere.
I had to stay in the hotel room for most of the holiday because it got
so bad."
"It took me a while to realize that they were being triggered by his songs, and I think it wasn't until I had heard it for about the 15th time that it finally twigged what was going on," said Zoe, who hasn't been able to work for six months. "The song was really popular and I went to my consultant and I said 'I know this sounds extremely bizarre, but every time I hear this song I have a seizure'. He said it was fascinating and that he had never heard anything like it, and I said that while it might be fascinating, I was really struggling - the song was everywhere at the time." She was referred to Sheffield's Hallamshire hospital where doctors played her Ne-Yo songs and were amazed when they induced a seizure. Her doctors notes from the time say: "We recognized a few musicogenic seizures arising from the right temporal lobe stimulated by songs sung by Neyo." Another added: "During her admission she was listening to the radio on [her] iPhone when a specific song came on the radio that triggers her fits (Pitbull Ne-Yo - Tonight). She called for assistance at this point and she was noted to be shaking and looking rather anxious and acting a bit confused.
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