Wwe Legend’s daughter talks about serious Rollercoaster Ride injuries


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Noelle Foley, the daughter of the WWE legend, Mick Foley, revealed in a recent podcast interview that he had suffered a horrible injury to a roller coaster.

Foley appeared in the “Rules Breakers” podcast, presented by the former WWE and the entire Libre Libre Saraya-Jade Bevis wrestling star, and discussed the injuries he had suffered after hitting his neck too much during a trip in Dollywood’s theme park.

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Noelle Foley attends the Fandom party in SDCC 2023 presented by Paramount+ and EA in Float at Hard Rock San Diego on July 20, 2023, in San Diego, California. (Phillip Faraone/Getty images for fandom)

She said that the particular trip “went up, went down and immediately climbed again,” forcing her body to move forward and immediately go back.

“My head hit very strong, and something happened with my neck, but I didn’t know what happened,” Foley explained, adding that the sides of his neck felt “stretched.”

Foley said he had experienced headache for the last five and a half years, which said it has been a “great mystery.”

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“It took me about two months to realize that I had a brain shock. I am like, ‘this headache will not disappear, and I am very sensitive to the lights and sounds and I feel strange,” he said. “And I was asking my dad, who would you think I would know a lot about brain shocks, but he said: ‘I’m sorry, I really don’t know.’ I feel that his brain shocks, boom, happen, and that’s fine.

Noelle Foley is the daughter of the WWE Mick Foley legend in the photo. (Anthony group-USA Today Sports)

“It wasn’t until I really began to dig that I started getting answers and feeling better. I discovered that I have a rare neck condition called cranial instability, and discovered that by a digital X movement … they are probably causing headaches.”

Foley said he had made a verification list before he decided to remove the breast implants. He said that withdrawing his implants helped his headaches a bit.

He later sent the program that expects to follow a career in modeling in the future, but is working with different tourism brands and boards, focusing on others that have discussed sensory issues.

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