Australian woman wakes up from tonsil surgery speaking in an IRISH accent despite never visiting the country - and it's a medical condition only recorded 100 times in history
An Australian woman has woken up from tonsil surgery with an Irish accent
An Gie Mcyen posted videos of her transformation over two weeks on Tiktok
She believes she has extremely rare condition called Foreign Accent Syndrome
An Australian woman has woken up from tonsil surgery to find she has an Irish accent - despite never having been to the country.
An Gie Mcyen posted a video to her TikTok account two days after undergoing an operation on her throat and was shocked to find she no longer had her Australian accent.
'I woke up with an Irish accent the day before and thought I was gonna wake up from this weird dream. But no, my Aussie accent's gone,' she captioned the clip.
Ms Mcyen, who documented her transformation over two weeks, showed the Irish accent progressively getting stronger as she recovers.
The accent didn't kick in until eight days after her surgery in a phenomenon even her doctors couldn't explain.
She claims she went to the hospital and spoke to her specialist after the accent persisted but was told to 'sit tight' and 'let the body heal'.
'I woke up this morning and I was speaking with my Aussie accent, and I called one of my friends and confirmed that my Aussie accent was back but during the phone call, within five to 10 minutes, she could see the deterioration of my accent back to Irish,' she said on day two.
'I don't know what to do, this is something that's very different. I'm not even trying, I'm completely freaked out. I thought it was going to go away when I woke up this morning.'
The following day Ms Mcyen said there were 'no traces of Aussie twangs anymore' and she had gone 'full Irish'.
'I still can't believe I woke up with an Irish accent yesterday. I've never been to Ireland. I grew up in Australia. My Aussie accent is gone.'
Ms Mcyen posted another video to her TikTok nine days after first noticing the Irish accent, saying it wasn't as 'thick' any more but said she was still very upset.
'In terms of how I am coping, I am definitely still in the third stage of grief, and the last two days were not pretty,' she said in the video.
@angie.mcyen
Day 13: Struggling to find a neurologist who has experience with #foreignaccentsyndrome or knows someone who can help me #foryou
♬ original sound - angie.mcyen
There has been just over 100 cases of the condition reported since its discovery in 1907, and Ms Mcyen said her doctors were unable to provide her with any insight.
'Yes I know I need medical attention and to see doctors but it's a struggle to even find the right person to look into me and tell me what's wrong and get me back to my old self,' she said in her latest video.
She says she's found a neurologist who specialises in stroke rehabilitation who is willing to meet with her and help diagnose the problem, without confirming it is FAS.
Several commenters accused Ms Mcyen of fabricating the story, but she angrily rejected the claim and said she hopes people 'learn something from her journey.'
'Unfortunately it's not fake. I bloody damn hope that my Aussie accent is coming through, as it's what I've had for the last 20 years,' she replied to one dissenter.
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