Husband Organises Touching Anniversary Gift For Wife With MS That's Guaranteed To Make You Cry

'My babe, you’re amazing - just the way you are.'
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A husband brought his wife (and half of Liverpool) to tears with the touching present he organised their 10th wedding anniversary.

Carl Gilbertson wanted to make the momentous occasion extra special for his wife, Laura, who has multiple sclerosis (MS).

So he asked the talented folk at Liverpool Media Academy to stage a surprise street performance for her.

Last Saturday, the choir sang the Bruno Mars hit ‘Just The Way You Are’ to Laura in the town centre.

She was clearly moved by the gesture and Carl had to help mop up her tears of joy with a tissue. 

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Love What Matters/Facebook

According to the NHS, MS is an autoimmune condition meaning it occurs when the immune system wrongly attacks healthy parts of the body. 

The lifelong illness can affect the brain or spinal cord, causing a wide range of potential symptoms such as problems with vision, arm or leg movement, sensation or balance.

Laura was diagnosed with MS as a teenager but her condition deteriorated shortly after she and Carl got married.

She was forced to start using a wheelchair soon after their honeymoon.

On Wednesday, the video of the moving performance was shared on the Love What Matters Facebook page where it’s been viewed more than 300,000 times. 

On his own Facebook page, Carl thanked the choir for helping him pull off such a great present before adding a message to his wife. 

 “At our wedding breakfast I said that ‘it is the greatest honour anybody could ever bestow upon me for you to take me as your husband and the most enduring privilege to be able to call you my wife’. It was never just a line for a speech it was how I felt and you spend every day reinforcing it,” he said.

“Your strength, courage and dignity take my breath away and though most Saturdays at kickoff time you may not think it, you’re the only thing that really matters.

“My babe, you’re amazing - just the way you are.”

Watch the full video below:

 
Multiple Sclerosis Symptoms
Numbness/Tingling(01 of05)
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After his initial balance difficulties, Sommers began to notice tingling and numbness in his right side, which motivated him to see a neurologist. The neurologist ordered an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), and found lesions in Sommers' brain that indicated multiple sclerosis was what was causing his symptoms. (credit:Shutterstock)
Other Signs (02 of05)
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MS symptoms are varied and numerous. In addition to those described above, common symptoms include fatigue, pain, bowel and urinary problems, sexual dysfunction, difficulty swallowing and speech problems, cognitive (thought process) issues, and depression — among others. (credit:Shutterstock)
Heat Intolerance (03 of05)
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Heat intolerance is another telltale sign of multiple sclerosis. If you feel dizzy, faint, or unusually uncomfortable in warm temperatures or when engaging in body-warming activities like soaking in a hot tub, exercising, or sunbathing, it could be a sign of multiple sclerosis. Heat intolerance also tends to make other symptoms of multiple sclerosis more pronounced. (credit:Shutterstock)
Losing Balance (04 of05)
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Balance and dizziness are also common initial signs of multiple sclerosis. Rick Sommers, a fit and athletic guy, was diagnosed with MS in 1994. "I was training for a marathon and my balance was off; I felt lightheaded," he remembers. "I went to a doctor who thought it was an inner ear infection." He adds wryly, "I was misdiagnosed." In fact, his balance issues were Sommers' first symptoms of MS. (credit:Shutterstock)
Vision Loss (05 of05)
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Eye issues are often the first sign of multiple sclerosis. Before he received his MS diagnosis, for example, Jeffrey Gingold noticed that his vision was beginning to rapidly decline in one eye. Gingold was 36 at the time, making such dramatic vision loss extremely unusual. He scheduled an appointment with his regular eye doctor, and remembers the ophthalmologist saying, "You either have MS or you have a brain tumor." An MRI confirmed that it was multiple sclerosis. (credit:Shutterstock)

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