FOR a couple of minutes, Gary Parkinson pieces together a sentence, flickering his eyelids to communicate the briefest of messages.

Unable to speak, he uses his eyes to work through the alphabet while his devoted wife Deborah patiently darts from A to Z and back.

It is an exhausting, arduous, process and then Deborah reveals Gary’s humbling words.

“Gary says that there are many more needier people than him, some who are a lot worse off.”

It is typical of the fortitude of a man I got to know well while covering Burnley’s fortunes shortly after the marauding full-back had netted the winning goal in a Play-off Final against Stockport County.

It made him a hero at Turf Moor, but he remains far more than that now as he confronts this cruel and debilitating condition.

Gary is fully alert, his senses heightened, but he can’t move or communicate verbally.

He is trapped in his own body, fed by a tube in his stomach and requiring 24-hour care.

However, surrounded by the unstinting love of his family, every day they pray that their dad will get better.

Talking in front of her wheelchair-bound husband at their home near Bolton, Deborah speaks movingly about her husband’s struggle for survival with locked-in syndrome.

“Nobody can imagine what he is going through, but Gary always had a great inner strength, and he was unbelievably disciplined as a player,” she said.

Twice he received the last rites as he clung on to life after the near fatal seizure eight years ago.

“When he was fighting for his life he used that adrenaline and raw courage to stay alive.

“Those were dark days, and life has changed dramatically for Gary, but we can’t dwell too much on what we’ve lost.

“When I told the children the news about Gary’s illness, our youngest daughter was only six.

“I said that I didn’t want to hide anything, and I never have.

“Sometimes, the nurses who come to help Gary say that they can’t believe how we do all this, but it is normal for us now because we are a very close-knit family.

“I believe that love comes out on top in the world.

“If you’ve got love then you’ve got everything.”

Gary and Deborah were childhood sweethearts.

They met at school in Middlesbrough when they were teenagers – and in January they celebrated their 50th birthdays together.

Deborah marvels at people’s kindness and warmth, but you can only begin to imagine how she copes to see the man she loves stricken in such a cruel way.

“We are incredibly proud of Gary – and the one thing that we all pray for is that one day he will be able to talk again.

“Even after all this time, though, people haven’t forgotten Gary.

“He still has that sparkle in his eye and we have a laugh and a joke, but people’s kindness never ceases to amaze us.”

Earlier this year, they received a letter explaining that a Burnley man had passed away, requesting that in his will a donation be made to the Gary Parkinson Trust.

“We didn’t know this family, but I shake with emotion when I think about that,” she said.

“It was such an amazing gesture and touched our hearts.

“Another kind person sent a £10 note, and that’s just so humbling because they might be struggling themselves, but they’ve gone out of their way to think of Gary.

“Then somebody delivered a couple of Subbuteo players, painted in claret and blue, and carrying the numbers Gary and David Eyres (the scorers) wore at Wembley.

“All his clubs, Middlesbrough, Bolton, Burnley, Preston and Blackpool have been brilliant.”

When Gary suffered the catastrophic stroke, they were told his life expectancy might only be months.

The number of people who fully recover from locked-in-syndrome is tiny, and then Gary sends another message to Deborah.

“Sometimes I do think why me?

“I felt great before the illness.

“I had no warning.

“You don’t appreciate what you’ve got until it is not there.”

I reach out to hold his hand and Deborah adds: “His body is locked but he knows who we are, where he is and what he wants to do.

“His personality and memory have not changed, and he can tell us how he is feeling.

“He does feel anger sometimes, and like the rest of us he has poor days.”

She added: “Gary was a fit guy, not a smoker or a drinker, so you think: ‘How could this happen to him?

“I try to be very positive and that’s how I want everybody else to be when they are around Gary.”

Another great source of inspiration for them both has been their three children, Sophie 14, Chloe 22 and 24-year-old Luke.

Gary’s son is a sports journalist and his father is extremely proud of Luke’s achievements.

Luke was studying at Runshaw College in Leyland when his dad was struck down in 2010.

He admitted: “I had to grow up very quickly and almost act like a father figure for my two younger sisters.

“And we must appreciate what we have now.

“There’s no point sitting around with tears in our eyes thinking ‘why us?

“As a family we still get to spend quality time together and create special memories.

“Others aren’t quite so fortunate.”

To witness Deborah’s love and dedication for her husband is humbling and there is something truly reassuring about her presence.

“I’m quite an old-fashioned person,” adds Deborah. “And when I made those marriage vows to Gary in 1991 – those words, in sickness and health – you made those vows for good and you stick together through it all.

“I’ll always remain positive, be Gary’s wife and a mother for the family.

“I love hearing about inspiring things, like the jockey Bob Champion who beat cancer to win the Grand National on Aldaniti.

“You can always defy the odds through the human spirit and we pray that Gary can.

“Dreams do come true sometimes don’t they?”

The Gary Parkinson Trust www.garyparky.co.uk