Neuralink User P-18 GB-5 l Vet. British Paratrooper | Now a Pioneering Neuralnaut navigating life in a wheelchair with a robotic arm and a Neuralink N1 BCI.
Yesterday, my wife and I had the immense honour of being presented to HRH The Princess Royal at Buckingham Palace. We feel truly grateful and deeply privileged to have experienced such a special moment in our lives.
My beautiful wife Glynnis made me so proud every step of the day — her grace and warmth lit up the entire occasion and having her stood next me is all I ever want in life.
A huge thank you to @thenotforgotten Association and The @supportourparas Charity for so kindly inviting us both. We are incredibly appreciative of your wonderful work. If there’s ever anything we can do for you in the future don’t hesitate to get in touch.
Can you imagine the absolute roar when Starship and Super Heavy blast off from the brand new pad at Starbase, All thirty-three of those badass new V3 Raptor engines lighting up at once… it’s gonna be wild.
@SpaceX and the team at Starbase have knocked it out of the park again. They just keep leveling this thing up, and honestly, it never gets old. It’s way more than metal and fire — it’s what happens when a bunch of dreamers grind hard, iterate like crazy, and just won’t take no for an answer.
Every launch gets me so excited because it feels like we’re actually stepping closer to living among the stars. The future isn’t sitting around waiting anymore… it’s about to light the sky on fire.
They’re aiming for no earlier than this Friday, May 15 for Flight 12 — first V3 flight from the new Pad 2. Fingers crossed everything comes together!
I’ll be glued to the screens for this one. It’s gonna be epic. 🚀
After some long, focused sessions with my LINK, I’m starting to notice a bit of fatigue in my upper arm and some tingling in my fingers—more of a sore tingle than a comfortable one. That said, I’m not complaining at all! It’s all part of the adventure, and I’m thrilled with the progress I’m making. @neuralink
Here is my neural spike raster. You can see my neural signals modulating in real time on the second pass. The first pass is just calibration. if you look closely, you can see slight vertical changes when I activate my fingers. Thank you so much to the @neuralink engineers for such a great update. 🦾🧠
@SpursOfficial@Madders10@MichaelBridge_ This is it. The moment that defines you.
Four games. 360 minutes. Everything you’ve fought for, everything this club stands for, hangs in the balance. The Premier League is not just a league — it’s our home, our battlefield, our identity. And right now, it’s calling on you to prove why you wear the badge.
You know the fire in the dressing room, the roar from the stands, the weight on your shoulders. But hear this: pressure is a privilege. Only the strong are given moments like these. Only those who bleed white and blue get to decide their own destiny in the dying light of the season.
Every tackle, every run, every pass, every shot — leave nothing in the tank. Chase every lost cause like it’s the last ball you’ll ever touch. Fight for the man next to you like he’s your brother. Because he is. This isn’t just football anymore. This is survival. This is legacy. This is Tottenham.
The fans are with you — every single one of us. We’ll be loud, we’ll be proud, we’ll be relentless. But it’s you on that pitch who must deliver. Dig deeper than you ever have. Run until your lungs burn. Believe until doubt has no oxygen left in the room.
Four games. 360 minutes.
Make them count. Make them unforgettable. Make them Spurs.
Come on you Spurs!
Now go out there and fight like hell.
Happy St George's Day! 🇬🇧Today, England celebrates its patron saint, St George, on 23 April.
A brave Roman soldier and Christian martyr, St George is best known for the legendary tale of slaying a fearsome dragon to rescue a princess and protect the people. His courage and chivalry made him a symbol of bravery and honour across Europe, and England adopted him as our patron saint in the Middle Ages.
Though not a public holiday, it’s a day for English pride — flying the St George’s Cross, wearing a red rose, and celebrating our history, culture, and identity.
God save England!
Tough question, I wouldn’t say the brain feels more alive or tingly, however I would say that the amount of confidence and positivity it has given me has changed everything. The positivity change was almost instant when I woke up after surgery. I hope that’s a good answer. Thank you for your question.
It’s hard to believe it’s already been 100 days since I received my Neuralink N1 implant. Looking back, the whole journey feels like science fiction that somehow became my everyday reality.
The surgery on Day 0 was surprisingly easy. A quick general anaesthetic, a small incision, and the robotic system did the rest — precisely placing the 1,024 ultra-thin threads into my motor cortex. I woke up alert and in good spirits and went home the next afternoon. By Day 3 I was feeling a lot better, and by Day 7 the little scar was already starting to fade. Recovery was genuinely minimal; I felt sharper and more positive than I had been in years after the BCI was turned on.
The real fun started in Week 2 when we paired the implant with my brand-new Apple MacBook (my very first Mac). The @neuralink engineers walked me through calibration sessions, and within a couple of minutes I was moving the cursor just by thinking. At first it felt like trying to remember a dream, but by Week 3 it was second nature. Scrolling, clicking, typing — all mind-controlled. The Mac integration was buttery smooth; I went from total Mac newbie to power-user faster than I ever expected.
By Day 80 I was ready for the big leagues. That’s when I fired up @Warcraft of Warcraft for the first time with pure thought control. The first raid felt clunky, but once my brain and the BCI synced, it was pure magic. I’m now raiding, and exploring Azeroth hands-free at full speed — no mouse, no keyboard, just intention. It’s honestly brilliant. The freedom is addictive.
The social-media side has been just as surprising. Every update I’ve shared has been met with genuine excitement rather than scepticism. Thousands of messages from people with disabilities, gamers, students, and scientists — all asking real questions about the tech and what it could mean for the future. The positivity has been overwhelming and incredibly motivating.
100 days in and I already can’t imagine life without it. The N1 didn’t just give me a new way to use a computer — it gave me a new way to live. Can’t wait to see what the next 100 days bring.
Thank you all so much for your support and I will keep you all updated as we continue this journey together.