The Glasgow Times' Scotswoman of the year has shared a touching video of her and her fiancé’s fist dance on the day they were due to get married.
Lucy Lintott, who is the youngest person in Scotland with Motor Neurone Disease, shared the heart-warming video on Twitter this evening after their special day was cancelled due to the coronavirus outbreak.
A Tweet from Lucy reads: "Today we were meant to be getting married.
"So we've been pretending that it is and here's our first dance.
"Can't wait for the real thing."
Today we were meant to be getting married. So we've been pretending that it is and here's our first dance. Can't wait for the real thing. pic.twitter.com/Wn2Ql14jkW
— Lucy Lintott (@LucyLintott) May 23, 2020
Lucy's partner, Tommy Smith, popped the question in May last year as he bowed on one knee.
The couple met at school, but their relationship blossomed when they met at a fundraising event for MND Scotland where Lucy shaved his head.
Lucy, from Garmouth in Moray, is the youngest person in Scotland with Motor Neurone Disease, an incurable condition which usually affects people over 40.
MND gradually makes gripping, walking, talking and swallowing extremely difficult and eventually impossible.
Since the devastating diagnosis five years ago, Lucy has opened up her life to help other sufferers, and has raised £183,000 to help find a cure.
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