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Bo Jackson says he will undergo procedure after dealing with chronic hiccups for nearly a year

PASADENA, CA - JANUARY 06:  Former Auburn Tigers player Bo Jackson on the field before the 2014 Vizio BCS National Championship Game at the Rose Bowl on January 6, 2014 in Pasadena, California.  (Photo by Jeff Gross/Getty Images)
Bo Jackson has reportedly tried everything to beat the hiccups. (Photo by Jeff Gross/Getty Images)

Bo Jackson has been suffering in intermittent silence.

The multisport legend will undergo a procedure later this week to address a bout of chronic hiccups that he has dealt with since July 2022, he said Wednesday during an appearance on "McElroy and Cubelic in the Morning" on WJOX-FM.

When asked about seeing fellow Auburn legend Frank Thomas' statue dedication at Plainsman Park in April, Jackson revealed that he did not attend because he was dealing with the hiccups:

"I wasn't there because of dealing with hiccups. I've had the hiccups since last July, and I'm getting a medical procedure done the end of this week, I think, to try to remedy it. I've been busy sitting at the hospital, sitting with the doctors poking me, shining lights down my throat, probing me every way they can to find out why I've got these hiccups. That's the only reason I wasn't there."

He was later asked if doctors had figured out the cause of the condition. They had not, and Jackson has apparently tried remedies from the cliché to the, um, exotic:

"Hell, no. I have done everything: scare me, hang upside down, drink water, smell the ass of a porcupine. It doesn't work."

That sounds like a miserable experience for the former NFL Pro Bowler and MLB All-Star. The procedure will hopefully take care of the issue; otherwise Jackson might end up in the annals of chronic hiccups, which are led by Charles Osborne and his still-unexplained 68-year case of hiccups.

The causes of hiccups can be incredibly murky, with a wide range of potential factors, which usually isn't an issue when they go away after a few minutes but can make cases such as Jackson's a true ordeal.

Jackson has been enjoying retirement since 1994 and maintains a unique legend as maybe the most athletic person to step onto a baseball field and one of the fastest people to ever run the ball in the NFL. He spent nine seasons in MLB with the Kansas City Royals, Chicago White Sox and California Angels and played four seasons in the NFL with the Los Angeles Raiders.