Campbell told the Jamaica Star that after he won in November, he felt sick for days “because I was thinking so much.” But when he showed up Feb. 5 to pick up his check, he said he was feeling better.

AD

“I’m kind of okay,” he told reporters, according to the newspaper. “I’m just a bit numb, a little bit.”

The lottery did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Washington Post.

Campbell told the Jamaica Star that he was initially overwhelmed.

AD

“I looked at my ticket and ran into my bathroom and said ‘I won! I won!’" he told the newspaper last month. “From the day I found out that I won, I’ve been sick. My head hurt me for three days because I was thinking so much — if what I’ve been longing for really come true. I had a belly ache for two weeks. Sometimes I feel so much pain I forgot that I won.”

Campbell told the newspaper that he knew the deadline to cash out was coming up later in February, but “I just wanted to get myself together before I came forward.”

And once he did, he made quite the impression. Supreme Ventures tweeted out photos last week showing him — in costume — collecting his million-dollar prize, then posing with his giant check. Fun fact: Campbell appeared to be playing homage to the 1996 horror film “Scream,” which starred … Neve Campbell.

AD

AD

It may have taken Campbell awhile to collect the prize, but at least it gave him time to think about how he wants to spend it.

He told the Jamaica Star that he plans to buy “a nice house.”

“I like to handle money,” he said. “I don’t beg, I don’t borrow. So I’m looking at things that can turn over the money. I have a little business, so I plan to make it bigger, buy an apartment. I love to have money.”

Last year in Jamaica, a woman who won the Super Lotto jackpot wore a mask of a winking smiley-face emoji when she went to collect her prize. Simone Clarke-Cooper, assistant vice president of Group Corporate Communications at Supreme Ventures, told the Jamaica Star that others had started doing the same thing.

AD

“Unfortunately, Jamaica is not like other markets,” Clarke-Cooper told the newspaper about the lottery. “In other markets, they don’t necessarily do it, but here I think they opt to do it to keep themselves safe. We are not going to tell them not to do that because their safety is of paramount importance to us as well.”

AD

The trend has emerged in other countries as well.

In China, winners have dressed up as panda bears, babies and robots to protect their identities. Several years ago in the United States, a California man covered his face with the enormous check and, last year, a woman in New Hampshire fought in court to keep her identity a secret — and won. Only a handful of states allow winners to maintain their anonymity when collecting prizes, but New Hampshire is not one of them.