anewnormal

I am trying to make sense of this crazy life I share with the ones I love. Our lives have been marked by chronic illness and colored by learning how to live every day with a new kind of normal.

Jan 23

What Brain Injury Survivors Would Like Everyone To Know.

What Brain Injury Survivors Would Like Everyone To Know.

 

I need a lot more rest than I used to. I’m not being lazy. I get physical fatigue as well as a “brain fatigue.” It is very difficult and tiring for my brain to think, process, and organize. Fatigue makes it even harder to think.

My stamina fluctuates, even though I may look good or “all better” on the outside.Cognition is a fragile function for a brain injury survivor. Some days are better than others. Pushing too hard usually leads to setbacks, sometimes to illness.

Brain injury rehabilitation takes a very long time; it is usually measured in years. It continues long after formal rehabilitation has ended. Please resist expecting me to be who I was, even though I look better.

I am not being difficult if I resist social situations. Crowds, confusion, and loud sounds quickly overload my brain, it doesn’t filter sounds as well as it used to. Limiting my exposure is a coping strategy, not a behavioral problem.

If there is more than one person talking, I may seem uninterested in the conversation.That is because I have trouble following all the different “lines” of discussion. It is exhausting to keep trying to piece it all together. I’m not dumb or rude; my brain is getting overloaded!

If we are talking and I tell you that I need to stop, I need to stop NOW! And it is not because I’m avoiding the subject, it’s just that I need time to process our discussion and “take a break” from all the thinking. Later I will be able to rejoin the conversation and really be present for the subject and for you.

Try to notice the circumstances if a behavior problem arises. “Behavior problems” are often an indication of my inability to cope with a specific situation and not a mental health issue. I may be frustrated, in pain, overtired or there may be too much confusion or noise for my brain to filter.

Patience is the best gift you can give me. It allows me to work deliberately and at my own pace, allowing me to rebuild pathways in my brain. Rushing and multi-tasking inhibit cognition.

Please listen to me with patience. Try not to interrupt. Allow me to find my words and follow my thoughts. It will help me rebuild my language skills.

Please have patience with my memory. Know that not remembering does not mean that I don’t care.

Please don’t be condescending or talk to me like I am a child. I’m not stupid, my brain is injured and it doesn’t work as well as it used to. Try to think of me as if my brain were in a cast.

If I seem “rigid,” needing to do tasks the same way all the time; it is because I am retraining my brain. It’s like learning main roads before you can learn the shortcuts. Repeating tasks in the same sequence is a rehabilitation strategy.

If I seem “stuck,” my brain may be stuck in the processing of information. Coaching me, suggesting other options or asking what you can do to help may help me figure it out. Taking over and doing it for me will not be constructive and it will make me feel inadequate. (It may also be an indication that I need to take a break.)

You may not be able to help me do something if helping requires me to frequently interrupt what I am doing to give you directives. I work best on my own, one step at a time and at my own pace.

If I repeat actions, like checking to see if the doors are locked or the stove is turned off, it may seem like I have OCD — obsessive-compulsive disorder — but I may not. It may be that I am having trouble registering what I am doing in my brain. Repetitions enhance memory. (It can also be a cue that I need to stop and rest.)

If I seem sensitive, it could be emotional lability as a result of the injury or it may be a reflection of the extraordinary effort it takes to do things now. Tasks that used to feel “automatic” and take minimal effort, now take much longer, require the implementation of numerous strategies and are huge accomplishments for me

We need cheerleaders now, as we start over, just like children do when they are growing up. Please help me and encourage all efforts. Please don’t be negative or critical. I am doing the best I can.

Don’t confuse Hope for Denial. We are learning more and more about the amazing brain and there are remarkable stories about healing in the news every day. No one can know for certain what our potential is. We need Hope to be able to employ the many, many coping mechanisms, accommodations and strategies needed to navigate our new lives. Everything single thing in our lives is extraordinarily difficult for us now. It would be easy to give up without Hope.

I copied this from another brain aneurysm survivor who copied it from someone else. I am not sure who deserves the credit for writing this but I thank whoever it was!


Jan 21

Dear Lord,

I pray for grace and strength today.

Amen


Jan 6
rebysky:

T R U T H 

rebysky:

T R U T H 



Anonymous asked: Wow. Do you know anything else about the history of those people who weren't at risk at all? Were they young/old? I am thinking that its possible somewhere further back in their family tree they had family members (that they didn't know of) with brain aneurysms that might of made them predisposed. What were their stories? I'm a teenager, but I've been so worried about brain aneurysms lately because of my friend, so I've been reading a lot. Sorry to bombard you with questions!

I am glad you got checked and everything looks good! I really didn’t know anything about brain aneurysms before this happened to me. I also really don’t know all of the personal stories of those I have encountered along my new journey. It might be that there were family members that they are unaware of that had aneurysms. Like so many other diseases, usually brain aneurysms affect an older population- I am in my 40’s and am considered to be a young survivor. Have you run across the BAF website in your research?

http://www.bafsupport.org/

This site has answered many of my questions and has been a true source of information for me.

Please don’t worry about brain aneurysms, you are well informed and know what to do should you experience any warning signs. You are young and have been given a clean bill of health in that area. Enjoy your life- every moment of it!!!! It is a gift! :)


Some randmon thoughts and reflections on my recovery and a wedding

I haven’t been keeping up on my writings. I started out with good intentions a couple of months ago, shortly after my brain aneurysm, but it just seemed too hard to pull my thoughts together enough to make any sense. Besides, my daughter was getting married and all my energies (which wasn’t much) were glued to the wedding channel. I am not sure what to do with myself now that we have celebrated the wedding date and she and her husband are moving into the next chapter of their life. It was a beautiful and blessed day and my daughter truly looked like a princess- as one very young girl at the reception said, “she is a REAL princess!” I think for myself, pulling this wedding off after my brain surgery was a true milestone. I was so blessed and excited to just be there. I told myself I would have FUN and dance and enjoy every single moment- and I did. I may have looked like an idiot out there- but something happened after my personal brush with death- I suddenly don’t care what anybody else thinks of me anymore. I will try to truly enjoy the moments I have.

I have been paying the price dearly for my enthusiastic celebration though. I have been exhausted to a point that I have not experienced since coming home from the hospital and for the last 2 days, I have been plagued with a headache that has actually made me cry. These are the moments that others don’t see. A brain injury is a tricky thing- I look fine on the outside- but it’s all in my head-so to speak. The pain, the confusion, short-term memory loss, losing my words, emotional mood swings. Most people don’t seem to really want to know what daily life is like for me now. I am not sure I even want to face it on some days. But I do, and I am giving every effort to see the positive and try to not dwell on the negative. I will be a better person- oh, I have failed on that on MANY a day since my new normal, but I will keep trying.


Being an artist, I LOVE this!!!

Being an artist, I LOVE this!!!

(via kid-pee)


Anonymous asked: First off, I want to say I am very sorry to hear about your brain aneurysm. But I also wanted to ask, did you suffer from any of the risk factors (smoking, high blood pressure, head injury, etc.)? I am sure you've read about the risk factors by now. I am trying to learn more about brain aneurysms myself, actually. I lost a friend to one.

Thank you for your question. I apologize for not getting back to you sooner, it has been a little crazy around here. I am so sad and sorry to hear about your friend. To answer your question though, I do have some of the risk factors: i have been a smoker-still working on that- I really hope I can beat it in 2012! The main risk factor according to my doctor though was family history- which I was not aware of until after the rupture and my family starting talking about it. I don’t think any of them knew there was a hereditary component until then. I did not have high blood pressure or any other risk factors. It is hard to say, I am in a Brain Aneurysm Recovery group and there are many people who were perfectly healthy (even runners and health nuts) with NO risk factors who had aneurysms as well. Best wishes to you in this new year!


Dec 6
itsgottagetbetterright:

I love Christmas, and wish I had the energy to decorate but don’t even have the energy to clean my house, so…….. For all my fellow “i don’t have enough energy for decorating” peeps, this is how to do it.   LOL.   Gotta love it.

itsgottagetbetterright:

I love Christmas, and wish I had the energy to decorate but don’t even have the energy to clean my house, so…….. For all my fellow “i don’t have enough energy for decorating” peeps, this is how to do it. LOL. Gotta love it.


Nov 18

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