On this blog, I've tried to write about the lessons I've learnt. I know that many of them are things that have worked; things that have gone well. That might make it seem that my recovery has all been plain sailing. I can assure you that, unfortunately, that's not the case.
Awhile back, I talked to friends of how, if I wanted to, I could call this blog, How NOT to Recover. One friend asked me what I regretted and what I would have done differently. I've reflected on that quite a bit since. Most of my regrets relate to times I simply pushed too hard - I ignored the constraint of my TBI and more or less tried to do stuff as I had previously done it.
In the list below, I've written examples of me doing that followed by posts or post labels discussing what I've learnt about each.
- trying to work for four straight hours well before I was even close to being able to (Fatigue);
- almost getting another TBI by trying to body-surf dumping waves at a surf beach I went to (Brain Lock);
- doing a new piece of work without having regular conversations with my boss about it. I subsequently embarrassed myself by having my work fall well short of expectations (Let's Talk About It);
- falling off my bike because of fatigue during a cycling trip and scarring my chin (The Hardest Thing of Mike's TBI Recovery? Acceptance!); and
- most critically, falling over and badly breaking an arm whilst out hiking when I knew I had poor balance, but hadn't bothered to use walking poles (once again, The Hardest Thing of Mike's TBI Recovery? Acceptance!).
Cheers,
Mike
2 comments:
Well it says something that none of your regrets are about things you didn't do or about not pushing yourself.
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