
This is me, only a few hours after my accident! A severe TBI is a pretty good way of stopping the brain working well. :-)
As well as my accident, I picked up a pneumonia in hospital that also came close to ending it all for me. It's fair to say, the odds were stacked against me! But, as a garden-loving relative jokingly said to me, it takes more to kill off a weed than that! :-)
When it comes to TBI, we can rely on another activity of the brain - recovering! And, in many cases, the brain will do a good job of that as well - all it needs is a little time!
Here's me and my Dad on my birthday almost three weeks later! The balloons are because no flowers are allowed in hospital.
For me, it did indeed need a good chunk of time. I was in the coma-like state called Post Traumatic Amnesia for a total of 54 days. This photo shows the blank, vacant stare of someone in PTA. At least I'd managed a thumbs-up and a 'kind-of' smile! I'm so thin too! I dropped 20% of my body weight following my accident! Also, you can see my tracheostomy in my neck and my gastric feeding tube in my stomach.
But slowly I came back to the world...

... just in time for a good cup of coffee! :-)
Still, my recovery was far from over - you can see I'm in a wheelchair in the previous photo. I had to relearn almost every muscular function - all the way from swallowing up through to walking and finally to running. I'm still learning to do the latter properly now - almost three years after my accident!
I finally walked again unaided on my own Independence Day, 4th July 2005 - about 4.5 months after my accident. Still, my walking was far from perfect and there was a lot of room for improvement! Here I am shakily demonstrating my newfound ability to walk to my brother almost two weeks later:
My recovery has been a long road with many ups and many downs - if you want, have a read of My Regrets. In the end, though, I'm pretty happy with the way I've recovered. I do, however, want to make one thing clear - it is a long road and the end can be very different from the start. So, if you or someone close to you is also recovering from a TBI, have hope!
Time for a proper grin! Hangliding over Rio de Janeiro a little under two years after the accident.
In some ways, my recovery was as a pretty short one. I once spoke with another TBI recoverer who lost his sense of smell following his accident. It came back, all of a sudden, fully nine years later! There is no question of the brain's ability to repair itself given a bit of luck and the right amount of time.
But there is much that can be done while we wait for things like that to happen. And I look forward to talking to you about some of that stuff on this blog.
Cheers,
Mike
Well done! I am encourage when I read ur blog...I myself still recovering from TBI...its been 2years 3months since my accident!
ReplyDeletecheers!
Sirion Lim
from: Malaysia