Quantcast
 

A medical, legal, and
informational resource
for persons dealing with
traumatic brain injury.

   
  Medical Resources

Home
How Can the Brain be Injured?
How Was Your Brain Injured?
   (new)
Symptoms of Brain Injury
Brain Injury in Children
Understanding Diagnostic Tests
   (CT / MRI / DTI / SPECT / EEG)
The Anatomy of the Brain
Recovery and Rehabilitation
Coma: Some Facts
Toxic Exposures & Brain Injury
Seizures and Head Injury
Little Known Symptoms/Injuries
Multiple Sclerosis Aggravation
     by Stress and Trauma

Special Cases: Alzheimer's, Multiple Sclerosis & Other Topics
Electrical and Lightning Injury
Neuropsychiatric Problems
Intracranial Pressure (ICP)
Epidural & Subdural Hematoma
Cranial Nerve Injury
Latest Medical Research

Stories of Amazing Recoveries
   Submit Your Story
Links & Resources
Testimonials


Talk to a Brain Injury Lawyer


STORIES OF AMAZING RECOVERIES

Submitted by: (William) "Doug"
Contact Via: douglesw@insightbb.com

In July of 1982 I fell from a three story roof and suffered an injury to my brain stem. I was comatose for five weeks, but the first memory I could recall was three weeks later. I still have some short term memory challenges and learning new subject matter can be difficult. I returned to a productive life in 1987. When I was first injured, I spent eight weeks in a hospital, five weeks at an inpatient rehab and a few more weeks at an outpatient rehab facility. A huge step in my personal recovery was to accept the fact that I could not be the same person that I was before the fall. Before the accident, I had been married just over two years, so my wife also had to get used to the new me. Her love was tough yet she showed me that I needed to work at my recovery and not to quit when the going got tough. This important step let me see that I could be reborn and that I could become an even better husband and father. I have also learned that every event in a person's life can be used to build up or tear down that same life. You are responsible for your own life and whatever comes your way. Some people may seem to have a better "lot in lofe" but you can always find those many who are much worse.

Copyright © 2001 - 2008 BrainInjury.com
All rights reserved.

Site hosted and maintained by
montana publishing