Lost & Found: What People with Brain Injury
Want You to Know
From Healthcaresolutionsplus.org. author unknown
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 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 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.
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.
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