TBI - Our Never Ending Journey


Book Description

A book for anyone staying in hospital. A great gift for a Tamil or family members who have suffered a traumatic brain injury or stroke and can see the funny side of a journey that has no ending. As they say if you don't laugh you will go mad playing the "What if game". This book is the perfect companion as it can be read in bite size chunks and can be picked up from any page or chapter. Put some laughter into a bad situation, something all visitors and the patient can enjoy. Just try not to laugh out loud to much !,




The Never Ending Journey


Book Description

A true story of courage, determination, and unconditional love for anyone going through difficult times. An inspiring story of courage and strength in the face of adversity. As a young, dedicated medical student, Antoinette Anthony-Pillai's future was mapped out. But when a routine operation for a tonsillectomy went horribly wrong, Antoinette's brain was starved of oxygen and her life took a dramatically different turn. She and her family came face-to-face with the harsh realities of living with brain injury. This is a moving account of Antoinette's daily struggle to cope with her condition and her fight to regain control of her life. It is an honest, captivating account of the difficulties that Antoinette and her family have faced as they have come to terms with the accident and its consequences. It is a story of courage, determination and unconditional love. It will be an inspiration for any who are going through difficult times.




Where Is the Mango Princess?


Book Description

Humorist Cathy Crimmins has written a deeply personal, wrenching, and often hilarious account of the effects of traumatic brain injury, not only on the victim, in this case her husband, but on the family. When her husband Alan is injured in a speedboat accident, Cathy Crimmins reluctantly assumes the role of caregiver and learns to cope with the person he has become. No longer the man who loved obscure Japanese cinema and wry humor, Crimmins' husband has emerged from the accident a childlike and unpredictable replica of his former self with a short attention span and a penchant for inane cartoons. Where Is the Mango Princess? is a breathtaking account that explores the very nature of personality-and the complexities of the heart. Outstanding Book Award Winner from the American Society of Journalists and Authors




Chicken Soup for the Soul: Recovering from Traumatic Brain Injuries


Book Description

Whether you are recovering from a traumatic brain injury or supporting someone with a TBI, this collection of 101 inspiring and encouraging stories by others like you will uplift and encourage you on your healing journey. With a traumatic brain injury (TBI) occurring every 18.5 seconds in this country - concussions the most common - chances are you have been touched in some way by this experience. TBIs occur due to accidents and sports, and are also common in returning soldiers. The personal stories in this book, by TBI survivors and those who love and support them, will help and encourage you and your family on your road to recovery.




Normal Again


Book Description

Life-changing traumatic brain injury can be a devastating and frustrating experience for an individual and his or her family. Or, brain injury can be a significant—yet not catastrophic—event that sets the stage for discovering what it means to become “normal” once more. Normal Again: Redefining Life with Brain Injury combines professional neuropsychological information alongside first-person accounts of the brain injury experience and the satisfactions of growing from it. The book provides insights for conquering the cognitive and emotional consequences of brain injury for individuals and families, as well as for educators, therapists, and medical professionals. The experience of brain injury does not have to be permanently dark and lonely. Instead, through an examination of personal values, the affirmation of hope, an on-going appraisal of realistic expectations, and application of specific rehabilitation strategies, life can once again have meaning, joy, and contentment. Normal Again focuses on a compassionate understanding of the personal experience of brain injury, with medical and psychological detail sufficient for gaining a basic understanding of brain injury. This is complemented with practical information about psychological, family, and vocational adjustments—and how to accomplish them—necessary for going beyond the usual scope of brain injury rehabilitation.




Health is Your Wealth Magazine


Book Description

Magazine for everyone living with a neurological condition plus their families. This publication is aimed at people living with a neurological condition such as Multiple Sclerosis / Spinal and Brain Injury / Stroke / Dementia plus Brain Cancer etc. Articles are by medical professionals, therapists, leading charities, patients and their families.




TBI Purgatory


Book Description

This is the follow-up book to TBI Hell, which was published in 2006. The author, Geo Gosling talks about life 14 years after sustaining a Traumatic Brain Injury. Few, if any, books regarding brain injuries give a perspective of what life may be like 14 years after suffering a brain injury, this one does. It is a male's perspective who received a TBI at age 25 and is now 39 years old. It is also rather humorous in spots, as humor is, in Geo's opinion, the best way to deal with what life is like after suffering a TBI.




Life After Brain Injury


Book Description

This is the first book of its kind to include the personal accounts of people who have survived injury to the brain, along with professional therapists' reports of their progress through rehabilitation. The paintings and stories of survivors combine with experts' discussions of the theory and practice of brain injury rehabilitation to illustrate the ups and downs that survivors encounter in their journey from pre-injury status to insult and post-injury rehabilitation. Wilson, Winegardner and Ashworth's focus on the survivors' perspective shows how rehabilitation is an interactive process between people with brain injury, health care staff, and others, and gives the survivors the chance to tell their own stories of life before their injury, the nature of the insult, their early treatment, and subsequent rehabilitation. Presenting practical approaches to help survivors of brain injury achieve functionally relevant and meaningful goals, Life After Brain Injury: Survivors’ Stories will help all those working in rehabilitation understand the principles involved in holistic brain injury rehabilitation and how these principles, combined with theory and models, translate into clinical practice. This book will be of great interest to anyone who wishes to extend their knowledge of the latest theories and practices involved in making life more manageable for people who have suffered damage to the brain. Life After Brain Injury: Survivors’ Stories will also be essential for clinical psychologists, neuropsychologists, and anybody dealing with acquired brain injury whether they be a survivor of a brain injury themselves, a relative, a friend or a carer.




A Different Perspective After Brain Injury


Book Description

Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Foreword -- Series foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1 The start of the (almost) end -- Chapter 2 The most exciting day of my life -- Chapter 3 My boring history -- Chapter 4 The Wellington hospital -- Chapter 5 A second childhood -- Chapter 6 The wheelchair and me -- Chapter 7 Standing on two feet -- Chapter 8 Understanding and feeling -- Chapter 9 The Bleakness -- Chapter 10 Clothes make the man -- Chapter 11 A birthday in hospital -- Chapter 12 A tilted point of view -- Chapter 13 The assault on self -- Chapter 14 End of an era -- Chapter 15 The National Health Service -- Chapter 16 The death of ambition -- Chapter 17 Other people's stories -- Chapter 18 The Oliver Zangwill Centre -- Chapter 19 The idealism of youth -- Chapter 20 The land of OZ -- Chapter 21 Perfectionism -- Chapter 22 The rainbow -- Chapter 23 The importance of semantics -- Chapter 24 The traumatic brain injury fraternity -- Chapter 25 A return to the institution -- Chapter 26 Writing -- Chapter 27 Excuses and choices -- Chapter 28 A constructive pastime -- Chapter 29 An (almost) new start -- Epilogue -- A little bit about the author -- References -- Further reading -- Index




Insight into Acquired Brain Injury


Book Description

This book offers an empowering approach to working with people with an acquired brain injury (ABI) based upon the views and perspectives of people with ABI themselves. Drawing upon Christine Durham's own ABI experience and Paul Ramcharan’s engagement in disability research over a quarter of a century, this volume gives voice to 36 participants with ABI, as well as carers and other professionals from both urban and rural areas. This unique perspective provides a long-needed, empathic alternative to the deficit-based model of ABI that dominates medical literature and existing rehabilitation models. In Insight into Acquired Brain Injury, the authors use educational and learning principles together with Durham’s extensive archive of experiential data to offer a reframing of the nature and experience of ABI and relevant a set of practical, real-world tools for practitioners. These ready-to-adopt-and-adapt scripts, guided interviews, research checklists, thinking tools and other innovative techniques are designed to engage with people and colleagues about brain injury as a means of supporting them to feel and fare better. With compassion and first-hand awareness, Insight into Acquired Brain Injury provides a much-needed perspective that deepens current understanding and translates the complicated life-worlds of people living with ABI in order to motivate, empower and increase their participation.