I think it is important to remember this stuff even if it
hurts a little so that when time goes by and I get sad or feel bad about
myself, I can look back and see how far I’ve come. I don’t like to think of it
this way (I think it makes me sound like a horrendous douche) but it’s kind of
amazing that I am relatively normal after everything that’s happened…
I had my surgery Jan-28 2014
Feb-20 2014 I lost the use of my right hand
Feb-22 2014 I lost the use of my right leg
Early March I was still using a walker or hobbling while
dragging my right leg behind me. My right arm was still curled up uselessly to
my chest. I couldn’t even use it for balance or to grip my walker. I needed to
sit just to take a shower and I could only use one hand in there. Ugh …I
weighed 220 pounds!
Rommy who is also a physical therapist would come by every
week to try to get me walking. At that point I couldn’t lift myself well enough
to get into my own bed. By mid March I could use a cane to get around (not too
well but I was not going to use that walker for one more day!) It felt so
demeaning! Finally, thankfully, I was able to start PT.
I had PT 3 times a week. It started off so hard for me that
I couldn’t even hold my balance with my feet together. Once I had my first week
of PT sessions and learned how to practice at home, I worked at rehabilitating
my leg 24/7.
Some of the exercises which were so frustrating and hard for
me at first—
Standing straight with my feet together
Walking heal-to-toe
Walking backward
Standing on a tile and touching the toe of one foot to the
three bordering tiles
Standing on one foot with my arms above my head
Standing heal to toe with my arms crossed over my chest
By mid April I could use my leg again. It was not the same
as it had been but it was sturdy and stable enough to stand on for short bursts.
I knew that in the course of my daily activities it would get back to normal (I
went for a walk every day, started off just 10 minutes and I couldn’t even
maneuver the smallest hill or tree root or crack in the sidewalk) but I forced
myself to go a little farther every day. I would always have to limp back and
there were a few times I was scared I wouldn’t make it home but I needed to
push myself. For the first few weeks I took my mom with me every time in case I
fell down or anything.
All of my focus then switched to my arm. From my shoulder
down it was useless. I remember at one point carrying my dinner plate in my
left hand and trying to put a bottle of water between my bicep and my chest
just so I could get to the table and my arm was so shaky and jerky that not
only did it drop the bottle but it knocked the dinner plate from my hand.
Things that you use you right hand for and don’t even
realize it, there are so many things but just to name a few…
Opening a can (requires 2 hands)
Working the mouse of a computer
Brushing your teeth or any bathroom activity
Opening any kind of sealed package or bottle like shampoo
(requires 2 hands)
Sending a text (usually takes two thumbs or one to hold the
phone and one to type)
Tweezing eyebrows
Putting on make up
Reading a book (one hand to hold the book, one to turn the
page)
My friends and family would joke that my right hand had a
mind of its own. It would hit me in the face while I was sleeping, it would
knock things over, throw things, it would tap people… a few times even hit
people. It was kinda funny but also really scary for me. I didn’t know if I was
ever going to get any better and a part of my brain had been removed, for all I
knew I would be like this forever. That thought scared me so much that I’d tell
myself “I KNEW I’d get better,” I secretly doubted it sometimes and it felt
hopeless but I always made myself think, “you ARE going to get better, you’re
just not trying hard enough! TRY HARDER!” Ok I know this sounds weirdly
abrasive but mentally calling yourself a lazy bitch is a very powerful
motivator.
To rehab my hand I started with bouncing a beach ball. For
me it was impossible but I kept at it until I could manage a steady dribble. I
remember trying this game with shot glasses (plastic ones) and ping pong balls.
You lay out all the shot glasses and try to put a ping pong ball in each. I
started out not even being able to put out the shot glasses. My hand was so jerky
that it would put out a glass or two and while trying to put another it would
bump the other or hit them hard and send them flying across the room. To top it
off I couldn’t even grab a ping pong ball. With extreme concentration I could
maybe grab one ball in about 5 minutes and hold it for just a few seconds.
Some games I played to rehab my hand
Ball and shot glass
Flip over the dominos—spread out the dominos and flip each
over (this took 14 min. at first)
Mancala
Tying my shoe laces
Throw a bean bag at a target
Knitting
Catch (this was one of the last things, when I was almost
all better)
Concentration (picking up the cards from the floor is hard
for a healthy person)
Stacking things like coins
Putting macaroni on a shoe lace
Writing the alphabet 3 times
Hitting a balloon back and forth with someone
Some of those games were too hard for me at first but from
sun up to sun down I would work on my hand. I would work so hard my muscles
would hurt. Part of my daily regimen was to get on all fours on a yoga mat and
then to lift up one hand then rotate hands and legs and then end up by lifting
one hand and the opposite leg at the same time. I had to do this 20 times per
side. It sounds easy and it is easy for a healthy person but it was work for
me. Doing this every morning was tiring and it made everything hurt for weeks
but once I adjusted, this activity had more or less retrained the bigger
muscles in my arm. It was time for fine motor skills.
I remember sitting at my desk with my hands on my keyboard
and tensing every muscle in my upper arm to keep my hand from shaking. It took
every ounce of concentration in my body to keep my hand touching the keys
without randomly pressing every button (at the time my hand would always want
to slap downward forcefully, if I had let it, it would have smacked down on the
keys and probably broken a few). At first, I would just hover my left hand over
my right and push each finger in my right hand down on the appropriate key,
until I got the hang of applying gentle pressure. With practice I could type a
whole sentence normally; it would just take about 15 minutes and lots of effort.
Writing and typing wasn’t the true test though. It was
arduous and just the memory of it makes me tired but the real test of my
coordination was handling sharp objects. If I had tried to handle a knife or
scissors before I would have accidentally killed myself or someone else. I got
to a stage in my recovery where I had this weird problem…I could grip things
but I had no coordination so I would hold onto something very tightly and wave
it uncontrollably. Usually this happened when I wasn’t thinking about it,
mindless actions that you are so used to using your right hand for that you
don’t think about it until it’s too late. Like if someone said pass the remote,
for example. So it is pretty obvious why grabbing a knife was so dangerous.
I remember passing my OT eval on May 6 and I came straight
home and decided to cut my name out of a piece of paper (I thought scissors
would be the safer bet). I did it easily. It was about a week before I had the
courage to try a knife though.
I don’t know if I can really over stress the amount of time
and effort that went into PT and OT. I’m not exaggerating when I say that every
waking moment was spent on this. When I was working on PT, I didn’t sit. Every
moment of every day was spent standing and during OT my hands never stopped
moving. But I did watch days and days and days worth of television (because I
couldn’t leave the house—not at first anyway) to keep my mind off the constant
repetition that my body was doing and it pretty effectively kept me from
getting bored. I was in the hospital for late January-early March so I had lots
of TV shows to catch up on.
By the end of May I had regained most of the control I had
lost. The only thing I still couldn’t do was control my tongue. Since the part
of my brain that controls coordination for the right side of my body had been
removed, something you don’t really think about is your tongue. I had no
control over the right side of my tongue. All my words dragged, I stuttered, I
had to talk extremely slow just to be understood. I felt like I had to start
off every conversation with a disclaimer “I don’t normally talk like this but I
just had brain surgery” but I couldn’t even say that many words in a row
without tripping all over it. For a person with aspirations of teaching, a
degree in history, an excellent vocabulary, and friendly personality this was
the most soul crushing part of it. I couldn’t even smile at people because if
they had started a conversation with me, I would not have been able to
participate in return. Everyone was so nice about this and they pretended they
didn’t notice the difference but in a way that was almost more insulting (I
know they didn’t mean it that way. Rationally, I know they were being really
kind about the whole matter). I didn’t express it this way because I am not an
ass but the way it felt was that they expected little of me. I wanted to shout
“This is not the best I can do!”
There was no real way to rehab my tongue except for conversation.
I had to get over my fear of how I might sound to people and just talk. I felt
embarrassed and shy but everyone I knew, knew the situation so they were not
judgmental if I slipped up. To this day (over a year later) it still happens
from time to time. I know what I want to say, I have all the words lined up and
ready to go but I just lack the physical ability to say them. Sometimes I just
say half a sentence and then nothing or I open my mouth and just garbled sound
comes out but it is much better than before.
The two things that have had the longest effect and consequently
have been the things I’m most ashamed of have been my hair and my weight.
I know hair grows. I tell myself this all the time, “hair
grows, it’s no big deal” but I miss my hair so badly. When my head was shaved
for my surgery, part of me was grateful that I survived but most of me was
irrationally grieving for my lost hair. I am extremely aware that it made no
sense in the grand scheme of things. I know I should have just been happy that
I no longer had to live in crippling pain that was so intense it would cause
nose bleeds or that I no longer had to deal with 10 or more seizures a day that
were so bad I would lose consciousness and pee all over myself but somehow
getting my head shaved was a little bit worse. I’d like to chock it up to this
(but truthfully in those first few months I’m not sure I was even thinking deep
enough for this to occur to me) I didn’t have much left. I had lost a piece of
my brain and skull, my ability to walk and talk and write, my figure—I couldn’t
even fit in my clothes, and a little bit of sanity and ON TOP OF EVERYTHING
ELSE, MY HAIR TOO?! It was like the last straw for me. I think I cried more
over my hair than anything else in this whole ordeal!
On a more physical level for the first few months it made my
incisions very visible. Sometimes I would be fine, going about my PT business
and catch a glimpse of myself and it was like staring at a fat stranger. They
did the surgery while I was on my side (which I am told is pretty cutting edge
and shaved a few hours off my surgery) but to do it this way they had to bolt
my head into this cradle and it had six screws on it and one bolt scar just so
happened to be dead center on my forehead (now it is just a hardly noticeable
little indentation but then it was a gross bloody hole). Then I had a tube that
drained excess spinal fluid out of my skull and that left about an inch and a
half long scar in the front/right part of my head. Luckily the main surgery
scar was at the back of my head and I didn’t have so see it (maybe that sounds
like a small, shrug it off, who cares kinda thing but to not have that big ugly
scar somewhere I could focus on it daily was a HUGE relief). Also after I got
home, like 6 weeks after the surgery, I still had blue marker drawn all over my
head. It wasn’t enough that I had these pealing nasty scabs now (and that I was
ordered not to wet my head for a while) but I also had these surgical marker
lines (meant not to wipe off). I had a dotted line down the center of my head
for almost 2 months.
Then when I had gained back some of the motion in my leg and
I could hobble a bit without my cane, I visited a friend’s house (she told me
she’d tweeze my eyebrows for me since I couldn’t). We ended up getting super
drunk and I bleached my hair blond. So when I talk about not recognizing myself
in the mirror, I’m not entirely being figurative. There were a few times I startled
myself at first, thinking for a second there was someone else in the bathroom
mirror. This change was insane and impulsive and maybe it was a good idea in
theory (my attempt to have fun with the little hair that I had) but it had
unforeseen consequences. It made my hair (which was finally growing long enough
to almost cover my scars) transparent. My scars stuck out like fire in my newly
blonde hair. At least I only had to deal with that for about a month before my
brown hair covered my scars and it just looked like I had purposefully done
some blonde tips.
The hair is still an ongoing thing. It just long enough to
look like I might have gotten this as a haircut on purpose but it is still
short. The part of my hair that is where bangs usually are, is still only half
way down my face. It’s just long enough to get in the way of absolutely
everything and not even close to long enough for a ponytail. I miss my hair!
Starting in November of 2013 I started taking steroids for
the swelling in my brain. It fucked up my whole life. I am not kidding it made
me not able to function as a person. The only thing it was good for was the
brain swelling. Believe that! ‘cause I tried to stop taking it so I could live
a normal life again and I have never experienced pain like that before in my
life. Like freeze you where you stand, wishing you were dead kinda agony. To
start off with in 3 months they made me gain 40 pounds. They made me constantly
hot and moody. I was totally unable to sleep—I thought I might accidentally
kill myself mixing so many sleep aids, and after 2 ambien, 4 melatonin, 2
guzzles of zquil some benedryl, and 2 pain killers I’d still only sleep like 4
hours. Also, weirdly enough, the same steroids that were helping reduce brain
swelling were causing all my joints to swell to the point that it ached just to
put socks on. To top it all off they made me so constipated. Needless to say I
hated those things passionately. In a weird medicated craze I wrote in
permanent marker on them “if you don’t take them you’ll die, if you do take
them you’ll only wish you were dead.”
Anyway so back to the point here. Overnight, it seemed, I
had gained 40 pounds and when I first got home I couldn’t walk well enough to
exercise so I changed my diet drastically. The steroids had made me constantly
hungry so now that I was off them I could eat normally again so the diet change
wasn’t too hard but it wasn’t very effective. It was then that I first started
noticing the stretch marks. I’m still extremely repulsed by them but I guess I
couldn’t come out of this without a mark to show for it. The surgery scars are
conveniently hidden by hair but those marks will always be there for me to see.
It still bothers me so much, I know it shouldn’t. I should just be happy that I
made it through all this or even come to see those as some kind of
representation of survival or some ridiculous crap like that. Maybe one day,
for now I am steadfast in my disgust and revulsion.
From March to May I only lost about 15 pounds but in May I
finished my therapy so I could devote all the time I had been using for rehab
toward an exercise regimen. By July I had lost 27 pounds and in September I was
back to the weight I’d been before my surgery and actually a few pounds
lighter. I’ve gained some back now (I chock that up to being in a loving, happy
relationship) but it’s something I know I need to work on. I can’t let all that
hard work to get it off in the first place be for nothing.
So this is a little reminder from your recovery days.
Remember that it was a painful and tiring and frustrating and it felt futile
but you did it. I hate to sound obnoxious but if ever there is a time in your
future where you feel like something is insurmountable, remember this. Memories
fade as time goes by and in some years it may seem like this was a small feat
but this was a pivotal, make or break, moment in your life and you overcame.
Hugs from March 2015J