Exciting (to me, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

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Exciting (to me, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

==========[ EXCITING (TO ME) NEWS ABOUT MY STROKE RECOVERY ]==========

I posted this last month on another, non-playingcard-related) forum I frequent, and thought that some here might find it interesting as well.

=====[ BACKGROUND ]=====

For those who are not familiar with my story in recent years, I experienced a massive stroke a little more than five years ago (August 4, 2008). Its most obvious and dramatic [wiki]Sequela[/wiki] is that it has made me a "Left-side [wiki]hemiplegic[/wiki]" (I have almost no control over the muscles in the left half of my body). The muscles themselves are evidently fine (although atrophied somewhat, after five years of non-use). It is the nerve paths leading from my brain TO those muscles which have been compromised by the stroke, so my brain sends the commands for the muscles to move, but the signal never gets to the muscle.

We have been told that the brain can eventually find different pathways to get the signals to those muscles (this "finding a new path" process is called "neuroplasticity"). but that there is no way to predict how long it will take the brain to find each of these new paths, and, given the extent of the brain trauma caused by my stroke, not to expect it to happen.

Here are some of the affects of my Hemiplegia (also called "Hemiparesis"):

=====[ MY LEFT HAND ]=====
The fingers in my left hand have been closed in a fist of sorts since the stroke, and I cannot open it (although I can - slowly, and with great concentration - open the Pinky and Ring fingers almost all the way, and can sort of wiggle the (tightly-curled) thumb a bit.

=====[ MY LEFT ARM ]=====
The left arm has been tightly clenched to my left side ever since the stroke, with the elbow bent in a 90-degree angle.

=====[ MY LEFT FOOT ]=====
The left foot suffers from pronounced [wiki]drop foot[/wiki], and its toes have a pronounced tendency to curl under.

=====[ MY LEFT LEG ]=====
the left leg is non-load-bearing (I cannot safely put any weight on it), and I cannot reliably direct it to where I want it to be, even when I am seated (which is pretty much always, as I have been confined to a wheelchair as a result of my hemiplegia/hemiparesis ever since the stroke.

The only times when I am NOT in my wheelchair are during my brief "transfers" (HospitalSpeak for moving a patient from one piece of furniture - bed/chair/gurney/operatingtable/etc - to another), and when I am asleep in bed.

=====[ THE DREAM ]=====

I was in my bed this past Monday (October 14, 2013) at around dawn, when I had a dream.

In it, Susan (my wife) and I were living somewhere other than our current home here in Salem, Oregon. I'm not sure, but I think we were back in Southern California.

In the dream, I woke up one morning, got ready for work (I have been on Disability ever since the stroke), walked to a bus stop, boarded a bus, disembarked, and walked to my job (no place I recognized from real life). During my lunch break, I went for a stroll around the building's large parking lot.

It was during that stroll that I suddenly realized: I was walking!! I had been, ever since I had left home that morning! Where was my wheelchair? Slowly, I realized that I was dreaming. Damn!

I - carefully, experimentally - took a few more steps, even going so far as to step up onto a curb and back down into the parking lot a few times. I could tell that my left leg was weaker than my right, but its muscles WERE responding to commands from my brain!

I made my way back to my job, and - somehow - back to my (dream) home, and to my (dream) bed, where I fell back asleep.

=====[ I AWAKEN ]=====

Dreaming in my (dream) bed, I started gently & experimentally moving my left foot and my left leg. It took concentration and effort, and the moves were not all that dramatic, but they happened! Gradually, I woke up - in my REAL bed, in Salem, Oregon! As I woke up, I started wondering: could I REALLY walk, like I had in the dream? I consciously tried some of the same gentle and experimental moves with my left leg as the ones I had done in my "dream bed" - AND THEY WORKED!! THIS WAS THE FIRST TIME I HAD BEEN ABLE TO MAKE EVEN THESE SMALL, SIMPLE MOVES SINCE MY STROKE!!!

I slowly sat up on the edge of my bed, in preparation for my transfer back into my wheelchair, like I have done every morning for a while. But I could tell that my control over my left leg/foot was better than it had been since the stroke. As I sat there, trying to work up the courage to make the transfer, I purposefully rocked to the left and right, by pushing down against the floor with my right foot, then my left (it worked!), over and over again. This was DEFINITELY using the [wiki]hamstring[/wiki] in my left leg, something I had been unable to do since the stroke!

What about my [wiki]Quads][/wiki]? I stopped the rocking, and tried to make a slow and gentle kicking motion with my left leg.

I could not get it straight out in front of me (parallel to the floor), but got it most of the way there (better than 45 degrees) before I had to lower it again. And I DID consciously lower it - it didn't just drop!

Once the left foot was back on the floor, I tried to lift it straight up while leaving the knee in a 90-degree angle. This was something that my old OT (Occupational Therapist) had stressed was very important, when he worked with me two years or so ago. I had not been able to do it at all back then, but Monday morning, sitting on the edge of my bed, I COULD!!

I only lifted the foot an inch or two off of the floor, but it LIFTED!!

I decided to brave trying to stand, using my "transfer pole" (an aluminum floor-to-celing, tension-mounted pole we had installed within arm's reach of my side of the bed).

I have been making that transfer every morning for more than a year now, but I wondered if it would be any easier now that the nerves to my left leg and foot were apparently waking up.
Since I had not been able to consciously press my left foot down on the floor during those earlier transfers, that foot had a tendancy to swing up off of the floor during a transfer, forcing me to quickly pull myself upright using my right arm, before gravity pulled me back down onto the bed. Would that still have a tendancy to happen, now that I could press down with my left leg a little?

Still seated on the edge of the bed, I planted both feet as firmly as I could, grabbed one of the "loops" on the transfer pole with my right hand, and pulled. I came to an upright position, and BOTH FEET REMAINED PLANTED ON THE FLOOR!!

While still holding on to the pole with my right hand, I then pivoted on my right leg until I was facing the pole, my back to my wheelchair. The next step would be to lower myself into the wheelchair by straightening my right arm and allowing my knees to bend, while holding on to the pole, thus making a "controlled descent" into the chair. This was another move during which the left foot had a tendancy to come off the ground, which could make for a very UN-controlled descent into the chair (or onto the floor, if my butt was not aimed correctly).

I decided that before trying the descent, I would test the left leg a little more,so I leaned the left side of my head against the pole for balance and slowly and carefully let go of the pole, hoping that both legs would keep me upright.

Leaving my right hand within easy grabbing distance of the pole's "loop" (in case I started to fall), I concentrated on using both legs to remain standing straight up, and - it worked! After a few daredevil moments of this, I grabbed onto the loop again with my right hand and made a VERY controlled descent into my wheelchair, buckled myself in, and headed to our office/computer room, where Susan was waiting to put my CircAids (compression garments) on me, like she does EVERY morning. En route there, I decided how I would tell her about this exciting new development.

=====[ THE DEMO ]=====

As I entered into the office, this was the conversation:



=====[ WHERE IT HAS GONE SO FAR ]=====

Later that morning, we moved my LifeCycle (a powered leg exercise machine, similar to the pedals on an exercise bike) to a spot in the office where I can park my wheelchair in front of it. I do so and, with Susan's help, get my left foot into the strap which will keep it on its pedal

I place my right foot onto its pedal, turn the machin on, and - WE'RE OFF!

With the machine's powered assistance, I pedal for several minutes before I stop it and turn it off.

This was FAR more movement than my left leg and fot had done in the previous five years, total! I could even "feel the burn" (a little) in my Quads from their "workout"!

I have done this every day since, even working out a way to get my left foot into its pedal strap on the LifeCycle without Susan's assistance!

I have also done a few minutes of slow & gentle arm and shoulder exercises every day.

As a result of all of this, my arm/shoulder and leg/hip muscles are getting a tiny bit stronger every day, and the new nerve pathways to them seem to be strengthening as well!

I am very excited by all of this, and firmly believe that if I keep at this, it will, in time, lead to my:
  1. Standing up without the use of the Transfer pole.
  2. Remaining standing for longer and longer periods of time without holding on to something.
  3. Walking with a Walker or Hemi-walker.
  4. Walking with a "quad cane".
  5. Walking with a regular cane.

    and, eventually...
  6. Walking without a cane!
At some point in that continuum, we will show my progress to my old Occupational and Physical therapists, and ask that I be put back on regular therapy! (they both dropped me at my insurance company's insistance more than a year ago, largely due to my lack of progress and, I'm ashamed to admit, my unwillingness at the time to do my "homework"/exercises.

I am also hoping that the benefits of what I am now doing will extend to my left hand and foot. My left ankle muscle is already "waking up" a bit, and I am able to raise and lower my foot a fraction of an inch using only the ankle muscle to do it! And, as that continues to strengthen, I hope that the toe muscles will start to wake up as well! (you use your toe muscles to do many things: not only to walk, but to point your toes to get your foot into a sock, shoe, or into a pant leg! The ankle muscles help with all of these things as well.

The LifeCycle is also meant to be placed on a table and used to exercise arms as well, and I hope to be using it for just that, once my arm and shoulder strngthen to a point where I am comfortable doing so.

I am hoping that exercising my left arm this way will lead to the neural pathways to the hand and fingers "waking up", and the tendons and ligaments in those fingers relaxing (they have been largely "siezed up" to various degrees since the stroke).

This could eventually result in my using that hand to do things like:
  1. holding small, light objects (envelopes, pieces of paper, etcetera).
  2. steadying objects while my right hand works on them (holding an envelope while I open it with my right hand, holding a piece of meat in place with a fork while my right hand cuts it with a knife, holding a sheet of paper steady on a flat surface while I write on it using a pen/pencil with my right hand, etcetera).

    And, eventually...
  3. Playing my mandolin and violin!

    That last one is something my OT and doctors have told me is not likely to ever happen (The fine motor skills needed for something like that are not likely to be in my fingers ever again, they told me), so it would be incredibly sweet to play even a simple tune for them some day.

    While I'm dreaming, I hope that all of this "waking up" will somehow extend to the muscles which control my singing ability (another thing greatly compromised since the stroke).

    =====[ IN CONCLUSION ]=====

    So, all of THAT is my exciting (to me, anyway) news.

    Sorry I blathered on at such length and in such detail about it, when I could have simply said something like "The muscles and nerves in the left half of my body are starting to wake up!" instead.

    -RSL[/QUOTE]
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by MagikFingerz »

This is actually very interesting, and useful, as I will most likely be working as a PT next summer. Of course, I probably won't have any clients in your situation (I'll leave that up to physios and other rehab-focused professions), but I might get someone who have had a smaller stroke or has recovered more.

Thanks for sharing :)
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Thanks for replying Tom, and best of luck in your PT work. Is this a new career for you?

Well, today is my first visit (out of four that have been approved thus far) from my Home OT (Occupational Therapist), and my fourth (out of eight) from my Home PT (Physical Therapist).

In mid-December, at about the time of the eighth Home PT visit, I will be starting Cardiac Rehab at a hospital.

Whoosh!
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by MagikFingerz »

Yes, I'm in my final year of university now (Sport & Exercise Science). Eventually I want to find a more niche type of job, but PT (Personal Trainer) will be my first career simply because I really enjoy helping/teaching others to exercise.

Do keep us updated on your progress every now and then!
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by montecarlojoe »

This is really positive news!

Just these small changes that allow you to exercise will open the door to bigger changes as you retain muscle memory, strngthen muscle and stretch out tendons.

It only takes a pebble to start a landslide after all - let's hope this is your pebble!
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by th4mo »

This sounds like very good news for you Robert! I am very hopeful for your continued improvement. It is so easy for the rest of us to take something like the wiggle of a toe for granted. Your story is very inspiring, thanks for sharing!
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Thanks, th4mo!

Yes, there is sooo much about our bodies we take for granted - until there is a problem, that is.

For example, I have always been right-handed, so, when the stroke took away the use of my left hand, I didn't foresee it being that much of a problem (other than some very specialized things, such as playing my violin or my mandolins).

Even my typing has not been much of an issue. Every letter of every word I have typed since the stroke in 2008 has been typed with my right hand.

Funny thing is, that's the way I have ALWAYS typed! I never learned how to touch type, so when I landed my first IT job in 1978 as a junior programmer/data entry clerk, I just typed the way that made sense to me: using only my right hand!

I started out hunt & peck style, using only the index finger, but gradually added fingers until all five were involved. I got so good at it that people would come and watch "The One-Handed Typist"!

I never did learn to touch type, typing every program I wrote over my thirty-year career using just my right hand.

So, when the stroke took the use of my left hand, it didn't change my typing style at all!

But we use our "non-dominant" hand an awful lot more than we realize (or at least, than I realized. It performs a lot of helper/support functions that we don't even notice nor think about, such as:

1. We use it to hold a fork to keep food in place on our plate while we use a knife in our "dominant" hand to cut the food.

2. We use it to hold a box, envelope, jar, bottle, can, etcetera while our "dominant hand works on the object (opening, closing, etcetera).

...and TONS more. Since I lost the use of my left hand, I have been forced to improvise ways to do hundreds of simple daily activities (holding cereal boxes, etcetera between my thighs while my right hand works on the object, and lots more.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by volantangel »

Great news Rob, all the best and have a speedy recovery ! Dont ever give up now that you have gotten going =D
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

volantangel wrote:Great news Rob, all the best and have a speedy recovery ! Dont ever give up now that you have gotten going =D
Thanks, Volant! At five years in now, I think it's a tad late for a "speedy recovery", but I know what you mean.

Keeping motivation high is an integral part of any physical recovery, and it is something I definitely need to keep an eye on. I do seem to be more motivated now than I have been at any point in the past five years, and I will try to keep that up, going forward.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by SilvaAce »

That is great news Rob!

Keep working on it! It is a good thing to get EXCITED about any little progress you make. :!:
I wish you better health and keep us updated!

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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by Eoghann »

Great and inspiring read RL. I hung on every word. It's incredible how the body works. It even goes as far as subconsciously saying "it's time to give it another go, Rob." Really great news and I trust that with that new found hope and constant exercise you will be on your way to a faster and full recovery.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by charlie81dbz »

RSLancastr wrote:
So, all of THAT is my exciting (to me, anyway) news.

Sorry I blathered on at such length and in such detail about it, when I could have simply said something like "The muscles and nerves in the left half of my body are starting to wake up!" instead.

-RSL
I can't imagine anyone here wouldn't be excited for you RS! Being in a situation like yours definitely makes you aware of things everyone takes for granted and I'd absolutely be ecstatic about these improvements if I were in your shoes (not sure they are little things either, after not being able to move/use something for so long, that's a pretty huge step). Very happy for you and hope you will continue improving, and definitely keep posting updates, it's nice to read good news like this.

charlie :)
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by walrus »

RS this is great to hear. Strokes are something that really scare the shit out of me. The way they just hit as they do is a frightening proposition. It is great to hear people making successful comebacks after such an event. We are all just temporarily able bodied.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

charlie81dbz wrote:I can't imagine anyone here wouldn't be excited for you RS! Being in a situation like yours definitely makes you aware of things everyone takes for granted and I'd absolutely be ecstatic about these improvements if I were in your shoes (not sure they are little things either, after not being able to move/use something for so long, that's a pretty huge step). Very happy for you and hope you will continue improving, and definitely keep posting updates, it's nice to read good news like this.

charlie :)
Thanks, Charlie!

Yes, you learn to appreciate little things you never gave a second thought to before. Thinks like:

- Being able to lift your foot off of the ground.
- Being able to open up your hand, frozen in a clenched fist for five years.
- Being able to point your foot/toes as you put your leg into a pant leg.

...and so much more.
walrus wrote:RS this is great to hear. Strokes are something that really scare the shit out of me. The way they just hit as they do is a frightening proposition. It is great to hear people making successful comebacks after such an event. We are all just temporarily able bodied.
Yeah, strokes are some freaky ****, allright. Sometimes I feel like I fell down the rabbit hole, and am still down here, five years later.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by th4mo »

RSLancastr wrote:Sometimes I feel like I fell down the rabbit hole, and am still down here, five years later.
It's nice to know Sprouts has some company down in the hole... ;)
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

"Sprouts"? :?:
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by th4mo »

Yeah, Sprouts1115. He loves to go down the rabbit hole.
http://unitedcardists.com/memberlist.ph ... file&u=304" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Just a joke. hope you are not offended by my humor on this thread, which is a little more sincere than most that i comment on... ;)
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

th4mo wrote:Yeah, Sprouts1115. He loves to go down the rabbit hole.
http://unitedcardists.com/memberlist.ph ... file&u=304" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;..
Just a joke. hope you are not offended by my humor on this thread, which is a little more sincere than most that i comment on... ;)
Not offended in the least. I just did not understand the reference. Ifigured it referred to a user here, but did not (and still do not) understand the context. No problem.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by th4mo »

RSLancastr wrote:
th4mo wrote:Yeah, Sprouts1115. He loves to go down the rabbit hole.
http://unitedcardists.com/memberlist.ph ... file&u=304" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;...
Just a joke. hope you are not offended by my humor on this thread, which is a little more sincere than most that i comment on... ;)
Not offended in the least. I just did not understand the reference. Ifigured it referred to a user here, but did not (and still do not) understand the context. No problem.
:lol: just check out some of his posts and you'll understand pretty quickly... :lol:
Keep it Sizzlin'!
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by charlie81dbz »

th4mo wrote:
RSLancastr wrote:
th4mo wrote:Yeah, Sprouts1115. He loves to go down the rabbit hole.
http://unitedcardists.com/memberlist.ph ... file&u=304" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;.....
Just a joke. hope you are not offended by my humor on this thread, which is a little more sincere than most that i comment on... ;)
Not offended in the least. I just did not understand the reference. Ifigured it referred to a user here, but did not (and still do not) understand the context. No problem.
:lol: just check out some of his posts and you'll understand pretty quickly... :lol:
I have to wonder how he's missed noticing Sprouts before now... :shock:

charlie :)
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

charlie81dbz wrote:I have to wonder how he's missed noticing Sprouts before now... :shock:

charlie :)
Perhaps Sprouts and I travel/post mostly in different subfora.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by walrus »

Hey RS, if you don't mind me asking did the doctors ever pinpoint a reason for your stroke. If I am getting to personal disregard this post, I only ask because I had a family member who had one and I have little understanding.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

walrus wrote:Hey RS, if you don't mind me asking did the doctors ever pinpoint a reason for your stroke. If I am getting to personal disregard this post, I only ask because I had a family member who had one and I have little understanding.
Walrus, never - and I mean NEVER - hesitate to ask me anything about my stroke. I am more than happy to share my experiences, hoping they can help others to avoid having similar ones.

There are basically two types of strokes: 1. Hemmoragic (sp?) - a Bleed, and 2. Ischemic - a Clot.

When someone has a stroke, calling 911 immediately is extremely important. Not only are brain cells dying, but, if the stroke was an Ischemic one - a Clot, there is a clot-busting drug which must be administered within an hour of the stroke to be effective.

However, if they administer that drug and the stroke was a Hemmoragic one - a Bleed, that drug will probably kill the patient.

So the patient must get to the ER in time for a brain scan (to determine which type of stroke occurred) and the injection given (if it was a Clot), all within an hour of the stroke.

Mine was a bleed - a MASSIVE one (the docs told my wife that it was amazing that I lived through it), so I did not need the injection.

To answer your question, though:

What caused my stroke was insanely high blood pressure, which had been improperly controlled for more than a decade since I had been diagnosed as hypertensive.

That BP was brought about by fifty years of an atrocious diet and a sedentary life style (I weighed 398 lbs. when I had the stroke).

What do I mean by "insanely high" blood pressure?

They want an adult's BP to be no higher than 120/80. When I was first diagnosed as hypertensive, my BP was 300/180 (and 300 was as high as the gauge went, so it may have been even higher than that!)

I started a regimen of BP meds then, but they never got me down to 120/80 for any real length of time, and 15 or 20 years later, I had the stroke.

So, had I eaten right and exercised even moderately for all of those decades, and kept an eye on both my weight and my BP, I most likely would never have had my stroke.

Hope this helps,

-RSL
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by walrus »

Thanks RS. It really is a scary proposition. I wish you continued success in your recovery.
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

walrus wrote:Thanks RS. It really is a scary proposition. I wish you continued success in your recovery.
Thanks Walrus, but... "scary"?

I haven't even TOLD you the Scary parts!

Like:

1. The confabulations I had, where I was absolutely convinced that things which I had dreamed had really happened (including a nightmare in which there was a giant rat living in my hospital room closet), and another in which there was a doll-sized Ninja loose in the hospital, killing people left and right,

2. The women I referred to as the LOC's (Little Old Cougars) - women in their 80s and 90s who were trying to crawl into bed with me at night (at 50 years old, I was the closest thing to a Young Hunk there), or sneak a peek at me when the nurses were changing my clothes. My wife thought that I was making it all up, until the time she and I came back from dinner and found one of the LOCs doing a strip tease outside my room.

3. The Left-side Hemispheric "neglect". weird crap, that.

4. The 6-8 weeks in a coma (not scary for me, but hugely scary for my poor Susan).

5. One of my roommates grabbing and savagely twisting my hypersensitive left ankle in the middle of the night.

... and more. In all, I was in hospital ICUs, CCUs, Physical Rehabilitation Centers (both Acute and Sub-Acute) and a nursing home for a total of eleven months before being discharged back home.

Not a year I'd care to repeat.
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by volantangel »

RSLancastr wrote:
walrus wrote:Thanks RS. It really is a scary proposition. I wish you continued success in your recovery.
2. The women I referred to as the LOC's (Little Old Cougars) - women in their 80s and 90s who were trying to crawl into bed with me at night (at 50 years old, I was the closest thing to a Young Hunk there), or sneak a peek at me when the nurses were changing my clothes. My wife thought that I was making it all up, until the time she and I came back from dinner and found one of the LOCs doing a strip tease outside my room.
HAHAHAH was this real ?? Yikes must have been a real nightmare for you Rob, glad its all over now !
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

volantangel wrote:
RSLancastr wrote:
walrus wrote:HAHAHAH was this real ?? Yikes must have been a real nightmare for you Rob, glad its all over now !
VERY real, volant!

Here are a couple more of the incidents:

1. One morning, a nurse was giving me a spongebath in my bed (Not NEARLY as fun as the Adult Film industry would have us believe, by the way) when one of the LOCs (an eighty-something woman named Ann) rolled into my room in her wheelchair, brushed aside the "modesty curtains" around my bed, and parked her wheelchair where she had a front-row seat of what was going on, her eyes fixed on my junk.

(I must note here that my junk is nothing to write home about even in the BEST of circumstances, and these were FAR from the best of circumstances, so I have no idea what the fascination was)

When the nurse saw the woman, she yelled "Ann, this is a man's room! You know you're not supposed to be in here - get out!"

Ann wheeled herself out of the room, and yelled back from the hallway "But where should I go? What should I do??"

The nurse called out "Go to your room, and go to bed!!"

Ann wailed from the hallway "I need to go to bed with a MAN!!"

The nurse looked at me quizzically, and I shrugged my shoulders and shook my head "no".

2. During a Group OT (Occupational Therapy) session one morning, there were a dozen or so of us sitting in our wheelchairs in a semicircle.

The therapist walked down the row, holding out a handful of Therabands (long, thick rubberband-like things used in resistance exercises), asking each of us to pick a Theraband (the different colors meant different strengths).

When he got to the little old woman parked to my immediate left, she looked at the selection and grabbed not a Theraband, but a length of bungee cord which was mixed in with the Therabands.

The therapist asked her "Are you sure you want that one? It will be much harder for you to pull than these others!"

She clutched it to her busom and, pointing at me, said "I'm gonna use it to tie HIM to the bed!!"

The therapsist's mouth dropped open, and he looked at me quizzically. I shrugged my shoulders and shook my head "no".

The therapist's assistand said to the lady, in a scolding tone "Claudia, he's a married man!!"

""SO??!!" was Claudia's reply.

And there were many other similar incidents.

I had no idea what was inspiring all of this. I am no hunk, that's for sure.

My wife, once she believed me about all of this (after she witnessed that "strip-tease"), said that it was because I was kind to these women.

Weird!
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by th4mo »

As they say... "No good deed goes unpunished"! :lol:
Keep it Sizzlin'!
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Re: Exciting (tome, anyway) news about my stroke recovery

Unread post by RSLancastr »

th4mo wrote:As they say... "No good deed goes unpunished"! :lol:
Yup.

However, my being kind to the nurses, doctors, orderlies, therapists, housekeepers, janitors, et al was nearly always rewarded, so you never know.
-Marcel Marceau
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