They looked at me like they had just seen a ghost.
And in one respect, they had.
Just prior to the three-year anniversary of my traumatic brain injury, I stopped by my local service station to get my yearly vehicle inspection sticker. Doing not much more than killing time as my car was being inspected, my eyes drifted to the intersection directly in front of me. Cars passed back and forth, an occasional truck rumbled by, and off to the side, the mechanics in the garage working on my car made occasional clinks and clangs with their tools.
And in two ticks of a clock reality struck me.
I was staring at the very intersection where I was struck by a teenage driver just shy of three years prior.
For a moment in time that seemed to stretch for longer than it should have, I wondered how I had found myself at that exact spot without the fact of it having occurred to me before. Perhaps it was a sign that I was healing, ever-so-slowly.
A couple of minutes later, as I was paying at the counter for the new inspection sticker, I asked the attendant a couple of simple questions.
“Have you been working here for a while?”
The gentleman, a retired school teacher, shared that this was his ‘retirement job’ and had been for six years.
And I had to ask. “Do you remember a cycling accident right out front a few years ago?” And I waited. My heart was pounding in my chest.
His eyes had that far away look as he mentally walked back through time. “I’ll never forget it. It was horrible. The guy on the bike was hit right there,” he shared, pointing to the corner. “And he flew head over teakettle all the way to there,” this time pointing to a spot 40-50 feet down the road.
He went on to tell his version of the day that fate intervened in my life, about how the local fire department closed Main Street, about all the first responders who walked from the fire station a mere block away to attend to my broken body.
And I dropped the bomb.
“I was that guy.”
Four simple words.
He looked at me like I was a dead man walking.
“It was a horrible accident,” he said again as he sized me up with new eyes. As expected, he then asked me how I was doing these days.
Rather than using this as a TBI teaching moment, I opted for the easier, softer path. “I've still got stuff, but I’m alive.”
As I was leaving, he called over to the station owner. “Remember that bike accident a few years back? He was ‘that guy’ who was hit.”
“Such a horrible accident,” echoed the owner, staring at me like I was supposed to be dead.
I smiled, cordially thanked them both for taking care of my car, and walked, legs shaking, back to my car.
Thankfully, the PTSD is getting easier, the nightmares less frequent. I was unexpectedly grateful to simply be alive. To have a heartbeat. To still be able to hold my wife, Sarah’s hand. Just “to be.”
Seeing the crash that caused my traumatic brain injury through the eyes of others was quite surrealistic. But then again, so much of my life today as someone who survived a brain injury borders on the surreal.
And if your life has been touched by traumatic brain injury, you are no doubt nodding.
Because like me, you get it.
Comments (16)
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Bashayer Hammad... replied on Permalink
I am Bashayer Hammadi, a second year graduate student-clinician enrolled in a Master's degree program in speech-language pathology at one of the universities in New York. Recently, I have had the privilege of working with twoTBI survivors at my medical externship in Long Island area. I must say that regardless of the differences between these clients, they all have reported that the TBI incident has changed them and most importantly changed their perspective of life.
I am glad that you are doing better and recovering as time passes. Reading through some of your personal stories has enlighten me into some of the struggles that people with TBI might face post their incident.
I am currently putting a powerpoint presentation about TBI and I was assigned to include reflections from TBI survivors. I have wrote three questions below to learn about your communication recovery journey. I would really appreciate it if you could reply to answer these question; however, I totally understand if you can't!
1. What kind of communication (e.g., speech-language-cognitive) difficulties did you face post your accident?
2. Did you receive speech-language therapy post your TBI accident? If so, what things did you find to be beneficial that helped your through your recovery process? Or what things did you find to not be so effective?
3. What advice would you give to SLPs to consider when providing evaluation and therapy services to TBI survivors?
Thank you for sharing your personal stories
Sincerely,
Bashayer Hammadi
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Jeff Trapp replied on Permalink
Me too 6 years ago a near-fatal motorcycle accident with TBI I was told I would never walk on my own I stayed on my own two feet sometimes with a wood staff now nothing donated my wheelchair and Walker to a veteran at the VA hospital.
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My son has also had this same experience. His fall was almost 3 years ago and he met someone on campus who remembered the incident and told my son "I thought you died." My son just recently graduated with honors from college and is now working and living on his own.
Blessings to you on your journey of recovery.
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