Behind the Player -- Paul Gray (DVD)
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Behind the Player -- Paul Gray (DVD)
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Just seen your post. Hope you are getting better each week. It's now 8 months since my SAH . I still have awful fatigue. Some days worse than others but it is still every day. I also get headaches some days but not every day like before. Use the clown key on the console near the save point, and ascend the staircase on the right. Walk through the yellow door, and collect the items in this room: anti-regen ammo (RAMRODs), shotgun ammo, a grenade, two med injectors and an incendiary grenade.
On a brighter note, I have in the last month spent some time at home, it was lovely taking some ME time, I got my garden landscaped with the help of my lovely niece and her partner, I felt so much better in myself after doing it, it nearly finished me off physically, I forgot how much heavy work was involved when revamping a garden lol, but it did wonders for my mental health. I am a grandmother of 5 boys and one girl and they all give me lots of joy! Grandma dates with each of them are the best. I am thankful our four grown children and their spouses live close. My youngest daughter (37) married with three boys helps me a lot. She is a Master degree nurse finishing her Nurse Practitioner degree and teaches nursing. She has me come in to her class once a semester to share my SAH story and 6 week hospitalization and what was most helpful and needed from my nurses. I suppose I am about a month ahead of you or maybe less in terms of recovery, I definitely feel like the last couple of weeks I've made more progress with recovery so hopefully this is on the road ahead for you too!
Nashawaty, Chris (September 11, 2020). "Liam Neeson replaces much-younger Bradley Cooper in survival thriller 'The Grey' ". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved January 29, 2012.
All of this has led me into a depression I can't seem to get out of. It all seems hopeless. My memory is shot, my head hurts all the time, my Lupus keeps my arthritis flared up almost all the time, I can't stay awake for anytime, my hospital bills are almost punitive, and I am finally demoted at work. I feel like there is no light at the end of any tunnel for me. I am 9 months post SAH and have reached a level, and I will never get past this.
Once you return home from hospital it is natural to feel anxious and worry that it may happen again, although this is very unlikely. You may feel low or isolated at times, especially in the early weeks, but it generally improves with time. If you feel very low, it may be worth talking to your GP. Attending a support group and talking to others in similar situations can help, but if you feel uncomfortable talking to strangers face to face, an online support group like the one here at behindthegray.net can also help. Smithers Regional Airport. [7] According to Empire magazine, in the climactic scene in which Neeson's character pens a letter to his wife, Carnahan urged Neeson to "channel his grief" over the death of his wife Natasha Richardson. [8] Carnahan disclosed, in a Q&A session following an early screening at the Aero Theatre in Santa Monica, he had an alternative ending he never intended to use showing Neeson battling the alpha wolf. It was supposed to be included in deleted cuts; [9] however, no extras were included on the Blu-ray. While your husband is struggling with the aftermath of damage to his brain in these early days he is physically exhausted and the trauma has affected his ability to control his limbs. His thought processes are all confused and he is not acting like `your loving husband` anymore. Brenda ... when the brain has experienced such trauma ... often the patient`s tolerance levels dramatically change. Instead of `biting his lip` when a situation may be upsetting him... now he just `lashes out` to varying degrees. This really is upsetting for you over time.
And three months on you may even let yourself start thinking that life isn't going to be the same again .... and to some extent this will be the case ..... and this is different for all survivors...... Everyone`s struggle to adapt is different. You will probably be more sensitive to noise and visual things such as bright or flashing lights during the early weeks of your recovery. Being in crowded, noisy or busy places such as supermarkets can be particularly difficult at first.I wish you the best in your recovery ~ it is up and down at times but you will see progress as Tina said. There will be residual challenges and the acceptance of a “new normal” but life is a gift and there are rewards to perseverance. Give yourself more grace on hard days. When I eventually made my first car journey, I had to drive with the air conditioning blasting on my face; I needed to feel the cold, needed to feel awake. It felt so very weird and also very scary. Even my feet didn't feel as though they were part of my body. I seemed to over emphasise every movement that before the SAH, would have been so normal. I just didn't feel in control, it wasn't me in this body that I had returned home with. Our decision to add a separate section to the forum about Driving after SAH is in response to the common questions asked about Driving after the event , regaining a licence if it has been revoked, and to share experiences of driving whilst living with common defecits post bleed.
The tearful and weepy days I also had - I asked my GP to refer me to a counsellor as I was diagnosed with PTSD - it might be worth talking to your GP about this. I was doubtful at first, but my word, how that man helped me was amazing. Please look into it.Just the other evening my wife said to me, 'I literally just said what you said...you never listen to me!!' To be honest it was embarrassing because I genuinely never heard her say what she said she did (she was sitting immediately to my right). Surviving behind the green door requires a high-grade filter, which you get from behind the red door (see above). The path ahead of you is almost entirely comprised of corridors. They don’t branch away from each other, meaning that the path forward is straightforward. Rather than constantly telling you to turn left or right, we’ll use milestones like enemies or items to guide you through. Through the corridors and hallways
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