Quote:
Originally Posted by Nick21
Hey,
Just thought I would share my story. (Sorry for the length).
My name is Nick and I am 22 years old and I have been dealing with my concussion/PCS for almost 10 months now. Seems like a very long time to me even though I know plenty of people here have been dealing with PCS for years. I was in the camp that thought Concussions only take a week to heal so the fact that its been 10 months has made it a very frustrating journey. Basic symptoms have always been the same: light headache (more of a pressure inside the head and feeling of compression), cloudy/foggy thinking, fatigue, stress/anxiety, irritability, and sensitivity to noise.
I got my concussion during the spring semester of my senior year of college in March of 2015 when I was out drunk with my friends and hit my head right on the side of my eye by the temple on an icy snowbank. I was drunk when it happened but I started to feel a headache pretty much right away and had a cut. The next morning I woke up feeling not so bad but definitely as if something wasn't right. First 24 hours weren't very restful.
I had an event the next weekend where I planned on drinking and legitimately thought I would be fine by then. I ended up not being fine obviously and from that point became week to week in my own mind. Ok I need one more week. Another week. I ended up flying home to stay with my parents and stayed there for a week. I actually felt better when I went back to school at the end of it but as soon as I got back to school I felt worse again. At that point it had been 3 weeks and I couldn't believe I wasn't better! How Naive I had been...
The fact that I wasn't getting better was extremely stressful. My peers didn't understand why i wasn't better and there were all these fun things going on that I desperately wanted to be better for. All these dates and deadlines that I was like ok I have two more weeks to get better. Long story short I ended missing out on everything, barely got my schoolwork done (handwrote a 15 page research paper because I couldn't use the computer), and graduated. Graduation night I had a beer or two because I was so sick of it and wanted to celebrate my four years of college with my friends.
What I was doing to help myself along was taking supplements (took a B vitamin, NAC, Magnesium, Omega 3s, and a new supplement called EHT by nerium). I saw a cranio sacral therapist who helped a lot actually. Every time I saw her after the session I would leave and it was like everything I was seeing was in HD. She told me that the swelling/inflammation in my head was having trouble draining and what she was doing was opening up the pathways in order to get the brain to drain. It helped a lot and I was convinced it was going to make me 100% better.
As soon as I graduated school I moved to NYC and once I was removed from that stressful school environment I started feeling so much better. At that point it had been three months. I attribute a lot of it to being removed from the stressful environment at school. At that point I thought I was 100%. I stupidly started doing all of things I had been wanting to do for so long. I went out with my friends to bars and got drunk, I played video games, went to the movies, had a beer after work or wine with dinner. Along with all of that I had just started a new job working in Finance. At a certain point after a few weeks the drinking and the stress of the new job became too much and my headaches came back. This was August and now I have not recovered since.
The best way for me to describe it is that I am 90% better but that last 10% feels like it is not getting better. Currently supplements I take are Brain Magnesium by Drs best, NAC by drs best, Curcurmin, omega 3s, and Neuro Optimizer by Jarrow. I try to see the cranial sacral therapist when I can but she's not local. I have become very knowledgable about concussions and try and help others and friends of mine as much as I can but its frustrating to see them get better in only a few weeks while I am still dealing with mine...
My greatest fear is that I will not make a full recovery and I will feel debilitated for the rest of my life. When I was 18 I had a herniated disc in my back and dealt with very stressful back pain. Today it is a lot better but it is not 100%. Im worried that is what is happening with my head. I fully recognize the role anxiety has in people's recoveries and how stressing about when you are going to get better is going to do the opposite. I just really hope it gets better soon and this nightmare that we all can't wake up from is going to end eventually...
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Nick I get it even though I am only 6 weeks out. I admire your courage and honesty. I have a lower back issue as well and yes, you can always strengthen it and you have to keep it in mind. I think acknowledging is a BIG deal so one can be honest with themselves. It may get all better but it will be a vulnerable spot. I can't speak about concussions but I think once you have been vulnerable you are vulnerable again. I remembered that I had whacked my head moving a box on the front of my head on a beam. The tears rolled. I broke the skin, had a bump for a few days. I believe that hit to my head may have compounded this injury. I too shared the same thoughts about concussions - oh, I'll be all better. I too have put my activities on hold. Hard on the family. I think injuries are an Achilles heel so to speak. Know you are not alone. This is a great support group and your parents sound like they may be too. We all need that more times than others even when we are physically fine. Hang in there. Hugs