NeuroTalk Support Groups

NeuroTalk Support Groups (https://www.neurotalk.org/)
-   Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/)
-   -   Bumped My Head (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/248675-bumped-head.html)

brandnewconcussion 08-02-2017 02:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark in Idaho (Post 1248326)
The key is to slow down. We used to be able to trust subconscious actions. Many of us need to slow down and make conscious movements.

And, YES, the literature speaks about how the brain memorizes responses and can connect a serious event and the results of that event to a very minor event that has similarities and use it to trigger the responses to the serious event.

Ask somebody who has cut themselves bad. Often, a slight prick or cut will trigger an extreme reaction. Same goes for burns.

It is a part of our survival mechanism. It just over-reacts in some cases for some people.


isn't that something like PTSD?

Mother of Dragons 08-02-2017 04:09 PM

Very interesting information! It seems that is what happened with me. Besides a few slight symptoms (mild eye discomfort and waves of light nausea), I seem to be fine. Definitely not re-concussed, thank goodness.

smutsik 08-04-2017 08:01 AM

Mark,

Do you think the same can go for experiencing a symptom from over-exertion? Yesterday I had an extensive and pretty intense discussion with my girlfriend that triggered severe fatigue, probably because we were going over some pretty abstract stuff that forced me to think in multiple layers and hold several thoughts in my head at once. Today I feel a little groggy and "fuzzy around the edges", but I suppose that could just be a symptom coming from anticipational anxiety? My thinking goes along the lines of that the brain has experienced getting worse after experiencing severe symptoms, so the anxiety kicks in as soon as one experiences a symptom, however slight, because one can be fearful of getting worse or not getting better soon enough.

Really interesting stuff, if you have any literary recommendations on the topic I'd be glad to read up on it.

Mark in Idaho 08-04-2017 10:38 AM

Yes, it is a PTSD sort of remembered response.

The intense conversation will set me back for a day or two. It can help to take notes. This way, your brain 'lets go' of the thought that you would otherwise try to memorize.

The male to female talking differential can make it difficult since we each think differently. Trying to process it is like trying to understand a different language.

We have to slow down to get through the 'What does she mean by that' process. I end up losing track of the point of the conversation and sort of glaze over.

So, there are two issues. 1st, Did I properly understand and respond to the conversation. 2nd, Can I avoid this causing me to crash mentally?

Take notes. If can slow the conversation and help the other person understand how we are struggling. And, it takes issues out of the 'I'm juggling too many thoughts' category.

Juggling is a good way to think of audio issues. We can only juggle so much until we drop them all.

smutsik 08-04-2017 11:14 AM

That's good advice. Do you find that you recover quicker from ending the conversation at the first sign of the brain being depleted of energy? Because up to this point I have interpreted the feeling of "I'm out of mental gas soon" as an indication that it's time to round off the conversation. However, I'm starting to realize that that feeling rather should be the definitive point to end the conversation - because if I don't, I crash and end up messing up 1-3 days.

Have you noticed an improvement in how capable you are of juggling thoughts/auditive input over time?

Mark in Idaho 08-04-2017 04:11 PM

Sometimes, the conversation has to end. Sometimes, you can take the conversation to a quieter place and continue. Ambient noise can reduce the brain's ability to tolerate the conversation.

A challenging issue is cell phone conversations. Too many people use their cell phones as a speaker phone that grabs far too much ambient sound for a PCS brain to process. Or, there is just lousy transmission quality. Using a head set can help with telephone call, especially cell phone calls. The worst calls tend to be were both ends of the call are using a wireless system, either cell to cell or cell to cordless landline phone.

Remember a simple concept. We can usually only do one auditory thing at a time. We can try to understand garbled words or we can try to understand a sentence. We struggle to understand a sentence of garbled words. Garbled words can be poor transmission quality, thick accents, and such.

My broadband provider likes to route tech support calls to the Philippines. I call it talking to Sponge Bob Square Pants at the bottom of the sea. The voices sound like they are bubbling up from under water with a Filipino accent on top. I ask for a US based agent and wait.

Once we observe and learn the specifics of our struggles, we can moderate them and do much better.

RidingRollerCoaster 08-04-2017 05:05 PM

MotherDragon-

If I remember correctly, you had a lot of problems with dizziness? So you are not dizzy anymore? That is great! I was thinking about asking you for an update. Did any thing or things specific help?

Thank you and take care.

brandnewconcussion 08-05-2017 01:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark in Idaho (Post 1248326)
The key is to slow down. We used to be able to trust subconscious actions. Many of us need to slow down and make conscious movements.

And, YES, the literature speaks about how the brain memorizes responses and can connect a serious event and the results of that event to a very minor event that has similarities and use it to trigger the responses to the serious event.

Ask somebody who has cut themselves bad. Often, a slight prick or cut will trigger an extreme reaction. Same goes for burns.

It is a part of our survival mechanism. It just over-reacts in some cases for some people.

But an extreme lasting reaction? I've never seen someone get pain over a spot for a month in fear from a bad prick..

Mark in Idaho 08-05-2017 09:44 PM

An injury to the many layers of skin over the skull can take many months to heal because the many nerve fibers heal very slowly. A non-concussive impact can damage these nerves and be very painful. There is no pain inside the skull except in the veins and arteries. These sometimes intense pains are usually as vaso spams if they are focused. If they are in a larger area, they are just a form of a head ache.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:18 PM.

Powered by vBulletin • Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

vBulletin Optimisation provided by vB Optimise v2.7.1 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.