Two Powerful New Brain Injury Books

Rosemary Rawlins for BrainLine
Two Powerful New Brain Injury Books

As a caregiver, wife, and mother, I have found great solace in sharing my story and hearing other people express how they coped with a family member's traumatic brain injury. I have also learned a great deal from reading first-hand experiences of people who have survived a TBI.

The TBI community is a unique community, and it's especially comforting to be heard and understood by those intimately connected to our experience.

I recently read two new books about brain injury that I'd like to share. One book, Falling Away From You, is from a caregiver's perspective (a mother's perspective of her son's TBI); and the other is from the perspective of a person who sustained a brain injury many years ago, before there were the diagnostic tools and rehabilitative practices in place that are commonly used to treat all levels of brain injury today.

Both stories add new insight into the way we experience traumatic brain injury in our own lives. Here is a short excerpt from each of these books.


Falling Away From You

By Nicole Vinson Bingaman

"Every time I think of it, I don't have to work hard to imagine what the fall looked like. Taylor weighed close to two hundred pounds, and fell and crashed in just the wrong way. There was nothing right about the way Taylor fell. The force of the brutal blows met my strong, six feet tall, brave, beautiful, and sweet son with undeniable power. He had tumbled down thirteen stairs, each one delivering some type of blow or beating to his head. For some reason, Taylor's head was the object that seemed to guide the fall. It was as if his head had protected the other parts of his body. No other part of his body was hurt, but the part that was injured would affect his entire being. These things were not noticeable right away to the human eye, but within a few hours, the initial force of the impact would be revealed."


Not What I Expected: My Life With a Brain Injury (I Didn't Know I Had)

By Sara E. Lewis

"In 1977, when I was a senior at the College of William and Mary, brain injury wasn't well understood. The hospital records I retrieved decades later include the scribbled notes of concern about my neurological state by the orthopedic surgeon and two other doctors who were called in for consults. But nothing was done after a CT scan, new technology to that place and time, appeared normal. No one talked to my family about what the doctor noted as my 'severe concussion,' a brain injury that would probably be considered 'moderate' by today's mild-moderate-severe measurement paradigm. I was in the hospital for five weeks and released. When I told the doctor at a follow-up appointment that I had this bothersome prickly feeling in the left side of my body and that I couldn't feel hot or cold or pressure or pain on that side and that sounds in my left ear were garbled and buzzing, he told me that it would probably go away in 10 years or so.

In the beginning, I tried to get on with my life as I had expected it to unfold, because I was unaware of the 'severe concussion' too. I was not coached to be on guard for the stealthy ways brain injury would affect every aspect of my life. After 27 years enduring mysterious pains, cognitive challenges, emotional highs and lows, fractured relationships, and career missteps, I saw a neurosurgeon for a pain in my neck. He sent me to a neuropsychologist who sent me to a neurologist.

Then, in fits and starts, I began to learn more about brain injury. In 2009, after my father sustained a brain injury of another sort, a cerebral vascular accident or stroke, I saw a reflection in him of my cognitive weaknesses. I was curious about his aphasia, so I took classes in speech-language pathology. Then I finally began to understand what had happened to my brain."

Posted on BrainLine June 3, 2015.

Comments (5)

Please remember, we are not able to give medical or legal advice. If you have medical concerns, please consult your doctor. All posted comments are the views and opinions of the poster only.

My book "I Didn't Die Because God Wasn't Finished With Me" is on Amazon. it's a short read from my perspective w helps for CareGivers. Dr. Mary Adkins

The art of a good TBI book is as healing to the soul as medication is to the body. Thanks for the tip.I'll review them. Some of my favorite books as a TBI were: "In An Instant", by Woodruff, and later in my recovery, "Man's Search For Meaning" by Viktor E Frankl ( a moving short book written by this concentration camp survivor in 1940s). If you want practical guides and how to: Cheryle Sullivan's Brain Injury Survival Kit, Robert Fraser's "Living Life Fully after Brain Injury" and Douglas J Mason's "The Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Workbook". I have read >25 such books. Each one offered slightly different value. The "how to" books worked best as part of ongoing therapy.  GG

And don't forget "I Forgot to Remember: A Memoir of Amnesia" http://www.amazon.com/Forgot-Remember-Schuster-Nonfiction-Hardcover/dp/1451685823 by Su Meck :)

I sustained my TBI when I was 8, I ended up writing a book about it when I was in high school but,..... it's  not just about my injury, it's about my multi-faceted reality with my injury being "Just another brick in the wall"

Please read.my book Six Weeks at Ryder available at azon.com It is an amazing informative story of my own hero my daughter