AbbyNormal
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Newbie here. I am a bit nervous because I haven’t even had my EEG yet, or the appointment with the neurologist. I have discussed this with my doctor, but it was a very short conversation.
I have had two concussions in the past. One was over 30 years ago and I was in and out of consciousness for a couple of days. Spent a week undergoing a myriad of testing in the hospital and most of that month is missing from my memory. I have these huge voids in memory of the day of the accident. I remember walking towards to doors to leave school, my mother shaking me and screaming at me, Young and the Restless being on the television, a bloody washcloth in my hand, looking in the mirror of the car and screaming what happened to my face (the whole left side was road rash), fighting a nurse while being made ready for an MRI, getting stitches in my face on a gurney...
The second one was a loss of consciousness for less than two minutes in karate class. A leg sweep did me in. I fell against a pole and knocked my head rather hard.
I have a history of migraines since the first episode and apparently either staring through objects or people (up to five minutes) or a serious case of brain freeze looking for a word or phrase. Sometimes I’m aware, other times I’m not. It depends on if the person I’m talking to gets mad at me. The brain freeze is like falling into a void; I can’t move, speak, the mind is totally blank. It’s a bit like sleep paralysis but I’m awake. I come out of the brain freeze confused and with a headache that sometimes turns into a migraine. That can sometimes last up to a minute or two. I also forget how to talk. In the middle of a conversation, I start spewing gibberish. I realize that and stop talking. When I start again, I can carry on the conversation, mostly.
Basically, I’m a bit freaked out. This has been going on since that first accident. Either these episodes were poo poohed away or especially when I was younger, I was scolded and told to pay attention.
Then there was the episode with my boss on Friday where I was asking about work for the afternoon and I froze, mid-sentence, and she said my eyes rolled back in my head for a couple of minutes. She was...not shocked, but unsure of what to do, other than to possibly keep me from falling and hurting myself if needed.
I apologize for the book but I haven’t anyone to talk to about this as my time with the doc is limited. (I see him once a month for migraine upkeep.)
Thanks for reading and replying.
~Abby

I have had two concussions in the past. One was over 30 years ago and I was in and out of consciousness for a couple of days. Spent a week undergoing a myriad of testing in the hospital and most of that month is missing from my memory. I have these huge voids in memory of the day of the accident. I remember walking towards to doors to leave school, my mother shaking me and screaming at me, Young and the Restless being on the television, a bloody washcloth in my hand, looking in the mirror of the car and screaming what happened to my face (the whole left side was road rash), fighting a nurse while being made ready for an MRI, getting stitches in my face on a gurney...
The second one was a loss of consciousness for less than two minutes in karate class. A leg sweep did me in. I fell against a pole and knocked my head rather hard.
I have a history of migraines since the first episode and apparently either staring through objects or people (up to five minutes) or a serious case of brain freeze looking for a word or phrase. Sometimes I’m aware, other times I’m not. It depends on if the person I’m talking to gets mad at me. The brain freeze is like falling into a void; I can’t move, speak, the mind is totally blank. It’s a bit like sleep paralysis but I’m awake. I come out of the brain freeze confused and with a headache that sometimes turns into a migraine. That can sometimes last up to a minute or two. I also forget how to talk. In the middle of a conversation, I start spewing gibberish. I realize that and stop talking. When I start again, I can carry on the conversation, mostly.
Basically, I’m a bit freaked out. This has been going on since that first accident. Either these episodes were poo poohed away or especially when I was younger, I was scolded and told to pay attention.
Then there was the episode with my boss on Friday where I was asking about work for the afternoon and I froze, mid-sentence, and she said my eyes rolled back in my head for a couple of minutes. She was...not shocked, but unsure of what to do, other than to possibly keep me from falling and hurting myself if needed.
I apologize for the book but I haven’t anyone to talk to about this as my time with the doc is limited. (I see him once a month for migraine upkeep.)
Thanks for reading and replying.
~Abby