Hello, I’m Elisa

Welcome to my little section of the Internet! My life fell apart in 2016 after a brain injury and this is me- navigating various health conditions, writing about it, and hopefully helping others.

  • Welcome to my blog!

    If you’ve talked to me in the last year, you know this blog has been a long time coming. If you’ve never met me (and even if you have) this post is for you. I am a smiley, fun-loving person but Ima let you know right here and now, this post, this blog will discuss heavy and sensitive but very important topics.

    Ok, now that you’ve been trigger warned, I will proceed.

    I understand pain. I understand suffering. I understand how it feels to have your body betray you. I understand how it feels to have your thoughts dictate your happiness. I understand how it feels to cry until you no longer feel human. I understand how it feels to desire death more than anything else.

    But I’m still here.

    This blog is about sharing the past four years. Sharing thoughts, trials and hopes. This blog is about learning to live again and learning to dream again. And friend, this blog is about you too. Come here when you feel alone. Come here when you feel no one on earth could possibly understand you. Come when the person on the inside doesn’t match the one without.

    Know this though, if you come here, whether it’s for one post or for all, my request of you will always be this: DON’T GIVE UP. If there’s anything to hold to in this life it’s hope, no matter your definition or spiritual inclination. That being said, welcome to my blog. Welcome to The Riverbend.

    Love Always,

    Elisa



  • What it’s like to be me

    As I sit here, I’m not quite sure how to write this. My new life is so different and yet I struggle to describe it to the people who live with me, let alone the casual observer. How do you describe life with Post-Concussion Syndrome? How do you describe life with chronic fatigue and chronic pain? How do you really describe life as a Spoonie?

    I guess the difference is found in the minutia. So here goes. In the morning I:

    • Set myself up for a bad eye day just by scrolling through Instagram like the rest of the world does before they even leave bed
    • Go to rehab for either my neck, brain or eyeballs
    • Do the home exercises from the rehab appointments I didn’t have
    • Sing and rock out to one song in the car and then feel like a zoned-out zombie for the rest of the ride
    • Only remove 1/4 of the pet hair from the entry rug so I don’t exacerbate symptoms
    • Have to get up from lying/sitting/squatting/bending over slowly so my vision doesn’t go black and my legs don’t buckle

    In the afternoon I:

    • Take a butt-ton of vitamins
    • Have trouble holding a conversation while trying to measure the correct amount of cat food
    • Sometimes feel so nauseas and/or weak at lunch I have to ask my family members to serve me my food
    • Don’t want to put my plate in they dishwasher because that means bending over. I do it anyway.
    • Take a nap for at least 45 minutes

    In the evening I:

    • Often have to sit in the shower so I can wash my hair without getting too dizzy or fatigued
    • Want to take another nap after I wash my hair. I don’t.
    • Scrub one thing at the sink after dinner then have to rest for 5-10 minutes
    • Stutter and have trouble articulating and finding the right words
    • Don’t watch TV if I’ve looked at my tablet or phone “too long” earlier in the day

    One of the most telling differences between my old self and concussed-self are the said and unsaid questions I never imagined asking:

    • What happens if I get whiplash again or another concussion?
    • Will I be able to connect with new people because I don’t live a 9-to-5, drinks after work, “Netflix and chill,” hit the beach on the weekends kind of life?
    • Will I ever be able to whip my head around and dance freely again?
    • Will I ever be able to date? Get married? Have children?
    • Will I ever be able to survive without government assistance?
    • Will I ever be able to cook for myself? Drive myself places?

    *Note: This piece is not as fleshed out as I would have liked. Writing it triggered a depressive episode where I didn’t want to get out of bed one morning, so I’ve decided to leave it as is. I’m sure one day I’ll write an updated version.

    Love Always,

    Elisa


About Me

I am a 90’s kid who developed a love of writing at age 10. I went to school for communication and English/journalism and now I’m a spoonie advocate and a content creator.

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