... I keeping thinking (well, hoping) I still see myself improving, and I keep doing 'exercises', to try to train my brain into getting things right.
I received my TBI in July 2005 (when I fell off a bicycle, thankfully while wearing a helmet - if not, I think I could have died).
I was diagnosed as 'blind'. I have always been able to see, but for months my poor injured brain couldn't put the two eye-images together. I had to wear a patch over one eye, so I didn't see double. For years, I have been able to see normally, looking straight forward, but I see double if I look down, or to the side.
As my 'training', when I am walking along outside, I choose something one the floor, a good few metres ahead. I look forward to it, and I can see it clearly. Then, as I walk towards it, I move my eyes, to keep looking at it, looking further and further down. It becomes double, but I concentrate on the image that I know is the 'real' one. I do this again, and again, as I walk to and from the train station. I think of it as an exercise for my brain. Hey, I go to the gym, at lunchtime, to exercise my body. I should do some brain exercises, too.
I also do 'balance training'. My balance was horribly screwed up. I used to have to hold the banisters all the time, when walking up and down stairs. These days, when I get to the train station at work, it has very wide stairs, and I always insist on walking up and down the middle, just because I *can*. For the first few years back at work, I couldn't. I also insist on standing on one leg, while I put on my socks or trousers, again just because for so long I *couldn't*.
I keep thinking that I am still seeing improvements, and I think that these 'exercises' are good for me. I am not sure they are, though. I read somewhere that a brain injury won't do any more healing, after a few years. My mother-in-law did say, this weekend, that she has noticed my voice continuing to improve, though.
Do you think I'm silly?