I just went to see Mike the physio, about this hip pain. It was due to running, and after more than a year of physic, I had an operation, more than 16 months ago. I have not recovered from that, and still have a lot of pain walking (or sitting down/standing up, or TBH, just all the time), and I can't really run. It is only the third time I've seen him (as both the previous physios moved to other hospitals).
He said he hadn't looked that carefully at the history of my problem to begin with, as he just took what the previous girls had said, and carried on the same as they had.
But it is definitely not working. So today, he wanted to talk about my brain injury, and the effects it has had. He had me walking up and down the corridor, and he said that I am a bit lopsided. I wasn't aware of that, but my husband says "Oh, yes!" He thinks that may have originally caused the trocantheric bursitis, which led to the operation, and has caused my failure to recover.
He has told me to continue with the same exercises and roller-work for a couple of weeks, and he will look into this in more detail. He says that maybe I will need a walking stick. He said that shouldn't be for too long, and it would be to sort out the hip problem, and fix my lop-sided-ness.
Apparently, I should go to the gym, but maybe split cycling and rowing (but not use the steppers or slidey-things). TBH, I am a bit sick of only using the cycle, so I am pleased about this!
Hubby says that if I know I am not walking straight, we can work on fixing it, and make it go away. He sees this "It's your brain, stupid!" * diagnosis to be a good thing, but I find it really depressing. I didn't realise my brain injury is more noticable to other people than to me. I mean, I can 'see' my blindness, which others can't (most of the time, anyway - sometimes I walk straight into people in crowded places ), and I can hear my horrible voice, which is definitely not the way it used to be, but I thought it sounded OK for other people, now. But the physio says he can definitely hear it. This depresses me a bit. I don't like being noticeably brain-injured (actually, 'noticeably brain-damaged' sounds more accurately the way I feel right now) - I don't want it to be so obvious to others.
* No, Mr Physio was very very polite about it, *he* didn't say that phrase, but in this situation, it seems right.