I've had a considerable amount of this post written for some time; months in-fact.  But what I've found is that traumatic brain injuries/concussions don't work on our timetable, they progress at their own speed.  In-fact, the more one fights against it and attempts to push through the longer the symptoms linger.  These are just a couple of the many lessons I've learned in what's now approaching a year and a half since my accident and injury.  Another is that in order to write this properly, it has to be raw.  Perhaps that was one of the issues prior.  Back when I began I was a school coach and as such, tended to scale back my language and how I wrote things.  I no longer have that concern thanks in part to some of the side effects that have come along with my now and finally diagnosed,"Moderate Post-Concussion Syndrome" I put that in quotes because that was what the neurologist diagnosed me with and clearly for this post, it's important to insure that it's given its proper reference.
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| The helmet I was wearing sitting atop pieces of the tree involved. | 
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| The rest of the tree.  This was the base so no directly involved  but when the issues no doubt began on my end.  | 
I remember turning enough so when it hit me it was on the back left side of my head and knew immediately I'd been dinged pretty hard but I've been hit in the head hard a lot so the idea of being genuinely hurt didn't enter my initial thoughts. Funny enough, after a moment or two and letting Caden know I was OK, I picked up my saw again to get back to work when it become apparent I should have Shawna (a former Army medic) check me out. I walked back to the house, entered, and since she was sleeping, I was forced to wake her (which I actually remember feeling badly about. HA!) Startled because I don't generally ask for medical help (there are other stories there), she was awake instantly and running me through some basic concussion testing. Most were OK but not great and I honestly thought that I'd probably panicked her for nothing when my speech began to slur. That continued to get worse until we made the decision that seeking medical advice was a good idea. We made a call and got a ride from family so the Dr could do basically nothing except charge me a fee. Limited cognitive testing, no MRI/cat scan, no advice except to rest. Looking back, I'm pretty pissed by the medical treatment I (didn't) received because I made decisions based on their reactions and advice. This is not to say that I would have listened to everything but I should have had those options much earlier than I did. And yes, I should have listened to my wife but when you're in the state I was, you put a certain amount of trust into the hands of your doctors and frankly, I'll never fucking do it again.
From here, some (many according to Shawna) details are fuzzy. I thought I'd be up and on my feet in a day or two but that turned definitely wasn't the case. I tried to go outside and work a few days later but that only magnified my symptoms. I tried and did work as an assistant football coach at the local high school, but I definitely wasn't myself. I would not come to realize how bad I was until I was sent to see an Occupational Therapist who helped me understand the shape was actually in by running a battery of simple tests that left me feeling fucked up not just following the appointment, for for a day or two after . However, even then, I honestly didn't take the whole thing nearly as serious as I should have. I continued to do things against her, my wife's, and pretty much everyone around me's recommendations because I thought for sure I could simply out-tough my injury.
Eventually, a couple months later, I finally began to feel like myself. I got to watched the Cubs finally win the World Series (I'm a Red Sox fan first, Cubs fan because of so many years of shared and understood misery) made it through the holidays, enjoyed watching the Pats pull of their epic Super Bowl comeback for the ages, was writing weekly blog posts while working on and beginning to lose some weight, and was even an assistant coach for the local high school baseball team in the spring. It was also during that time that I found a new job and began working an overnight security gig at a local specialized school. Everything seemed to be back to normal and going well...Right up until it began not to And that's when the fucking relapse happened.


