ABSTRACT

Whilst preparing for his travel adventures into a world he had yet to explore, Christopher Yeoh was involved in a road traffic accident and experienced something few others would be "privileged" to witness. Eight days in a coma, more than a year in and out of hospital and a gradual re-introduction to the world of work.

A Different Perspective After Brain Injury: A Tilted Point of View is written entirely by the survivor, providing an unusually introspective and critical personal account of life following a serious blow to the head. It charts the initial insult, early rehabilitation, development of understanding, the return of emotion, moments of triumph and regression into depression, the exercise of reframing how a brain injury is perceived and a return to work. It also describes the mental adjustments of awareness and acceptance alongside the physical recovery process.

Readily accessible to the general public, this book will also be of particular interest to professionals involved in the care of people who have had significant brain injuries, brain injury survivors, their families and friends and also those who fund and organise health and social care. This unique author account will provide a degree of understanding of what living with a hidden disability is really like.

chapter |3 pages

The start of the (almost) end

chapter |6 pages

The most exciting day of my life

chapter |3 pages

My boring history

chapter |6 pages

The Wellington hospital

chapter |4 pages

A second childhood

chapter |5 pages

The wheelchair and me

chapter |6 pages

Standing on two feet

chapter |8 pages

Understanding and feeling

chapter |4 pages

The Bleakness

chapter |4 pages

Clothes make the man

chapter |4 pages

A birthday in hospital

chapter |4 pages

A tilted point of view

chapter |4 pages

The assault on self

chapter |3 pages

End of an era

chapter |4 pages

The National Health Service

chapter |3 pages

The death of ambition

chapter |4 pages

Other people’s stories

chapter |6 pages

The Oliver Zangwill Centre

chapter |3 pages

The idealism of youth

chapter |4 pages

The land of OZ

chapter |3 pages

Perfectionism

chapter |6 pages

The rainbow

chapter |5 pages

The importance of semantics

chapter |4 pages

A return to the institution

chapter |2 pages

Writing

chapter |3 pages

Excuses and choices

chapter |5 pages

A constructive pastime

chapter |4 pages

An (almost) new start

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

chapter |1 pages

A little bit about the author