I survived a subdermal hematoma. And I just found out recovering back to how you were before is rare...

I survived a subdermal hematoma. And I just found out recovering back to how you were before is rare. It's probably made me fucking dumber than I was before it happened. Anybody know this interesting kind of feel?

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Damnit I thought I was on my Jow Forums tab I'm a little drunk

15 x 7 you have 10 seconds to respond

you LOST

I think if you keep that sense of humor and humility you'll do just fine, m8.

I must have a double digit iq Because that took me a long time :(
I thought dumb people never question their intelligence.
I'm fucking stupid

Fascinating. Never experienced it myself but had severe heat stroke one time this summer. I could physically feel that it was harder to father my thoughts and focus. It passed after some days. Or normalized and I am just dumber as well. Ignorance is bliss tho and I still feel most people are more retarded than me when I talk to them.

It does get better, might take some years but it gets better.

It's not a subdural hematoma it's epidural HA god damn that makes me mad

user, the literal whole function of the brain is to change over time. We are never the same as we are before.

Do Australians really like to box with kangaroos when there's nothing else to do?
I've seen two videos of Aussies and kangaroos like this

Spend some time in a compression chamber and get some extra oxygen up there

Do you fear death?

Yes

based user

Do you fear the dark abyss?

No, it is a subdural. See the extension into the Sylvian Fissure?

Are you referring to the belief of nothingness after death? If so the no. I am afraid of death but don't care about afterwards

Subdural Hematoma*

Mate you got demon face in you brain

All your deeds laid bare.
All your sins punished.
I can offer you, an escape.

So is it Meth or alcohol or neither?

you're not drunk you're dumber than you were before. nice try, user. i wouldn't touch alcohol every again that's for damn sure.

Interesting image, though. Was this a chronic subdural that was discovered after remote trauma or was this a hematoma that was observed conservatively? It certainly appears to be an old hematoma as it is not a uniform 100 Hounsefield Units.

does anyone else see a parakeet looking at them?

I got this image off Google. My ignorant parents put me on ssris anti depressants when I was around 16 just because I had some normal mood problems.by the time I was 18 I swallowed two bottles of sleeping bills, blacked out, and was found unconscious on the concrete by an old couple. after my recovery I've not taken anti depressants and have never felt like hurting myself. I only did on those evil pills

I am also recovering from a hematoma that I got in a skateboarding accident a year and change ago.
I never went to a doctor because America.

Still have headaches and soreness but it's gotten much better than what it was.
I'm not as quick, or as smart as I used to be. I might be slightly more social though? I was always very social however.

Get used to being a little slow, don't be ashamed to say I fucked my head up.

OK. You don’t mention whether you had surgery. I assume you did. Subdural are usually older people and usually related to incidental remote trauma. Younger people who present with an intracranial hematoma tend to be epidural.

I had a heart attack from drugs and got severe brain damage. Mostly affected my movement but officially I I am retarded

>bux for life
> feel totally lucid and normal

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Yeah I'm on NEET bux too I hate myself

friend you hit the jack pot . Welcome to the new nobility

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I had a medical setting related fall 7 years ago now. Negligent doctor was responsible for it, but he got off scot free but that's a different topic.

I was lucky enough to not get a hematoma but I ended up concussed nonetheless and sustained inner ear damage. The inner ear damage has caused me permanent "benign positional vertigo" or dizziness when I move my head in a certain angle, usually 45 degree. The concussion seemed did in fact affect my short term memory (I space out more), and my ability to play twitch shooter games- anything requiring hand eye coordination. I used to be pretty good in the COD games, CS, and Starcraft. Now, I struggle to keep up with noob players/average k/ds.

I know that this sounds stupid. Like who cares about video games. But the point is that, yes, a simple little fall did change my life. I'm now on SSI disability (Neet) and my quality of life shit. Future is bleak.

There's more side effects and gaps to fill in that 7 year time lapse, but I'm not gonna blog my whole life right now. You're right. You'll never be the same person after. There's before and after. But after several years, I got to tell you that, you need to get into the mindset of not immediately defining your life like that - putting a line in the sand and being 'woe is me.' Playing the victim card when it's not relevant won't help your long term recovery. You need to eventually pick up the pieces, and move onto whatever it is that you're moving onto. I'm not moving onto much, but I keep busy. I read. I photograph and go out to see nature. I listen to music/podcasts. I take the occasional community college class etc. Keep busy and be aware of your limitations (whatever those may be). And be aware that most normies in the world won't care about you, or your history. I've tried to use my health situation in cases in which I needed a little bit of extra help and it fell on deaf ears. People really do not care. So don't despair. Buckle up. Toughen up. Do what you have to.

It sounds as if you matured amazingly in the interval you typed your post.

In your case nobody will notice the difference

Subdural you dumbass.

Someone hit your head. Or you fell and hit your head. Or your on blood thinners and took too many.

Nothing says you're concerned about your brain health like getting so drunk you don't know what board you're on