NoWord

It’s National Brain Awareness Week, March 6th to 12th 2017, and tonight it was launched with an information evening in TCD with Professor Tim Lynch, Director of the Dublin Neurological Institute and National Clinical Lead for Neurology who was joined by one his colleagues as well as by one of his patients; Professor Shane O Mara, Professor of Experimental Brain Research in Trinity College Dublin, provided an overview of what the brain does in our lives.

One of the topics they talked about was deep brain stimulation, a kind of a pace maker for the brain, showing great potential for the treatment of many brain diseases.

Strangely enough, none of the Irish specialists had heard too much about the use of DBS for the treatment of severe acquired brain injury.

Had great plans for today, trying to catch up on work and plans for An Saol and although I was busy all day, it feels like as if there was nothing to show for.

Pádraig had a really great physio session in the morning with much of his body control slowly, very painfully slowly coming back, at least partially.

Taped a short interview for the Newstalk morning drive time programme which will be aired, hopefully, on Wednesday around 8:15.

Tomorrow is swimming day, but only after another, longer session of Brain Awareness Week in TCD’s Science Gallery.

No words from the HSE about a location for An Saol.

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Sin é An Saol

Dublin people used to go on holidays there, today it’s just a 30 minute drive and you’re there. In Bray.

It was a beautiful, bitterly cold spring day. Just perfect to go for a walk to this seaside town where Pádraig had spent his pocket money every year during a trip with his gran who brought him down to the seaside and the amusement arcades with their slot machines.

Not sure, but I think that this is where he must have discovered his interest in gambling, 5p at a time. He never hit the jackpot. But really enjoyed the thrill and the company.

We went down the promenade to the beautiful Bray Head Hotel and a little up Bray Head with beautiful views of Bray and the coast line. Dreaming.

Dreaming about An Saol. The Dreamboat going up the stream. A really exciting Future. Sin é An Saol.

This amazing community of survivors, family, friends, doctors, researchers, therapists, healers, scholars, musicians and artists. There are days when I think big. And think that every thing is possible.

Today was one of those days.

Historic

We are standing in the great tradition of the suffragettes and the cicil rights movement of the sixties. In the past, everybody had a right to vote – except if you were a woman; in the past, everybody had a right to education – except if you were black; today, everybody has a right to rehabilitation, integration, and participation – except if you were the survivor of a severe acquired brain injury.

Today was historic, a day to be remembered and to look back to in the future. The An Saol Café was in full swing. It was packed and there were conversations that had never been had amongst such a big group of survivors of sABI, there families and friends.

 

What really surprised me was the similarity of the experience despite the very different background to the severe acquired brain injury cases. These conversations will be continued.

And our campaign to claim the civil and human rights of our family members has just begun.

Well and then – today was the first time ever that Pádraig travelled on Dublin bus. A dreamboater on the green double decker bus. Brilliant, don’t you think? Had anyone told any of this to anyone just 6 months ago, they would have been told that they were dreamer. But we’re not the only ones…

PS: Here are some more pictures from the An Saol Café (courtesy of Sandy):

Berlin

Back from Berlin tonight where I attended a 2-day ‘After Care Conference’. It’s the 11th year that this conference took place, organised by a group of organisations led by the ZNS-Hannelore Kohl Stiftung. It’s where I heard professors shocking the attendants telling them that they had been in an institution where they saw health carers hoisting survivors of acquired brain injury! Hoisting! Instead of doing a manual transfer!! They couldn’t believe their ears that sABI were still being hoisted.

It was lovely when I came back this evening and Pádraig welcomed me with a big smile. We had a few good news here today and everybody around was in a really good mood.

I am completely exhausted tonight and thinking of a great day tomorrow at the An Saol Café. Looks like we’ll have a record attendance of survivors, with Niall from Longford, as well as Mandy (currently in Donnybrook), and David (now living ini Bray I think) will join the ‘regulars’

We’ll be having a great time – and remember, if you’re coming, bring some cake along and, very importantly, any kind of instrument!

More about Berlin over the coming days – as well as about something of the good news I received yesterday and today…Good night!

Liveline and The Irish Sun

For three days now, Ireland’s most popular phone-in show had callers discussing the scandal of lack of neurological rehabilitation services and the placement of young people in nursing homes without the option of them being able to live in the community if they wanted to with the provision of adequate support services.

Today, Joe took calls from Tommy Lee who talked about how he has to fight to get appropriate neuro rehab services for his partner Amanda Dalton, and Mary Walsh took to the airways to highlight how her daughter Sarah had improved following intensive neuro rehab at a ‘boot camp’ in Germany.

 

As if that was not enough, The Irish Sun today reported on the closure of much sought after beds in the National Rehabilitation Hospital (NRH) because of staff shortages.

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What will be next?

5th Social Gathering – “An Saol Café”

We will be continuing with our Saturday meetings this Saturday
Share your experiences with others!
Gather strength and courage!
Flavour life, literally!

The An Saol Foundation’s 5th Saturday Social Gathering
of survivors of severe Acquired Brain Injury (sABI), their families and friends

An Saol Café

Everybody welcome!

Saturday, 04 March 2017
2pm – 5pm

Odin’s Wood HSE Day Care Centre
Kildonan Road
Finglas West
Dublin 11
Eircode: D11 H526

Enjoy an afternoon with great tea/coffee
Bring a cake, a game or an instrument
Bring yourself, friends and family
Please help us to spread the word!
http://www.ansaol.ie
Reinhard.Schaler@ansaol.ie
For enquiries: 087 – 6736414 (Reinhard)

Sandy

28 years in a nursing home from age 21 following a severe acquired brain injury. Niall is about to celebrate his 49th birthday and defied doctors who had told his family that he would remain in a vegetative state for the rest of his life. His sister Sandy told his story to Joe Duffy today on Ireland’s biggest phone-in radio show, Liveline.

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‘What a remarkable family’, concluded Joe. You can listen to the full programme here.

img_6761We listened to the programme on our way to Pádraig’s weekly swimming session. It was a great interview and congratulations to Sandy for speaking up and for sharing her family’s and especially her brother’s story with us! – Sandy brings her brother up from Longford to the Saturday An Saol Café about once a month. Last time, her mother came with her and we got a picture of herself and Pádraig. I don’t know what the magic of her is but she brought the biggest of smiles to Pádraig’s face when she talked to him!

Consciousness

Trish is in her 50s and suffering from MS. She has been in a nursing home for 5 years but strongly believes that this is not the right place for her. The Irish Nation’s most popular telephone / phone-in show, Liveline, today took up her plight. “Talk-to-Joe’ Duffy, the presenter, asked whether there was anyone not turned 50 who has been in a nursing home for 5 years.

His researchers remembered Pádraig’s story and An Saol and gave me a call, and the opportunity to “Talk to Joe” on national radio about the scandal of the abandonment of young people with severe acquired brain injury in nursing homes without adequate support, therapies, or social environment – as well as sharing the good news of the approval by the Minister of Health and the HSE of our proposed pilot project.

The Northside People are reporting on the approval by the Government and the HSE of the An Saol 3-year pilot project establishing a day centre for persons with a severe acquired brain injury in their newest edition of 01 March 2017, on page 5, in an article written by Terence Flanagan.

Northside People, p.5, 01 March 2017

Northside People, p.5, 01 March 2017

Pádraig keeps braking his own personal bests (PBs) almost on a daily basis. Sitting in his wheelchair, he is now able of keeping his legs lifted up in the air for longer than his carers can. Today, he has started to turn his head to the right – previously, he could turn it only to the left. He smiles more often and really seems to engage much better than ever before with what is going on around him.

The biggest challenge now is to keep making life and living really interesting for him, with challenges he can overcome and milestones he can reach. Getting him to participate more, telling us what he wants and what his opinions are.

To express his consciousness.

Movie

Some of Pádraig’s friends organised a movie ‘night’ for him that was really a movie afternoon. They went to great length to get it all just right: crisps, popcorn, donuts, the whole works. The place certainly smelled like a cinema. The movie they had picked was Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, according to Wikipedia, a 1998 British crime comedy film written and directed by Guy Ritchie, produced by Matthew Vaughn and starring an ensemble cast featuring Jason Flemyng, Dexter Fletcher, Nick Moran, Jason Statham, Steven Mackintosh, Vinnie Jones, and Sting.

Pádraig said he enjoyed it and so did his friends. I got a bit lost with the London underground gangsta language and an extraordinary amount of blood baths… all part of a surreal story line!

Earlier this morning, I had found an interview with Joseph J. Fins.

It’s just four minutes long and really well worth watching.

There is a right to live! There is a human right to conduct your life. With a severe acquired brain injury.

One of the greatest challenges in today’s society is science literacy, says Prof Fins in another interview.

And here is a longer, 34 minute talk presented at the Measuring Borderline States of Consciousness conference, hosted by the NYU Center for Mind, Brain, and Consciousness and the NYU Center for Bioethics on October 24-25, 2014.

If you still have time, have a look at TG4’s extraordinary documentary about a group of old men rowing from Ireland all the way to A Coruña from where they will walk the Camino Inglés to Santiago de Compostela!

The way Pádraig will go in April!

Elder

We had another great afternoon in the “An Saol Café” today in Odin’s Wood. Nice, relaxed, social, different. – Next week, we’ll have some nice music again, with hopefully more families and friends joining us – can’t wait. Please come and join us, and: spread the word.

I picked up a brochure in Odin’t Wood today.
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Read on. Imagine. And just substitute “Elder” with “sABI Survivor”…

There’s no excuse for sABI Survivor Abuse

What is sABI Survivor Abuse?img_6879

sABI Survivor Abuse is defined as a “single or repeated act, or lack of appropriate action, occurring within any relationship where there is anexpectation of trust which causes harm or distress to an sABI survivor or violates their human and civil rights.

In the following paragraph, I substituted ‘ageism’ and ‘age’ with “discrimination against sABI survivors”.

Spotlight on Discriminationfullsizerender

Discrimination against sABI survivors, is the stereotyping of and discrimination against, individuals or groups because of their sABI.

Such discriminatory attitudes can convey the message that sABI survivors are of less value than other citizens. This message is reflected in the ways that people think and speak about sABI survivors and act towards them. As an sABI survivor you may come to see yourself as others see you, and this can diminish your confidence and limit your potential as a person and a citizen.

All that makes perfect sense, doesn’t it?

Only that the HSE hasn’t prepared a brochure entitled “There’s No Excuse for sABI Survivor Abuse” – yet.