The Lion's Pride Lion's Pride Volume 12 (Spring 2019) | Page 8

experience and developing pneumonia. When you get hit in the left side of your brain, all kinds of things begin to happen, including organs shutting down, delusions, and other kinds of complications. A damaged liver didn’t help my situation. They weren’t sure if I would make it through the first seven days, and, if I did, if I would regain my cognitive thinking. I had also lost the vision in my left eye. The worst part was that my body wasn’t cooperating. I wasn’t capable of talking and walking normally, and my words came out slowly. It is one of the most helpless feelings a person can experience. You’re trapped in your own body. By the third week, they let me walk with a walker. My mind was resisting everything that was happening. I just wanted all my abilities to come back to normal. Once it was confirmed that my cognitive thinking and hand-eye coordination had returned, I was discharged with my walker. With a little practice, I quickly switched to a cane. My grandmother used to say, “Never be afraid of a little bit of work,” which became my mantra. The word “work” can mean many types of work, and I had a ton of work to do. I spent the next six months healing and fighting vertigo, walking with a cane and relearning how to function. After being laid up for three weeks, the resulting muscle atrophy was debilitating. I had lost seventy pounds and was left with no muscle mass. At this point, I was thinking, it sucks to be human. I looked awful in the mirror.