How I Rescued My Brain: a psychologist's remarkable recovery from stroke and trauma
By (Author) David Roland
Scribe Publications
Scribe Publications
23rd July 2014
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Coping with / advice about illness and specific health conditions
Neurology and clinical neurophysiology
362.196810092
Paperback
304
Width 136mm, Height 209mm, Spine 29mm
326g
As a forensic psychologist, David Roland often saw the toughest, most heartbreaking cases. The emotional trauma had begun to take its toll - and then the global financial crisis hit, leaving his family facing financial ruin. When he found himself in an emergency ward with little idea of how he got there, doctors wondered if he had had a nervous breakdown. Eventually they discovered the truth: David had suffered a stroke, which had resulted in brain injury. He faced two choices: give up or get his brain working again. Drawing on the principles of neuroplasticity, David set about re-wiring his brain. He embarked on a search that brought him into contact with doctors, neuroscientists, yoga teachers, musicians, and a Buddhist nun, and found the tools to restore his sense of self: psychotherapy, swimming, music, mindfulness, and meditation. This is the story of David's neurological difficulties and of his remarkable cognitive recovery. It is also an account of a journey to emotional health. How I Rescued My Brain is an amazing tale of one man's resilience, and his determination to overcome one of the most frightening situations imaginable - the fear that he had lost his mind and might not get it back.
David Roland is the author of The Confident Performer.