To understand me and the changes to mine and my families life you would have to know that pre brain hemorrhage/children I was a solicitor. Before the brain hemorrhage I was a very active mum. I want to blog now because I hate being bored, I want to help other disabled young people - this is not a position you expect to be in in your 30’s (!) and I hope it will be interesting to others. A bit about me: I am 37 year old wife and mummy to a 11 & 9 year old. I was going to go into lots of detail but suffice to say I had a big brain hemorrhage caused by an AVM (Arteriovenous Malformation) causing a stroke - type 'AVM' into a internet search engine if you are interested. I was born with it and I could have had a bleed at anytime. Mine bled and now I spend all day/every day striving for 'a semblance of normality'... Yes, it was rubbish and yes, I wish it hadn't have happened but it did and there isn't anything I can do about it. I do...
My daughter (11) wrote the following speech for her class at school and her teacher kindly sent it to me. I think what I have been whinging about (a lot obviously ) has gone in: 'Hi my name is x and I am here to talk to you about disability discrimination. The reason I am going to talk about this subject is I am very passionate people know what disability discrimination is. All over the world people are building new restaurants and hotels, but these new amazing buildings are forgetting about laws that were put in place to help the disabled access for these buildings. These buildings are still allowed to open due to them finding ways around the law. I am going to tell you a short story about something that happened to my mum. One morning my mum was going out and so my mum called a taxi. When she was saying goodbye to her PA/helper the taxi driver would only speak to my mum's PA, completely ignoring her presence. After a while my Mum had, had enough. She told the driver she ...
When was the last time you fell over? I don't mean a little trip I mean ending up on the floor! I fell over about an hour ago, which is the second time this week, that I have ended up on my bottom. I will admit this is unusual. I am extremely careful after spraining my ankle in 2015 (which wasn't great. It was a day into the 6 weeks holiday and was surprisingly painful - with all the brain surgery etc and 2 c-sections that easily hurt the most!). I will never forget my automatic feeling of not concern about it really hurting - I thought I had broken it - but the upset it was going to set my physio back! What has been surprising is how ok and generally acceptable it is for me to get hurt, on a daily basis. Quite often I have big bruises and won't know how I did it. It’s not because it didn’t hurt, it probably did, but it is just my normal now and I get on with things. I wouldn't think even to mention it unless: 1. ...
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