Venting - no riding after crash :(
Hello ladies. Last month I was in a bad wreck on my bike. apparently my front wheel got caught in some nasty train tracks. The whole thing was an ordeal (lost consciousness, ambulance ride, ER, Neuro ICU, several days in the hospital), and I can't ride or workout like usual, and I can't drive for another 2 weeks per doctor's orders. On top of that, all the effects of the head trauma suck.
I'm going insane here. I'm allowed on the trainer for moderate efforts, but I'm too tired most days to even think about it. And my husband is being a pain in the rear.
sigh.. anyway, I'm loving reading about everyone else's adventures on the road.
recovering from crash and head trauma
first of all, owie ouch, I am so sorry for your crash.
Secondly, I went through exactly the same thing at the beginning of the year. The cause of the crash was different, but the results were 4 broken ribs with a partially collapsed lung and a severe head trauma, subdural hematoma, loss of consciousness, ambulance ride and 5 days in the hospital. The worst part of all of it was that I had to be off the bike for almost 12 weeks and I just about went berserk.
It took me about two weeks of fretting and fuming to realize that like it or not, I was going to have to take and extended recovery season. Of course the head aches, double vision and dizziness sort of helped that decision. When I finally got off of the pain medication and could move around without the world spinning, I began doing some light exercises, leg lifts, knee lifts, arm circles, gentle head rolls and some very very gentle torso stretching. After another week I added some yoga stretches and some of the poses that didn't force me to invert my head. After almost two months, the doctor finally gave me permission to start back at the gym and I started with some no resistance elliptical and treadmill walking in 1 hour intervals at least 5 days a week and built it up in length and intensity.
I know it's frustrating and crazy making, but I had the good fortune to have a doctor who is also a biker who promised if I followed his orders, that I would be riding as strong and as long as before the accident within 6 months and that there would be little or no after effects in my breathing, head or ribs.
How much of this was tempered by the fact that I was 62 at the time, I can't say, but do get yourself on less pain relief as soon as possible, since they tend to be depressants. Watch your nutrition, since you are less active....... drink lots of nice warm soothing liquids since pain relievers also tend to constipate you.
I could go on but you get the gist. Give yourself time, be patient with the healing process, take up knitting, read, play with the kitties if you have any and heal heal heal.