Recovery

Surviving and Thriving Post-Aneurism and Stroke: Guest Post from Christie Richardson Schreppel

I have the honor of connecting with many fellow survivors and thrivers who share the same goal: lift up others. Christie Richardson Schreppel’s comeback from two life-changing events shows how dedication, positivity, and continued efforts lead to worthwhile results. Christie, like many, had to work for recovery and rehabilitation progress, and she stayed positive and faithful throughout.

5 Practices to Improve Your Future Today

Big changes don’t happen overnight. It’s important to remember one day of practicing these methods to improve your life isn’t enough. Keep at it, build beneficial habits, and reap longterm rewards. You might not notice immediately, but overtime your results will speak for themselves. Listed below are five of these practices that you can look at as daily gifts instead of repeating obligations.

5 Steps to Tailor Routines to Disability Needs

Your body does evolve, and so should your routine! My own daily routine has changed many times over the past nine years since my disability began. Although I modify my level of performance as needed, my baseline routine stays intact and at a comfort level that’s suitable to me. Remember to help your future self by occasionally reviewing your daily patterns using these 5 steps.

5 Self-Advocacy Steps For Independent Research

Independent research is a crucially important part of each person’s recovery. Your own research directly effects your long term outcome while you work to heal each day. This is all quite frustrating for sure, but when it comes to your body this troubleshooting is vital — especially if it leads to possible surgery. How you learn to listen to your body and communicate to others makes a marked difference in how you move forward or how you digress.

5 Tips to Return to Work Post-Aneurysm or Stroke

Going back to work after surviving an aneurysm and/or stroke isn’t easy. Countless unknowns certainly test your confidence. Having said that, your first priority to succeed here is actually much easier than anything you’ve done up to this point in your recovery: have faith and confidence in yourself.

Before we dig into 5 tips to navigate the workplace during or following your recovery, let’s cover what you’ve already accomplished:

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Getting through what you suffered along with all that followed was the hard part. Your life changed. You’ve had to learn how to start over on every level, and now you’re here getting ready to go back to work. Let’s talk about what you’ve learned about yourself thus far. Your confidence level has reached another step up along this new journey with your limitations. Therefore, trust and faith have entered your mind to control a wheelchair or figuring out once again how to put one foot in front of another. You’ve relearned a manageable level of independence to do daily chores on your own. What feels uncertain is doing something new in front of others instead of in the privacy of your own home, where if something doesn’t go so well or as planned, you’re most likely the only one who sees it. Returning to work means you’re center stage among coworkers. This is where your conviction to succeed needs to find its way into your soul. No matter what setbacks might occur throughout any day, you must rely on your confidence and keep looking forward with your chin held high and a smile on your face.

Now, here are 5 tips to consider when preparing to go back to work post-aneurysm or stroke recovery:

1. Communicate Your Needs

When you return to work, find a way up front to let everyone know what is and isn’t acceptable to you. What are you willing to strive to achieve? If your limitations stand in the way, then let that be where you’re willing to accept dependence on others. Do everything you can to set a high bar for yourself when it comes to achievement. In doing so, you set a high bar for everyone else you work with each day.

By communicating your needs, your coworkers see and learn where your limits are and when they should step in to assist you. Having others lend a hand isn’t a problem, nor should asking for help be seen as a roadblock. That said, make sure you never take advantage of your coworkers: strive for independence wherever possible!

2. Be Mindful of Your Mindset

In the beginning, the workplace is as much an assault to your senses as the first day you woke up with your disability. It’s new, it’s unknown, and it requires your patience. Your return might remind you of your first day going to school, with so many uncertainties, fears, and apprehension, but give it a chance. Go into this new chapter of your life with an open mind and enthusiasm. Focus on the mindset that you’re doing this because you want to, not because you have too.

Go into this day with a smile on your face and realize there are people out there in the world who wish they could be doing what you’re doing. However, do it being mindful of your emotions and energy levels. If it’s been a while since you last worked, your body and your mind are not accustomed to thinking beyond what’s going on inside you. Therefore, your using your brain more can cause fatigue onset sooner than expected. When physical and mental fatigue occur at the same time, it’s easy to find yourself overwhelmed. Some people may find it easier to navigate this type of setback. Others may find themselves struggling with mood swings.

So be careful when it comes to exerting yourself. Don’t be afraid to speak up and communicate as needed, and always be mindful of your own mindset.

3. Ask For Help

This is one of those tricky areas that people with disabilities can have difficulties with. Because asking for help switches between independence and dependence, it’s natural to struggle with bringing in outside assistance. Disability or not, we all find times in our lives when we need to ask for help. This doesn’t mean we’ve given up, but rather the opposite: asking for help means, under the current circumstances, we must accomplish something with external assistance.

Asking for help is far better than injuring yourself and causing a setback. This also helps you manage your energy and assists with bonding with your coworkers. It may take some doing, but the more you practice, the more organic and natural collaborating to accomplish workplace goals will feel.

Find a way to let asking for help into your life. Remember, your journey forward works more efficiently when you open yourself up to change.

4. Build Endurance Overtime

Energy management is the most important factor in your recovery and is especially important when you go back to work. Strengthening your endurance is a daily goal, and not one to rush.

There’s a lot of personal therapy to be found returning to work as well. If you’re craving the return of normalcy, the workplace is a great place to find a familiar, reliable routine. When you’re absorbed in work, you’re concentrating more on the project at hand than on your disability. You’re interacting with coworkers and talking about subjects that are not centered around you. In other words, you benefit from engaging in a regular work life!

The more you do as each day comes and goes, the more you’ll build strength and endurance. If you feel that you’re physically or mentally weak in certain areas, then here’s two suggestions I can provide that work hand in hand: Pilates for the strength training, and neuromuscular massage to calm your body. Pilates will work the small stability muscles, and the massage therapy will reduce help to reduce adhesions and restrictions in your muscles.

Remember that endurance is built overtime. This is a long-term goal, not a short-term accomplishment. Pace yourself now, thank yourself later.

5. Document Your Progress

Find time at the end of each day to sit and write about what worked and didn’t work. What made you happy? What bothered you? How do you make the next workday smoother? Journaling is very good therapy to consider because it helps you to release your concerns and helps calm your soul by venting as you write. Writing also assists you in seeing progression along this new advancing journey.

Remember this when you journal: it doesn’t have to be perfect or a few pages long. Again, just start small as in a sentence or two.


I hope these 5 tips will help you more confidently navigate the workplace. Although each journey is unique, there are common battles we each face, in one way or another. My aim is to always help where I can, even if it’s by lending an ear in the comments section. If you have a thought or question, please don’t hesitate to connect below or find me on socials.


Managing Pain: 5 Activities to Relax the Mind and Soul

How do we manage our pain and how do we find activities that relax our mind and soul? In this post, I share 5 tips you can implement today to make positive change. Disabled people dealing with pain and exhaustion from their limitations work very hard to keep their emotions in check. They also dream and have aspirations of a day when they are liberated from their bonds. Please be kind and non-judgmental along their journey!

Writing About Trauma, Disability, Recovery: The Story Behind FINDING FORWARD

There is power in writing your story. There is honor in sharing what you’ve gained with others. After waking up paralyzed from the neck down at 49, I realized there was no instruction manual I could refer to during this time, no resource I could lean on to find my way through dark hours, no guide on how to find my way forward. But now, there’s a book in the works that points readers toward proactive vs. reactive recovery approaches, methods to overcome obstacles, and tips on how to avoid letting “I can’t” rule your vocabulary. My journey has taken unexpected turns, and it’s time to pass on what I’ve picked up: Finding Forward: You Have the Will Within hits bookshelves on October 12, 2021. Read on to find the link to preorder!

7 Steps to Inner Peace After a Disabling Event

For so many of us who find ourselves facing a new disability, the challenges that come along with it can be both small and immense. However, despite this collision with fate, a little ingenuity and awareness help us discover we can succeed in overcoming our setbacks. These 7 steps will help you create an inner peace and find your way forward after a disabling event.

How to Return to Work After an Intense Injury

Returning to work after a devastating injury can be an opportunity to heal in an exciting and different way. The psychological side of working has many different challenges that are good in multiple ways, like giving back, contributing, feeling worthwhile, and restarting your life. On the other hand, those challenges require a thick skin at times when you might not be prepared. The lesson here is to keep fighting at all costs. Even though your fight is harder than most, the payoff in the end is a life that is appreciated more than normal people can ever know. I am always mindful of every nuance of a good day, and on those painful, heart-hurting days when I need some uplift, I lean toward a song by the Beatles and Sir Paul McCartney, “Let It Be.”

Finding Motivation, Movement, & Momentum After Paralysis

As I unwillingly welcomed my new dependence, I said goodbye, for now, to my independence. MOTIVATION, MOVEMENT, and MOMENTUM were now my singular vision and my full-time job to recover from paralysis. My very survival depended on conquering those three goals. It didn’t matter how I got there, and nothing, or nobody would stand in my way.

Parallels Between Paralysis and a Post-Pandemic World

During the initial days of my paralysis back in 2012, my confidence as well as my independence were shattered and constantly in question along with my survivability. Disbelief set in regarding what happened while wondering if I would ever walk again. I was concerned about what other people thought seeing me in that condition. Friends that I had for many years during that time suddenly had different values that I could no longer keep up with and as a result moved on. As time went on, I realized I needed to find my way back to a place where I could feel socially inclusive again.

Inspiration During Recovery and Now

However, as time goes on it’s easy to start feeling withdrawn, as though you no longer feel a connection with those who are trying to help you. It’s by no means the people: sometimes it’s the devastation and type of trauma experienced which causes a conflict and the inability to hear and accept the words of peace being bestowed while you’re trying heal. Their words and actions are forthright, but unknown to those helping is what they intend is better suited for people like themselves instead of what you face and fight for each day from the time you wake up until the end of your day. The more these polite and caring actions occur, the more it’s easy to feel withdrawn and not accepted. For instance, how does one explain what life is like in a wheelchair if those receiving the message have never spent time in one? How does one tell someone with PTSD everything will be ok if they’ve never experienced what caused the PTSD? The message by those people intending to help may only come across as noise, or notes on a sheet of music and void of lyrics. In other words, the people offering help and the person who needs it are more than likely speaking two different languages and neither understand the other.

There are a few things to consider here from both parties. For the person who is injured consider the following:

5 Tips For Recharging Vacations With a Disability

Everybody at some point needs an escape for mental refreshment or healing. Because each of us are at different ability levels, advice on traveling for mental healing will be capably acceptable for some and not the best fit for others. With this in mind, here are 5 tips for traveling to encourage reflection and mental healing:

Preparing to Transition From Hospital to Home Post-Injury

Are you ready to go home?

For those of us who finally get to return home from the hospital after a traumatic event has altered our lives, a new chapter in our journey awaits that has the potential of causing nonstop challenge and change. Our ability to face these adjustments needs to be met with patience and an evolving open mind as we rewire our brains into accepting our home environment while moving forward.

5 Key Things to Know About a Disabled Loved One, From a Disabled Individual

I would like to say to all the family members, friends, and caregivers who are currently helping someone who is disabled in any way that your patience and efforts never go unnoticed and are always the kindest of gifts and the best of blessings. You are heroes to all of us who struggle and combat our daily bonds in one way or another. Whether or not we realize it, you make each day worth fighting for, and what afflicts us goes away even if only for a few short moments. You have the ability to help us heal through happiness by pulling our thoughts toward something or someplace much better.

It’s never easy to do what you do for us. You may beat yourself up wondering, Was what I did today enough? Did I say or do the right thing? Did I spend enough time? Am I actually helping?

How to Set Goals to Move Forward Post-Injury

Setting goals is actually quite easy and fun if you allow it. However, to do so, the first step is a leap of faith to acknowledge and allow yourself to let go of what is burdening you so you can let your mind calm down and find some much needed peace. What I’m saying here is that you have to let a little self-confidence seep in so you can let “I can’t” seep out. If your mind is full of today’s list of aches and pains or doubts, then tell your brain the complaint department is closed. With those concessions you can now get down to business and move on to setting a few goals and achieving them.

Progress Isn't a Straight Line: What to Do When Rehabilitation Setbacks Happen

Healing isn’t a linear equation. Progress sets its own direction and pace.

Since I know each day will bring its own set of challenges, I know that if I go into that day with a positive attitude and possibly something funny on my mind then I’ll meet those challenges with a smile on my face. A good old friend of mine Tom Keck used to tell me, “Some days it’s chicken, and some days it’s feathers.” and other than always finding that statement hilariously funny, I found this was a good way for me to approach two steps forward and one step back in my recovery.

Finding Forward

Words like paralysis, stroke, or trauma (of any sort) are just words, and they by no means define who we are as human beings. If you’re finding that fate has chosen a new path along your journey of life, and you’re wondering why, look upon those new paths as a fresh start or a new beginning and set the word “why” off to the side for a while. These were my initial thoughts as I lay on a gurney, shut off from my entire body. Yes, I could have chosen to lie in panic, and my initial reaction was indeed that, but I chose a different path. My mind still worked; I could breathe, speak, see, and hear. Now all I needed was to create that first step in my mind and achieve it.