Dating someone with a head injury

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Contents:
  1. Dating: What You Should and Shouldn't Do
  2. Dating, Romance and Sexuality Post-ABI
  3. The blog of the Brain Injury Society of Toronto (BIST)
  4. Traumatic Brain Injury and Intimate Relationships: What You Need to Know | DoDLive
  5. Main Document

Doctors an others didn't think I was going to move or walk again. I had to relearn how to move an walk again, an I did have a difficulty with my fingers a little an I'm walking. I thank the Lord How are you doing today? I hope awesome and the next pieces have fallen into place. I am looking for a man with TBI cause I think it would be easier to date someone who understands. After my accident im Sep. He assured me it was not due to the accident. Recent Blog Posts Advice for Caregivers: Getting the Help You Need, Now.

Dating: What You Should and Shouldn't Do

I am a social worker for the Army. I often wish I could address the general population of females: Thank you for starting here. I'll stay tuned and use these posts as a resource for my guys! Thank you for serving and i was in a coma 21 days and my mood changes and that is what i need to do know that i am 1 of the very fortunate human life comes and it go's. I need to work on my defects not yours or the next human Just a few weeks ago, I met the man of my dreams.

Comments (87)

He has depression and social anxiety, so it's been difficult getting through to him lately. But just during the few wonderful times we've spent together, I truly know he's the one for me. He's had a hard time dating because a lot of women don't see past his challenges. I can see straight into his heart. And there I see the most loving, kind, intelligent, funny, creative, gentle, brave and handsome man I've ever met in my life.

I know he's going through a very hard time right now I pray for him every single day, morning and night. He's always on my mind. I won't ever give up on him or ever stop praying for his full recovery and restoration. I would give anything to hear him laugh, see his amazing smile and stare into his beautiful brown eyes again.

One day with him would be worth a lifetime of waiting I am a female with a tbi. It is difficult to believe I can find someone when I have a mild tbi. I worked in mental health for years, now cannot. However, an injury can mean major changes to the relationship, for both the survivor and the partner. Both people will have to adjust to the changes after a brain injury, which can be a stressful period.

Dating, Romance and Sexuality Post-ABI

Maintaining a relationship is often dependant on communication. Part of communicating well with your partner may involve conversations about your injury. How to tell the person about your injury and talking about how your injury impacts the relationship can be difficult talks to start, but starting slow, providing small amounts of information at a time and planning ahead about when, where and how you want to talk to your partner can help to reduce anxiety.

Being sexually intimate is another area to figure out. For some brain injury survivors, sexual needs, functions and abilities change.

The blog of the Brain Injury Society of Toronto (BIST)

This can be a major life change for people, and a major consideration when re-entering the dating world. For those in relationships before injury, both partners may have to work together to renegotiate the sexual aspects they share. Talking to your partner is key. You are commenting using your WordPress.


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Traumatic Brain Injury and Intimate Relationships: What You Need to Know | DoDLive

Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. However, this answer also comes with an asterisk. In order for people with a TBI to maintain healthy, loving, romantic relationships, they will need support, encouragement, and understanding from their partner. While this sounds like a recipe for the success of any romantic relationship, there are specific ways in which people with brain injury will need to be supported. There are also commitments the people with brain injury will need to make to themselves, their partner, and the relationship, in order to sustain relational happiness and security over the long term.

The partners of people who has a TBI must first educate themselves about how brain injury impacts an individual. In addition to the frequently cited TBI challenges related to thinking such as memory, attention and concentration, and problem-solving, individuals with brain injury often experience changes in behavioral, social, and emotional functioning. In a relationship, partners often read the emotional and social cues of their partner in order to gauge the stability of the relationship.

However, after TBI, some disruption in emotions and challenges with communication are to be expected. Education can also help partners not to personalize behaviors that may be more related to brain injury than a reaction to or reflection of the relationship. Again, while these may be important skills for any romantic relationship, the way in which a partner de-escalates an argument when their spouse has a TBI will be different from the approach used by couples where brain injury is not a concern.

Reading information written for caregivers, attending family member support groups, and meeting with a therapist who has familiarity with brain injury are all solid ways to build an effective skill set.

Concussion / Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)

Of course, maintenance of a healthy relationship always requires the dedication of both partners. People with brain injury can improve the likelihood that their relationship will succeed by attending therapy focused on emotional regulation and compensatory strategy development. Additionally, by focusing on building communication skills, asking for help, and focusing on the positive, survivors can enhance the emotional connection they have with their partner.

Both emotional and physical intimacy can be impacted by brain injury. Couples counseling can assist both partners in developing strategies and coping skills that can enhance the intimate connection both individuals feel with one another. This is an eye-opening realization for me. I've had a TBI since , when I was Many of my gfs have told me that I wasn't happy with them, but I was happy with them.

Main Document

In 28 years my zero affect has set in more, I guess. I was smiling, but looked in the mirror and saw that I looked annoyed. What can I do? My boyfriend and I have been together for six months. He recently was in a car accident and diagnosed with severe TBI. I guess my question is will he remember me when he wakes up? Will we be able to have the relationship we once did? Will he know that we loved each other and were in a relationship. We lived together and I love him very much.

I just feel so lost and have never been in theis situation before. He may or may not remember you. Depending on the injury. He may remember things different as they were.. Due to injury of the brain he will probably be different in many ways.