Seeking Other Violent Crime Injuries And My Story Of Injury
#1
Posted 29 November 2011 - 03:23 AM
When I was 12 my family and I were driving home from the movies when a stranger started driving aggressively towards our car. The car tried to run us off the road, played chicken with us, and then drove off. Scared and uncertain what to do my step mom called the police and reported the driver as a drunk. We were advised to go to a well lit parking lot behind our house and wait for a squad car to take our report. While we waited the stranger had gone home, changed cars, gotten a gun, and found us in the parking lot. My step mom saw the man roll down his car window and shoot at us. The man shot to kill all three of us, but the car stopped two bullets.
The third bullet entered my right shoulder and ricocheted and fragmented. The tiniest sliver sliced between my t3 and t4 vertebrae severing my spine 95%. The larger piece ripped through my lungs and tissue finally lodging itself into my left pec muscle. I suffered many collapsed lungs, spinal fluids going everywhere but my spine and brain, pneumonia, ect during my months in the Icu. I even had a tracheotomy for a while. In the beginning I had no idea what paralysis really meant and coped amazingly well as far as people could tell. I spent a lot of my first year in the press, doing telethons, and being the perfect paralyzed happy person everyone expected. I've never had more than 3 therapy sessions to deal with everything and my friends, family, and acquaintances seem to think my life is exactly the same as an able persons and don't bother to learn more.
For a long time I've tried to do this alone with no support system, doctors that don't give a shit about me, and no clue where to find help. I hate being the angry, bitter, and depressed person I've become. I'm really hoping to make friends here and learn more about the Sci community I belong to. I really hope to find other people that are innocent victims of violent crimes that can relate to my story and the feeling of being raped of a healthy able life through no fault of their own.
#2
Posted 29 November 2011 - 03:32 AM
Norsegoddess, on 29 November 2011 - 03:23 AM, said:
When I was 12 my family and I were driving home from the movies when a stranger started driving aggressively towards our car. The car tried to run us off the road, played chicken with us, and then drove off. Scared and uncertain what to do my step mom called the police and reported the driver as a drunk. We were advised to go to a well lit parking lot behind our house and wait for a squad car to take our report. While we waited the stranger had gone home, changed cars, gotten a gun, and found us in the parking lot. My step mom saw the man roll down his car window and shoot at us. The man shot to kill all three of us, but the car stopped two bullets.
The third bullet entered my right shoulder and ricocheted and fragmented. The tiniest sliver sliced between my t3 and t4 vertebrae severing my spine 95%. The larger piece ripped through my lungs and tissue finally lodging itself into my left pec muscle. I suffered many collapsed lungs, spinal fluids going everywhere but my spine and brain, pneumonia, ect during my months in the Icu. I even had a tracheotomy for a while. In the beginning I had no idea what paralysis really meant and coped amazingly well as far as people could tell. I spent a lot of my first year in the press, doing telethons, and being the perfect paralyzed happy person everyone expected. I've never had more than 3 therapy sessions to deal with everything and my friends, family, and acquaintances seem to think my life is exactly the same as an able persons and don't bother to learn more.
For a long time I've tried to do this alone with no support system, doctors that don't give a shit about me, and no clue where to find help. I hate being the angry, bitter, and depressed person I've become. I'm really hoping to make friends here and learn more about the Sci community I belong to. I really hope to find other people that are innocent victims of violent crimes that can relate to my story and the feeling of being raped of a healthy able life through no fault of their own.
I'm a bit curious after reading your story, how are things going now? How long ago did these things happen? Were the others in the car alright? Was the man who attempted to murder you ever caught?
Scuze my nosiness. Please feel free to use this place to vent, ask questions, reseach, yadda yadda yadda. Although most of us have different circumstances, you wont find a more understanding bunch. Or at least that's been my experience.
#3
Posted 29 November 2011 - 03:54 AM
I can see by your choice of forum name that there is another side to you beside the "angry, bitter, and depressed person" person you became.
It is more than justified to be angry at health care people who do not seem to care about you becoming more able and, well, goddess-like.
I have been fortunate to meet a number of MDs and nurses who cared deeply for my learning, and 2 PTs out of many.
The folks here have been a great support group. Over the past 18 months (I am 3.5 yers from getting hit by a stupid driver) I have discovered that I am the best movement coach available. Once I got settled into the notion of self-reliance I have developed many new muscles and changed my walker-assisted walking to leg-based instead of torso-based. You know the style- where a person hauls their legs about using torso strength, like a puppet.
A big welcome to you, and as Black Sheep suggested, take time to tell us a lot more about yourself.
#4
Posted 29 November 2011 - 04:04 AM
I was shot in August of 1999, so its been 12 years. My dad and step mom were uninjured physically. My dad doesn't really show emotions so I don't know if he's dealt with it, and my step mom still suffers puts from it and milks every dramatic moment she can get out of it. As far as I'm doing I'd rather be dead then paralyzed, I don't thank anyone for reviving me and have often cursed being a minor at the time of the shooting. I now have a dnr form filled out though since I'm old enough for people to care about my decision now.
For the most part I feel like I was raped and then punished for surviving against my own will. I'm angry at how ignorant people are to paralysis, how afraid people are to learn or even be associated with someone in a wheelchair. I'm angry that its so hard to go to college, get a job, find parking, grocery shop, ect. Everything I do, I do alone and I'm so exhausted trying so hard at everything and having everything still be so difficult. I hate that I can't be spontaneous, that I can't go anywhere I want whenever I want. I want my childhood back, I want a family that cares, and I desperately want to not be alone anymore.
#5
Posted 29 November 2011 - 07:06 AM
I can't relate with the violence portion...although I also felt robbed & imprisoned.....I got hurt back in 1990 when I was 14 but along with the SCI I got a TBI. Mom started jokingly referring to it as "the CNS combo package" (CNS being Central nervous System...a sign hit me in the head causing Traumatic Brain Injury, dislocating a bunch of vertebra including my neck & broke L2 causing Spinal Cord Injury). Like you I felt robbed. I had even had some scholarships lined up & had it all set to graduate 2-3 semesters early. I had lots of "friends" but they weren't really my FRIENDS seeing as they all bailed when I didn't return to being fully normal....85% recovery with the CNS BS was apparently too slow + not good enough. I've never found any magic happy pills...it's just that eventually I realized that being angry didn't make the situation any easier...so although it has been a hard lesson to learn but eventually I did learn to just "let go" of things that are out of my control & just to make the best of it that I possibly can. Rant, vent, cry, or scream....we've all done it.
Edited by wheeliebear75, 29 November 2011 - 07:13 AM.
*Wheelchairs are made of a special ocular magnetic alloy......they're "eyeball magnets".*
*I USE a wheelchair, that does NOT make ME a wheelchair!*
#6
Posted 29 November 2011 - 09:17 AM
Edited by Kayak Girl, 29 November 2011 - 09:18 AM.
#7
Posted 29 November 2011 - 04:16 PM
I cannot really relate to the terrible circumstances of your injury but in some way we can all relate to the difficulties you now face in your life everyday.
I do hope that through this site you make friends and feel you can moan, rant and share any good moments that come along !
#8
Posted 29 November 2011 - 05:26 PM
I understand what you mean when you say you’d rather be dead, which of course doesn’t mean you’re suicidal, but that you have a strong ‘death instinct.’ In my own dark moments I, too, often wish I could escape this world, even if it is to become nothing at all.
I won’t foist platitude after platitude upon you in an effort to make you feel that in time life will somehow assume some semblance of what it used to be, because you already seem to know that it won’t. Nevertheless, you will find a way to cope, it’s what we humans do. And, unfortunately, we do it too well.
You should try your best to become a part of a community like this one. Whenever I feel the fog of depression descending on me, I come here and read about so many others like myself who have persevered and triumphed in the face of trials similar to those confronting me. And I take heart from their strength.
This is something that is always easier when you don't attempt to do it alone, and there are good people here who are eager to assist you in whatever way they can. You should take advantage of that.
Edited by bongorum, 29 November 2011 - 09:10 PM.
-Albert Camus
#9
Posted 30 November 2011 - 10:04 AM
Kayak Girl, on 29 November 2011 - 09:17 AM, said:
Thanks for being so welcoming. It's always weird when people remember me from the news I feel like I haven't met the expectations of the public. I'm really interested in getting to know everything you know about the wheelchair community in the area. Do you still kayak? I went once before my injury and would like to do it again. Well I hope to get to know you better and thanks again for the welcome.
#10
Posted 30 November 2011 - 10:16 AM
wheeliebear75, on 29 November 2011 - 07:06 AM, said:
I can't relate with the violence portion...although I also felt robbed & imprisoned.....I got hurt back in 1990 when I was 14 but along with the SCI I got a TBI. Mom started jokingly referring to it as "the CNS combo package" (CNS being Central nervous System...a sign hit me in the head causing Traumatic Brain Injury, dislocating a bunch of vertebra including my neck & broke L2 causing Spinal Cord Injury). Like you I felt robbed. I had even had some scholarships lined up & had it all set to graduate 2-3 semesters early. I had lots of "friends" but they weren't really my FRIENDS seeing as they all bailed when I didn't return to being fully normal....85% recovery with the CNS BS was apparently too slow + not good enough. I've never found any magic happy pills...it's just that eventually I realized that being angry didn't make the situation any easier...so although it has been a hard lesson to learn but eventually I did learn to just "let go" of things that are out of my control & just to make the best of it that I possibly can. Rant, vent, cry, or scream....we've all done it.
Thanks.
That's wild about your injuries and your friends, my friends have been much more helpful and active than my family in my new lifestyle. I'm trying my best to not be angry but lately it feels like my only fuel.
I hope to get to know you better through the forums and learn from your experiences.
#11
Posted 30 November 2011 - 10:28 AM
Tetracyclone, on 29 November 2011 - 03:54 AM, said:
I can see by your choice of forum name that there is another side to you beside the "angry, bitter, and depressed person" person you became.
It is more than justified to be angry at health care people who do not seem to care about you becoming more able and, well, goddess-like.
I have been fortunate to meet a number of MDs and nurses who cared deeply for my learning, and 2 PTs out of many.
The folks here have been a great support group. Over the past 18 months (I am 3.5 yers from getting hit by a stupid driver) I have discovered that I am the best movement coach available. Once I got settled into the notion of self-reliance I have developed many new muscles and changed my walker-assisted walking to leg-based instead of torso-based. You know the style- where a person hauls their legs about using torso strength, like a puppet.
A big welcome to you, and as Black Sheep suggested, take time to tell us a lot more about yourself.
That's amazing that you can walk with a c injury. I'm extremely jealous. I picked the name from an ongoing joke with my roommate. I was complaining about how all the second hand wheelchair stuff listed was. For short atrophied/skinny people. We always joke about my viking lineage and how I was made to be wrestling bears in Vinland and not trying to fit in a tiny chair LOL. I am more than the bitter person but sometimes it seems fruitless to be brave and nice. I have way too much integrity to really stop trying though.
I really hope I can have the same luck as you finding doctors that care.
Thanks for the welcome, hope to see you around the forums.
#12
Posted 30 November 2011 - 10:33 AM
JaneC, on 29 November 2011 - 04:16 PM, said:
I cannot really relate to the terrible circumstances of your injury but in some way we can all relate to the difficulties you now face in your life everyday.
I do hope that through this site you make friends and feel you can moan, rant and share any good moments that come along !
#13
Posted 30 November 2011 - 10:41 AM
bongorum, on 29 November 2011 - 05:26 PM, said:
I understand what you mean when you say you’d rather be dead, which of course doesn’t mean you’re suicidal, but that you have a strong ‘death instinct.’ In my own dark moments I, too, often wish I could escape this world, even if it is to become nothing at all.
I won’t foist platitude after platitude upon you in an effort to make you feel that in time life will somehow assume some semblance of what it used to be, because you already seem to know that it won’t. Nevertheless, you will find a way to cope, it’s what we humans do. And, unfortunately, we do it too well.
You should try your best to become a part of a community like this one. Whenever I feel the fog of depression descending on me, I come here and read about so many others like myself who have persevered and triumphed in the face of trials similar to those confronting me. And I take heart from their strength.
This is something that is always easier when you don't attempt to do it alone, and there are good people here who are eager to assist you in whatever way they can. You should take advantage of that.
Thanks for the welcome and I hope to get to know you better.
#14
Posted 01 December 2011 - 04:09 PM
#15
Posted 02 December 2011 - 04:52 AM
koolkitty, on 01 December 2011 - 04:09 PM, said:
Hello & a warm welcome to YOU TOO in the forum.
MOST Dr.s unless they specialize in SCI are clueless. And whether it be an injury/illness to yourself or anger towards another person or something completely different: (I won't say whether harboring anger is right or wrong) only that THIS life has taught me to step back & ask myself "IS THIS something that is I can do something about?", & "What can I DO to make this better?".....if the answers to BOTH questions are nothing then I go on to making the best of it that I can, saving my energy for those things that I CAN have an effect on. I wouldn't say to stop being angry at his selfishness or the lack of punishment given by the courts because you & your daughter & your grandson have EVERY RIGHT to be angry. I'll only ask you to ask yourself if your anger is doing anything positive for any of you.
*Wheelchairs are made of a special ocular magnetic alloy......they're "eyeball magnets".*
*I USE a wheelchair, that does NOT make ME a wheelchair!*
#16
Posted 02 December 2011 - 05:49 AM
#17
Posted 02 December 2011 - 08:28 AM
koolkitty, on 01 December 2011 - 04:09 PM, said:
I'm glad that you joined, I wish my parents cared enough to look on forums or even try to understand what I go through. I would say that alone helps your daughter immensely. I do harbor a lot of anger at my parents for keeping me alive, I did feel like it was really selfish, but I was 12 my biggest responsibility was doing the dishes not raising a child. I don't know if she feels the same way but it is hard to keep the will to live in a world that isn't ready for you, accessibility wise and socially. If we had been injured in some parts of Asia we would have been left without equipment or help and shunned for being alive and crippled. I would talk to her about her wishes, sometimes problem solving makes life a little easier. If anything it puts perspective on hardships. The responsibility of having my dog has saved me from suicide and given me purpose, maybe her son does the same for her.
As for forgiving, its hard. After my injury I forgave the man who shot me because I had faith in my Christian belief and I thought God would provide and it was a waste of time to dwell on the shooter. Now, well I'm not really religious and I would like to make the shooter suffer everything I've been through. It's understandable to hate her ex, and you may never forgive him, and thats okay. Unless you're going after sainthood ;-). But I do agree with wheelie and try not to spend all your energy hating and obsessing about something you can't fix. I wish I could be more inspiring or sell paralysis better but I really hope that my honesty and what opinions I do give can help you in some small way.
#18
Posted 02 December 2011 - 08:34 AM
Beautiful, on 02 December 2011 - 05:49 AM, said:
I relate to the feeling of it just catching up to you. I thought paralysis sucked before but now looking for jobs, housing, dating, school, it all seems so impossible. I feel like for every thing an able person does I have to spend 100x the effort, energy, and money to only possibly achieve. How do you keep your energy level up when its depleted so quickly?
#19
Posted 06 December 2011 - 08:14 AM
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