After Lotje Sodderland had a stroke at 34, she couldn’t speak, read or even think. Over time she’s worked to rehabilitate her brain and accept what happened to her – making her insights into the mysterious questions of how we think and who we are all the more revealing
RIGHT from the start it’s clear this is no ordinary video selfie – the young woman staring into the camera looks vulnerable and scared. You can’t see her head at all, only her face peering from a hoodie she wears to hide her partly shaved scalp and bloody scar – a grizzly reminder of the emergency brain operation she’s just undergone. “Okay, I’m alive,” she says haltingly. “I’m not dead. That’s a start.”
After suffering a life-threatening stroke at age 34, Lotje Sodderland awoke in a London hospital feeling like she’d landed on a different planet. Just a few days earlier she’d been a producer with an advertising agency, full of life and energy, always on the move. But unbeknown to her, she’d been born with a tangle of abnormal blood vessels in her brain. One night in November 2011, for no obvious reason, it ruptured.
By keeping her in a medically induced coma for two days and performing surgery on her parietal and temporal lobes – the parts of the brain housing language and perception – doctors were able to save her life.
But they weren’t able to do anything to reverse the catastrophic damage caused by the haemorrhage. She awoke to a world she didn’t recognise.
“Colours were much more vibrant and sounds were louder,” she now recalls.
“I couldn’t speak at first, or read, and my thoughts weren’t linear or logical. I knew who I was, and I recognised my mother and brother – but I didn’t know anything else.”
この記事は YOU South Africa の September 21, 2017 版に掲載されています。
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この記事は YOU South Africa の September 21, 2017 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
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