Currently: we have sent back the wheelchair and hospital bed. Ian sleeps upstairs. I no longer escort him to the bathroom/shower (he still uses a shower seat). He is fully capable of making his own meals, although digging around in the fridge sometimes presents a problem (balance AND leaning, not so much).
The PEG tube is gone; no more wires! Naturally, he is thrilled by this development.
Thanks to my MIL's fortuitous Christmas gift, he's able to read ... although it's not a comfortable, relaxing activity, it CAN be done. (Current reads: Robinson Crusoe and More Than a Carpenter.)
At the annual Church Beer Fest (don't ask!), he partook of his first ABS2 barley-based beverage.

We have now moved from in-home therapy to out. We travel twice a week and Ian has speech, occupational and physical therapy concurrently ... so a grueling 3-hr session each visit. He is expected (and is harassed) into following up with a series of exercises at home.
![]() |
Hi, I'm Ian. I promise not to stand up so fast next time. |
We went to Ian's (office? employer? business?) for a visit, and everyone seemed very pleased to see him up and about. It did him good to chat and reconnect, I think. They seemed amenable to his return, whenever that may be or however that might look, so that's encouraging. Even if they were "smiling and nodding," I think it gave him a hopeful boost.

What you can do:
Pray, naturally; this is the long haul portion of recovery. New territory, no real answers, just hard work that provides tiny improvements.
Encourage: "you look great!"s are becoming commonplace, which is lovely.
Challenge: sometimes rather than attempt something, Ian will look at me and give me a mope to say, "could you do this?" Trying, failing, then asking for help is one thing, but lack of attempt -- even if it's something you haven't tried before -- is not only counter-productive, it's very UNlike my husband. (look, I'm not a she-devil; I don't bark orders or force him to take out the trash.) Sometimes he needs a, "hey, bring me that hammer, would ya?" kind of prodding to prove to himself that as cumbersome as it may be, he CAN and SHOULD do stuff.
*After Brain Surgery #2