Living with aphasia

I had my stroke in 2010 which ended many things in life including work. The stroke affected my right hand and right foot and speech. Typing with both hands and r/c helicopters helped with fine motor motions and exercise helped with lifting simple things. In physical therapy if you can walk a block more than before you know there is an improvement. It is hard to know if there is any improvement in speech. One way to tell is the sales person at the store may now understand you. Another way to tell is practicing with a microphone to record your self. If you cannot understand yourself how can other people understand you. You have to make constant effort in all of these to improve. Getting back into my hobbies and developing new hobbies fill my time and help with the stroke.

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Learn about aphasia

What is
aphasia?

Get a clear explanation of aphasia, what it affects, and why it can look different from person to person.

What causes
aphasia?

Explore the most common causes of aphasia and how brain changes can lead to communication challenges.

What are symptoms
of aphasia?

Find out what communication challenges people with aphasia face based on what type of aphasia they have.

What are the
types of aphasia?

Learn how aphasia is commonly grouped, what those patterns mean, and why no two experiences are exactly the same.

Diagnosis, recovery,
and prevention

Learn how aphasia is diagnosed, recovery outlook, and prevention tips.

Related
conditions

See which conditions may co-exist with aphasia and how they might affect you.

How is
aphasia treated?

Get more info on how professionals treat aphasia and how different treatments work.

Resources

Articles

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Aphasia stories

Personal stories, short films, and perspectives that show how people live, adapt, and communicate with aphasia.

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