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Stroke Stroke Rehabilitation

Stroke Survivors: Their Stories


Medically Reviewed On: March 31, 2006

Bob Nichols (Stroke Survivor; Anchor WPEC-TV, West Palm Beach, Florida)

It was probably one of the scariest things that could ever happen to somebody. I had just turned 30 years old. Out of nowhere -- it happened! I wound up laying on a gurney inside an emergency room of a hospital. Then I woke up finally, and I realized that I can’t use my left side, I couldn't communicate so that somebody could understand me, and I just thought my life is over. It’s the most frightening thing in the world. Especially if you are a broadcaster who has been working in the business for over 15 years and that’s all you know, and now you can’t even talk. It’s absolutely petrifying! After the initial feelings of not wanting to go on, you realize that there are people who care about you and there are things that you can still do and be the person that you want to be, IF you have the determination. Once that determination is made, then you go to work and do it. And, it took me a long time---almost two years of solid, constant therapy. During that time, my therapy was twelve hours a day, six-to-seven days a week for my hand, my arm, and my leg. Now, we do one or two hours a day, two or three times a week.

I think that everybody has a button. Everybody has a button that somebody can push. My button just happens to be golf. That was my passion all my life. I grew up, from the time I was three years old, playing golf. When I had my stroke, I was a scratch player. The rehabilitation doctor walked into my hospital room about three weeks after I had my first stroke. He said, "You’ll never play golf again the way you did before, if at all. You’ll never bowl again. You'll probably not really work again in the broadcasting business." But, when he said that I'd never play golf again, he really pushed my button. And when that button was pushed, I knew that I WOULD do it; I knew that I would work again. I knew that I would be able to do right for my family. But that button was the one thing that put me over the edge.

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