• This product is available as a download to the following member(s): "PREMIUM". Download this product by becoming a member today and also get access to over "18,209+" PLR products.

How To Survive The First 10 Days After Your Stroke Give Away Rights Ebook

How To Survive The First 10 Days After Your Stroke Give Away Rights Ebook
License Type: Giveaway Rights
File Size: 2,008 KB
File Type: ZIP
SKU: 24217
Shipping: Online Download
Members Download

Ebook Sample Content Preview:

Flashy, high echelon successes will tell you how a Positive Mental Attitude carries the day? Stroke victims can do a hundred “I think I can”s an hour and never make a limb move.

That poor limb might as well be attached to a grape vine for all the listening it does. Treating the residue of stroke is not easy or fun. The people that make the most progress are the ones with the most spirit. Some of the people receiving therapy at Jim Thorpe at the same time I was were so far gone I wouldn't have traded places with them in a million years.

I watched one woman struggle relentlessly for an hour just to lurch her body over on its side. In a matter of minutes her workout clothes would be drenched with sweat, but she never once quit trying while they let her stay on the mat. Day after day, she worked to achieve just that one challenge. Kids talk about their champions dancing on the football field with cheerleaders chanting away that they can do it? They pale in comparison to the kind of champion she was.

Grit, pure grit, is what carries the day for stroke victims. You feel helpless, you quit trying, and you may be in a bed for the rest of your life. Maybe you'll be in a bed forever anyway, but don't make it be a sure thing. Don't let stroke beat you.

The first thing staff did after I got settled in was to come in so they could help me “set goals.”

Goals? I had bad news for them “I don't set goals, I am here to get my body back as close to normal as I can get it. I don't need and I don't want a pack of cheerleaders rah, rah, rahing my day down the drain either.”

“You've got to set some goals.” The way she said it, I felt like it was real close to me getting kicked out of there before I got started. I reached way back in my head for something to tell her. “I don't set any goals, but I will tell you this; I'll be walking out of here on my own two feet within two weeks.”