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20-Something Stroke Survivor On Recovery, The Brain And Parenting With Physical Challenges

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Nina Mitchell at WBUR. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)
Nina Mitchell at WBUR. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

Nina Mitchell was 26 years old when she suffered a massive stroke that robbed her of her speech and mobility. After surgery, months in the hospital and a grueling, yearslong regimen of physical and speech therapy, Mitchell — now 41 — is a successful writer, blogger, wife and mother.

Mitchell (@mindpop) joins Here & Now's Robin Young to tell her story.

Interview Highlights

On having a stroke at 26 years old

"There are various kinds of stroke. There's the older people stroke, which tends to err on people who have high blood pressure and various other things. But then there's another kind, and that tends to skew younger. It's called hemorrhagic stroke. People with the more common kind of stroke have a clot in their brain. People with my kind of stroke have a bleed in the brain. So it's just blood that leaks out into the gray matter itself."

On having a smaller stroke prior to the massive one

"I had one that was about golf ball-size, which is not tiny, but that was being monitored. And then at this friend's wedding, I just felt very strange. So I went home and then I called my parents, which was probably a good sign that something was very odd. My parents lived in Los Angeles, and they suggested that I go to a friend's house for the night, given my history. And all my friends were at this wedding. So the only person who was home was my ex-boyfriend. And the next morning, I was just not making sense."

"Your mind is so important to you, and it disappeared in my case for a while. And when it came back, it wasn't the same as it had been."

Nina Mitchell

On symptoms she noticed prior to the stroke

"I had had problems typing, and I went to see a hand doctor, and she looked at me and said, 'Oh, you don't have carpal tunnel. But I'll refer you to a neurologist, maybe you had a nerve injury.' A few days later I went to see the neurologist, and he looked at me and said, 'Go get an MRI immediately,' because he noticed all kinds of things that I had just not picked up on. He noticed that it was hard for me to balance on my right leg, on my heels. Things like that where, I hadn't noticed that. I had asked the neurologist, 'What are we talking about,' and he said, 'Well, [multiple sclerosis], a brain tumor or a stroke, and stroke is the best possible option.'"

On talking with her son about how the stroke affected her

"I don't really talk to him directly about it. But there's plenty of things that he picks up on, just as a little kid. And I'm sure at times in the future, he's going to notice. Right now there are little things like, you know, mom has trouble opening those really annoying pouches, like the baby pouches. Daddy does it better and faster if you're hungry."

On the phrase "mindpop," also the name of her blog

"Your mind is so important to you, and it disappeared in my case for a while. And when it came back, it wasn't the same as it had been. I just think of that as a good catchall for all the things that have changed."

On experiencing grief over having a stroke at a young age

"Especially early on, when my lot of my friends were on the make: they were off to grad school and starting companies and writing books. That was very hard to watch that happen, because I had to stop and do rehab for years, while my other friends were, you know, discovering planets. But I think I sort of see my life as having ups and downs. I'm definitely in an up period. I have a lovely son, I have a lovely husband, I work. So it's all very exciting."

This article was originally published on October 05, 2017.

This segment aired on October 5, 2017.

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