- Sep 9, 2012
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The snippets from the age are pretty confronting
Justin Clarke left home to drive to university. He got halfway and stopped. He had driven the road hundreds of times but suddenly he had no idea which way to go.
He knew that he knew the way but his mind was blank. He had a choice of two roads but he sat there with the car idling and traffic banking behind him looking at the way ahead not knowing where the roads led or which way to go. So he chose one, the wrong one, and was late for university.
...
His visual memory was badly damaged. He had always quickly absorbed what he read when he studied but now has had to read things five times for it to sink in. He fretted that the damage would be permanent.
After the injury he was assessed by a neuro-psychologist and his memory readings were out of kilter. His cognitive function was in the top fifth percentile of the population - thus he could still drive – but his memory was in the bottom 25th percentile – so he could not remember where he was going. The testing also detected the problem with his visual memory.
...
"My speech was slurred and I would trail off in conversation and forget what I was going to say half way through saying something. Shocking headaches and dizziness, I couldn't get out of bed," he said.
A week ago he went with his manager Matt Bain to the AFL Players Association in Melbourne. Clarke could not climb the short flight of stairs to the door.
"He had to stop halfway," Bain said. "He was dizzy and faint, he was complaining of headaches and this is 10 weeks after the injury," Bain said.
...
His dad broke his back in a car accident years ago – he made a full recovery – but the initial phone call home about the injury informed the Clarke's their son had suffered possible spinal damage.
"That upset mum quite a bit because it brought back a lot of stuff about dad's accident. Dad really struggled with hearing me on the phone stutter along and lose track of everything. It was not particularly pleasant for them," he said.