Get me through tomorrow : a sister's memoir of brain injury and revival / Mojie Crigler.
- Crigler, Mojie
- Date:
- [2015]
- Books
About this work
Description
On August 4, 2004, Jason Crigler was onstage in a New York City nightclub when a blood vessel burst in his brain. The thirty-four-year-old guitarist, a fixture in the downtown music scene who had played with Marshall Crenshaw, Linda Thompson, and John Cale, narrowly survived the bleed. A string of complications that followed - meningitis, seizures, coma - left him immobile and unresponsive, with his doctors saying nothing more could be done. Meanwhile, Jason's medical insurance quickly hit its lifetime cap, meaning that his policy would no longer pay for his care. Despite such overwhelming circumstances, Jason's parents, sister, and pregnant wife were sure that he was still there, trapped inside his incapacitated body but able to fight his way back. They mounted an intense course of rehabilitation for him even as they fought a healthcare system that was geared toward defeat. In intimate and unflinching prose, Mojie Crigler chronicles her brother's harrowing decline and miraculous recovery. Get Me Through Tomorrow is much more than the story of a medical victory amid a broken healthcare system, however. It is about a sister's metamorphosis from fearful naive to assertive caregiver. It is about families bridging heartache and divorce to find hope. It is about the deep and enduring relationship between siblings - and the love that transforms them.
Publication/Creation
Physical description
Series
Contributors
Type/Technique
Languages
Subjects
- Brain damagePatientsUnited StatesBiography
- Brain damagePatientsRehabilitationUnited States
- Brain damagePatientsFamily relationshipsUnited States
- SiblingsUnited StatesBiography
- Brain Damage, Chronic
- Brain Damage, Chronicrehabilitation
- Family Relations
- United States
- Crigler, JasonHealth.
- Crigler, MojieFamily relationships.
Where to find it
Location Status Access Closed storesM30215
Permanent link
Identifiers
ISBN
- 9780803254145
- 0803254148