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Jennie Sweeney

Dedicated to my Mother

At the end of a busy, varied life, my mother was hit by a series of strokes, at first so minor as to be almost unnoticeable, then becoming more serious. Gradually, very gradually, her speech deteriorated. At first it was as if a poltergeist was… Read More »Dedicated to my Mother

Shocking Shakeh

The Shakeh brings Pauline back into the world. For Victoria this dance, like the sudden strike of stroke, is Shocking.

The Miracle

The emotional fall-out of stroke can be overwhelming. A trip to Lourdes offers Jamsie and Christine a surprise cure for depression and tears.

Ploughboy

When Ken was a ploughboy he would shout Hough and Heigh to get his horses to pull more to the left or the right. Fifty years later he drew inspiration from the memory of these commands when they took away his driving license because a stroke had resulted in him veering to the left whilst driving.

Acceptance

Coming to terms with the changes wrought by stroke. Here is Jamsie’s story, told by his wife and carer, Christine.

The Colour of Stroke

An impending stroke can be signalled by strange changes in perception. Tom tells seeing unexpected colours.

Helping Hands

When the man in your life can no longer fix things around the house you suddenly miss the male skills you had come to depend on. Marie confronts changing a light bulb and mowing the lawn.

Finger Family

When Seamus lost the use of his left hand he couldn’t believe that the useless thing that hung from his arm belonged to him. Then he named his cramped fingers after the members of his boyhood family so that he could get to know them again. A powerful song from Stroke Odysseys performed as part of Derry-Londonderry’s City of Culture 2013.