Was your brain injury mild/moderate/servere?
My injury was a mid traumatic brain injury. The situation was as follows:
We were on a mission north of Ramadi, Al Anbar province Iraq. We were tasked out with supporting an Iraqi Highway Patrol check point that was getting attacked by what was suspected to be a cell of Syrian terrorists for the purpose of clearing the highway to open up supply lines for the purpose of illegal arms dealing between Syria and Iraq. This Highway Patrol check point was a major control point along said supply route. Because of this the check point had been attacked on several occasions and was a main focal point for the enemy. At the time the Iraqi Police were having a tough time standing on there own so we were tasked to fight along side of them.
The situation was we had been in about a 3 day firefight (small arms fire, mortars) when my Platoon Commander decided to make a push late one night. In his infinite wisdom (sarcasm) he decided to send out a black out patrol; it was a mounted patrol of about 3 vehicles all with their lights out. I don't know why he thought that 3 diesel vehicles could sneak up on anyone in the still dead air of the desert night, but these were the orders we received. You have to realize that our vehicles not only had headlights but additional mounted spot lights and flood lights all over them that helped us detect IEDs at night. This particular night we were ordered to turn them off. Instead we were given the order to go with NVGs (night vision goggles) which offer no real definition or depth perception. I remember thinking to myself how stupid this order was and how this "boot ass Lieutenant" (a term of endearment we give to new officers with little experience) was going to get someone killed. Just as I was thinking this, everything went white and I heard a PINGGGGGGGGGGGGGG!!!!!!!!!!!! sound ringing in my ears.
When I came to I remember seeing the muzzle flash of small arms fire. We were taking enemy fire. I was disoriented; I knew I had just hit an IED, but I didn't know if anyone else in my truck was OK. I was on the machine gun turret, which means I was on the outside of the truck when we struck the roadside bomb. I dropped in from the turret and tried to yell "IED IED IED" but I could barely hear my own voice. It sounded muffled, like I was yelling under water. The first person I saw was my Corpsman. Doc looked at me, and I remember thinking to myself "I am really out of it; if I talk to Doc he's going to know I'm f*cked up. I'm just not going to say anything so he doesn't think anything is wrong with me." So I looked Doc dead in the eyes and gave him the thumbs up. Doc shined his pocket light in each one of my eyes and then gave me the thumbs up back, and then I popped back up in my machine gun turret and started looking for my target...
Anyways, what had happened is we had run over an Italian land mine that was wired to a pressure plate switch; we called the pressure plate switch "Christmas tree lights" because the circuit worked much in the same fashion as a set of Christmas tree lights. It was a long strand of wire with several pressure circuits in it. Like a Christmas tree bulb, if one goes out they all go out, if one pressure plate is struck the circuit is completed and the bomb goes off. When we drove over the wire we blew a tire off of our truck pretty much right under the gun turret. I don't know if the concussion from the blast is what gave me the injury or if the blast knocked me back and I smacked my head on the gun turret.
What has helped me the most in my recovery has been Equine therapy. My equine therapist has worked with me in pretty much all areas I am deficient in. One thing that hurt me is I didn't get diagnosed right away. I started to complain of symptoms almost immediately after the incident, but the medical doctors threatened to take me out of the fight if I persisted with complaints of symptoms, so I covered it up and pretended like they didn't exist. It wasn't until years later that I took a neuro assessment battery and it was determined that I suffered a MTBI.