Brain injury can happen to anyone at anytime, and it does. New Mexicans living with brain injury are all ages and come from diverse cultural backgrounds. They share common feelings and experiences as they cope with the challenges of living with their injuries. The people below are 7 of the 8 stories highlighted on the documentary "every 21 seconds..." a 60 minute film telling the stories New Mexicans living with brain injury, a project funded by the Brain Injury Advisory Council.

Chloe

Chloe is an angel of a child with a sweet smile and an endearing laugh. She was severely injured when she was shaken by her birth mother’s boyfriend. “”She is blind and she’s now considered hard of hearing,” says her adoptive mother. “She is considered a spastic quadriplegic, she eats through a tube in her stomach, and she takes all her medications through it.” Chloe will never have a normal life.

 

Joe Zamora

Joe remembers returning to the corral after a fun family ride. He was thrown from his horse and woke up in an ambulance. A former probation officer, who took pride in his education and his job, he can no longer work. He is deeply frustrated. “Sometimes when I’m home alone and the depression and loneliness and probably self pity overwhelm me, I begin to cry,” he says. “I don’t want to feel the tears rolling down my face, so I will lean over and bow my head so they fall straight down. I search the puddle on the floor looking for the pain the tears are supposed to wash away, but all I see is a puddle of tears.”

 

Jessica

Jessica, now a talented artist, was a passenger in a car that hit a tree when she was a teen. She was in a coma for four weeks. “First it was a thick grey fog, then it started to lift and hover like cataracts,” she remembers. “Then it was now, and now is sort of like white, but you stand out and everybody sees you stand out and you know you will never fit in. You have been where no one else has.”

 

Joe Anaya

Joe was partying with friends and took a drive in his dad’s Corvette. He was hit by a drunk driver and thrown from the car. Since his brain injury, he has served time in prison. Today, he is learning to control the anger that got him in trouble. “I just want to get my life together,” he says. “More than all the fun things, I just want my life to be normal. I want to be able to feel good about myself one of these days and be proud and know that all these things I’ve been through—the head injury, the prison, are behind me. But there’s still a lot of work to be done.”