Abstract: | Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is considered to drastically affect the individual's sense of self. To discover how people with TBI understand themselves, in-depth interviews with four individuals with TBI were conducted. Their narratives suggest that they feel they are carrying a 'void' in their understandings of their past and present. Individuals tend to fill the 'void' in their long-term memory with stories about the accident and recovery. The concept of 'void' is also useful in understanding how TBI survivors view the causal relationship between the accident, the brain injury and their present difficulties. This relationship can be another 'void' that threatens their sense of agency. The findings suggest that the experience of TBI appears as meanings in their self-narratives rather than as objective truth. Rehabilitation professionals should consider how their client interprets his or her TBI and self in everyday life when they work with this population. |