- Joined
- Aug 17, 2007
- Messages
- 11,439
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thats fair. i apologizeI remember staring at a screwdriver once trying to remember what it was called..
Who hasn't put coffee in their breakfast bowl on the odd occasion?
thats fair. i apologizeI remember staring at a screwdriver once trying to remember what it was called..
Who hasn't put coffee in their breakfast bowl on the odd occasion?
Who hasn't put coffee in their breakfast bowl on the odd occasion?
Swedish female boxer Frida Wallberg received some serious brain damage and was forced to retire. She's from a town pretty close to mine, was sad when it happened. Some of the issues were genetical though, but being hit in the head obviously doesn't help.
I don't think women hit hard enough to cause that sort of damage....
Lol clearly an out-of-shape loser who doesn't know what he's talking about
Swedish female boxer Frida Wallberg received some serious brain damage and was forced to retire. She's from a town pretty close to mine, was sad when it happened. Some of the issues were genetical though, but being hit in the head obviously doesn't help.
YupYeah, i think i remember her. She collapsed after fighting an Aussie girl and was in a coma for a while, right?
Yeah I might have misremembered some, but it feels like I heard that she had sone sort of long going brain issue beforehand. Maybe not something she was born with, but from years back, as far as I remember anyways.I can remember checking her facebook updates, just occasional posts saying stuff like 'sometimes the headaches are very bad' 'i feel tired all the time' 'sometimes I throw up' - combinations of that and not much else for like 1-2 years afterwards. Not sure if things have got better for her since but it would suck to live like that, especially if things never improved.
What 'genetical' issues were mentioned? It would make sense that some people might be more susceptible to brain bleeding than others, but I've not read it discussed in specific cases (with regards to sport).