
When Rachel first became a Resource Facilitator at the Brain Injury Association of Nebraska, she expected to help others navigate the challenges of brain injury. What she did not expect was to realize just how deeply brain injury had already shaped her own life.
It was only through listening to clients, hearing their fears and frustrations, and learning their stories that she began to see her family’s experiences in a new light. She recognized symptoms she had witnessed for years, and connections she had never named before.
Her Dad struggled with balance problems and executive functioning challenges during his cancer diagnosis, when nine tumors were discovered on his brain. Her Mom has faced years of chemotherapy, radiation, congestive heart failure, and multiple near-death experiences. Each medical crisis added a cumulative effect on her brain health and impacted her short-term memory. And most recently, Rachel’s son sustained a mild concussion that disrupted life for six difficult weeks. These were only the experiences she could identify. Once she allowed herself to look more closely, she began to understand just how much brain injury had affected her family.
This awareness changed everything for Rachel. It deepened her empathy and gave her a clearer understanding of the individuals and families she supports. It also helped her see brain injury not as something rare, but as something that touches all of us in some way, whether through our own experiences or through the people we love.
Today, Rachel brings this perspective into her work as a Resource Facilitator. She is driven to help her clients pursue a better quality of life, to connect them with resources, and to walk alongside them with understanding and compassion. She chooses to lean in, to serve where she can, and to advocate when it is needed most.
Rachel’s story reminds us that brain injury is often closer to home than we realize. It can shape entire families without being named. And it can teach us how to show up for one another with patience, empathy, and strength.
What you do not see can change a life. What you choose to see can change a community.
💙 Read more stories from our What You Don’t See campaign and support our work at: biane.org/appeal
























0 Comments