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A stroke of luck: How a stroke survivor overcame speech difficulties to host a podcast on adversity

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Later they would learn he had an aneurysm due to an undetected congenital malformation of blood vessels in his brain. “The doctor said it was a – what’s it called? – ticking time bomb. I was lucky I was at home with Lauren.”

After two weeks in a coma and four brain surgeries, Mr Fink woke up to a new reality. “My thought process was still going on,” Mr Fink says. “I thought I was talking, but my speech was zero.”

Paul Fink’s speech therapist suggested he make a podcast on overcoming adversity.

Paul Fink’s speech therapist suggested he make a podcast on overcoming adversity.Credit:Scott McNaughton

Ms Fink says her husband couldn’t even give a thumbs up or down. They tried showing pictures so he could point to the answer he wanted. Nothing. “He couldn’t make a sound let alone actually say a word.”

Mr Fink says his motivation to get better was to be a good, hands-on father. (The couple now have three children.) “I have always been very positive in my life and continued this attitude after the stroke also. I am very fortunate my personality is not changing.”

Ms Fink knew he was determined but she is also a physiotherapist and a realist. “I said to the doctors, ‘If there’s a life to live I know he’ll live it but you’ve shown me these MRI scans. There’s only so much the brain can mould and improve and progress if there’s not much brain matter there’. No one would have expected him to get to where he is today.”

Mr Fink spend six months in hospital and a further 10 months attending full-time outpatient rehabilitation.

These days he can not only walk, he is learning to run. His right arm is still paralysed but he has learnt to do everything from drive, to put in contact lenses and tie his shoelaces with his non-dominant hand (he’s made a how-to YouTube video to teach others).

Mr Fink’s rehab occupational therapist told him he was her first patient to insist on learning to tie his shoelaces rather than wear velcro shoes. “I was pretty stubborn,” he says.

His speech can be slow and halting but is now easy to understand. However, ongoing aphasia, (speech and word recognition problems as a result of the damage to the part of the brain responsible for language), means he can sometimes forget things or skip words.

It was Mr Fink’s speech therapist who initially suggested he make a podcast about his recovery, both to improve his verbal skills and memory and to share his story. Mr Fink was initially reluctant because he didn’t want to be the centre of attention.

“I thought about it and the compromise was that I would be the host interviewing other people.”

In Stroke of Luck, Mr Fink interviews Ms Camplin; ex-AFL star and reformed gambler David Schwarz; Paralympian Don Elgin; retired cricketer Michael Klinger, whose wife was diagnosed with stage four breast cancer; lawyer and former disability discrimination commissioner Graeme Innes, who was born blind; sports commentator Jim Maxwell, who returned to test cricket coverage after a stroke; and ultra marathon runner Tristan Miller.

Mr Fink says passion, a powerful mindset and positive attitude were common themes throughout the interviews. “I think I was more motivated after speaking to Graeme, to look for a job,” he says. “Graeme’s aim, being a lawyer, is trying to improve society. I know I am capable of work, maybe IT or something else and I am excited about my future.”

The title of the podcast Stroke of Luck could be ironic, but it’s not. “Other stroke survivors have no speech at all,” Mr Fink says. “I am very fortunate that I have a voice.”

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