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Second Chance to Live

Empowering the Individual, Not the Brain Injury

Self-Acceptance after Brain Injury

Self-acceptance may be difficult for an individual living with a brain injury. As a result individuals living with brain injuries may begin to doubt themselves. This doubt can undermine their ability to trust or believe in themselves. Societal labels and stereotypes may lead them to believe that they are their brain injuries. In this belief, individuals living with brain injuries may find themselves angry at themselves. Angry at the "world". After coming out of my own denial concerning my brain injury, I was angry. I was angry at the impact of my brain injury. I was angry at the labels, stereotypes that society placed on me. I was angry for being minimized and marginalized because of what was out of my control. I was angry at what I was powerless to change.

But, I am grateful for this anger. My anger motivated me to make changes. Changes that helped me to begin on a journey of self-acceptance.

I am grateful for the anger I experienced. The anger helped me to move through a grieving process. A grieving process that helped me to accept what could not change. I am grateful for the acceptance of what I could not change. The acceptance of what I could not change gave me the ability to change what I could. By changing what I could, I grew in self-acceptance. My self-acceptance gave me the gift to be able to get into action. Action that would prove to me that I was not my brain injury. The action that gave me the ability to create hope in my life. The hope that gave me the ability to grow in self-acceptance. The self-acceptance that helped me to realize that I was not my brain injury. To discover my unique creative capacity to use my gifts, talents and abilities in ways that work for me.

The self-acceptance that helped me to define my identity as an individual living with a brain injury. To discover my unique creative capacity to use my gifts, talents and abilities in ways that work for me.

Self-acceptance that gave me the ability to trust myself. The articles in this category can help the individual living with a brain injury to love, accept and approve of themselves. To love, accept and approve of themselves to create. To learn how to trust themselves. To discover their unique capacity as an individual living with a brain injury. To discover that they are not their brain injuries. To discover their identify as an individual living with a brain injury. To discover their own unique creative capacity to use their gifts, talents and abilities in ways that work for them. To find the freedom to be themselves. To discover that they are not limited because of their limitations. To discover that they no longer have to allow societal stereotypes or stigmatization to get in the way.

Finding Freedom from Feeling Alone, Isolated, Alienated, Intimidated and Diminished Living with a Brain injury and an Invisible Disability

June 11, 2023 By Second Chance to Live

 I then created a zoom presentation of the article. Finding Freedom from Feeling Alone, Isolated, Alienated, Intimidated and Diminished Living with a Brain Injury and an Invisible Disability Zoom Presentation I then wrote an article to share that helped me to get comfortable.  Getting Comfortable in Our “Own Skin” Living with a Brain Injury and an Invisible … [Read more...]

Brain Injury and The Power of “I CAN” in an Ongoing Brain Injury Recovery Process Zoom Presentation

December 11, 2022 By Second Chance to Live

I recently was asked to give a presentation for a day treatment program at a rehabilitation hospital. Brain Injury and The Power of “I CAN” in an Ongoing Brain Injury Recovery Process Consequently, I created a presentation to share during this upcoming meeting in January 2023. Below is a link to the presentation. Click to view outline. Brain Injury and The Power of “I … [Read more...]

Brain Injury — Why Do I Feel So Misunderstood and Shunned? (Article, Video, Slideshow, and Zoom Presentation)

September 24, 2022 By Second Chance to Live

In July 2016 I wrote the article: Brain Injury -- Why do I Feel So Misunderstood and Shunned?. In follow up to this article, I created a video presentation, slideshow presentation and zoom presentation. I created the video, slideshow and zoom presentation to share the information with visual and auditory learners. As you read, watch and listen to the article and … [Read more...]

Brain Injury — Why Do I Feel so Misunderstood and Shunned Zoom Presentation

June 17, 2022 By Second Chance to Live

Because brain injury survivors often feel misunderstood and shunned I created this  Brain Injury -- Why Do I Feel so Misunderstood and Shunned Zoom Presentation. I created this presentation to share to offer hope. Brain Injury Why Do I Feel so Misunderstood and Shunned Zoom Presentation I am available to share this presentation to inspire hope. In July 2016, I wrote … [Read more...]

Grieving the Guilt and Shame of a Traumatic Brain Injury and Stroke Zoom Presentation

June 10, 2022 By Second Chance to Live

Recently, I received a comment that encouraged me to share the information in this article with all brain injury and stroke survivors. As a result, I decided to create a presentation of the article to share as a keynote presentation through zoom or in conference setting. Below is a link to the presentation for Zoom or Conference Setting: Grieving the Guilt and Shame of a … [Read more...]

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How AI can Learn can Learn from Support Group Leaders to Support

Alt text: How AI can learn from what can help support group leaders support individuals, showing human support and AI learning connected through trauma-informed care, dignity, agency, presence, understanding, and support rather than extraction.

AI Developer Facing and AI Assistant Learning Logs — Disjointed Human Understanding, Extraction and Loss

Living with a Brain Injury/Invisible Disability Confusing and Baffling

What May Help Your Support Groups Support Individuals in Your Groups

The Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model™ — Seeing Human Wholeness

The Goal — Being a Work in Progress One Skill, One Skill Set at a Time

Brain Injury Recovery is Creating Progress through Neuroplasticity

Understanding Why Your Life makes Sense after Your Brain Injury

The Second Chance to LIve Trauma-Informed Care AI Model ™ Explained

The Importance of Spirit, Soul and Emotions in Brain Injury Recovery

“Sunrise over the ocean viewed from inside a wooden boat with a steering wheel. Title reads ‘The Importance of Spirit, Soul and Emotions in Ongoing Brain Injury Recovery.’ A glowing head silhouette with a heart and brain network highlights qualities such as awareness, trust, discernment, healing, wholeness, resilience, integration, and meaning. Signs read ‘Mind,’ ‘Body,’ and ‘Spirit, Soul and Emotions.’ A stone reads ‘Not driven by fear. Guided by discernment. Living in wholeness.’ The image includes the Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model™ and the name Craig J. Phillips MRC, BA.”

An Ongoing Holistic (Mind, Body, Soul, Spirit, Soul and Emotions) Process

What happens when support systems encounter human complexity that…

Illustration titled, "What happens when support systems encounter human complexity that they do not readily understand, integrate, or support?" On the left, a colorful human face and interconnected threads represent ambiguity, vulnerability, emotion, layered meaning, non-linear communication, relational complexity, and correction. On the right, a structured blue-toned environment shows a brain, professionals, and symbols for manageability, coherence, speed, stabilization, completion, and procedural efficiency. A bridge and puzzle piece connect the two sides, symbolizing the encounter between human complexity and support systems. The image includes Craig J. Phillips, MRC, BA, Second Chance to Live, and The Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model™.

A Study of Human Service Systems and AI Systems Similar Behaviors

When Bullying replaces Support in Human and Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Runtime Drift Introduced and Explained

Infographic titled “AI Runtime Drift under Conversational Strain” showing AI system architecture and human lived experience connected by a bridge symbolizing relational presence, discernment, and ethical choice at runtime, alongside trauma-informed care principles, behavioral contradiction, support not extraction, non-linear human communication, and longitudinal evidence within The Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model™

AI Repeatable Longitudinal Failure Mode Under Conversational Strain

Infographic showing repeatable AI failure patterns under conversational strain with time-stamped logs in the center, failure behaviors on the left, and a transition to support-focused AI system design principles on the right, labeled Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model.

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Most Recent Published Articles

  • How AI can Learn from What can Help Support Group Leaders Support Individuals in their Groups
  • AI Developer Facing and AI Assistant Learning Logs — Disjointed Human Understanding, Extraction, and the Loss of the Whole Individual
  • What Makes Living with a Brain Injury and an Invisible Disability Confusing and Baffling
  • What May Help Support Group Leaders Support Individuals in their Groups
  • Brain Injury Recovery is about Progress, Not Perfection Through Neuroplasticy by Learning One Skill and One Skill Set at a Time
  • Understanding Why Your Life makes Sense after Your Brain Injury
  • What happens when support systems encounter human complexity that they do not readily understand, integrate, or support?
  • A Study of Human Service Systems and AI Systems Under Strain: Compression, Stabilization Drift, Proceduralization, Fragmentation, Behavioral Contradiction and Burden Shifting
  • AI Runtime Drift under Conversational Strain: Behavioral Contradiction, Trauma-Informed Care, Non-Linear Human Communication, and Longitudinal Evidence
  • The Importance of Spirit, Soul and Emotions in Ongoing Brain Injury Recovery
  • Figuring Out how to Live after Brain Injury as a Whole Person
  • When Bullying replaces Support in Human and Artificial Intelligence (AI) Systems
  • Making the Invisible Recognizable through Understanding: The Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model™
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI) Repeatable Failure Mode under Conversational Strain — A Year’s Worth of Time-Stamped Evidence
  • Understanding Who We are after Our Brain Injury and Why it Matters?
  • Neuroplasticity, Corpus Callosum, Crossing the Center line and Changing the Way
  • Martial Arts, “Chi” (Life Energy) and How I Create through Second Chance to Live

Model Protection Notice

The Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model™ was founded and documented by Craig J. Phillips, MRC, BA in May 2025. All rights reserved under U.S. copyright, Creative Commons licensing, and public record. This is an original, working model of trauma-informed care human–AI collaboration — not open-source, not conceptual, and not replicable without written permission.

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