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    Gary Woodland still dealing with repercussions

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    • mayjayM Online
      mayjay
      last edited by mayjay

      https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7104976/2026/03/10/gary-woodland-ptsd-brain-surgery-the-players-championship/

      He has been experiencing PTSD from the entire ordeal of months of anxiety and panic attacks before his brain lesion was diagnosed. Few people knew, going public.

      I will repeat: The Athletic is worth every penny.

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      • rockchalkjayhawkR Offline
        rockchalkjayhawk
        last edited by

        yea, sad. i remember some of that was on the great Netflix series Full Swing (season 3 i think). They had a good chunk dedicated to him and his recovery from brain surgery. very good watch. I enjoyed that series. Glad he's open about it now. Here's to a full recovery, Gary! Rock Chalk.

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        • bskeetB Offline
          bskeet
          last edited by

          Helluva interview. Lots of love to Gary. Rock Chalk!

          Rock Chalk!

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          • C Offline
            crimsonblu22 @bskeet
            last edited by crimsonblu22

            @bskeet love that guy!πŸ’™β€οΈπŸŒΎ I've never heard of anything quite like that. Hate it. He's been thru so much. I read the story but thought the ptsd was all after the surgery. I hope his good buddies can help pull him thru!

            mayjayM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • mayjayM Online
              mayjay @crimsonblu22
              last edited by mayjay

              @crimsonblu22 You are right. I suspect even Gary never realized how deeply scarred his psyche was from living in abject fear and panic for months and months before surgery. Our physical bodies can get healed but what a reminder that emotionally injuries can last for years.

              We usually don't think of PTSD as arising from solely from the symptoms of a medical condition. I was so astounded to read this. Very glad he is talking to vets. We have a few in our heavily senior community who hunker down with headphones every July 4th and NYE because people shoot illegal (in the development) fireworks nonstop.

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              • bskeetB Offline
                bskeet
                last edited by

                I think the article/interview mentioned that the benign tumor was removed from an area adjacent to the region that regulates anxiety, so I took that to mean that there was collateral damage from the surgery.

                At least some self-repair/healing should occur with time. But, he'll likely need to manage the symptoms the rest of his life. At least they know what they are dealing with. 50 years ago, this would have been a mystery and there would have been few if any resources for comfort or care. Modern medicine is pretty miraculous.

                Rock Chalk!

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