Learning to do a Little Something
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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Publisher Description
Learning to do A LITTLE SOMETHING
Gradually bringing activity back into your life following a concussion is necessary to encourage neural activity and growth in your brain, however too much activity can set back recovery and cause more harm. Pain and energy levels vary day-to-day, making it difficult to know how much activity to do at any given moment. It is a delicate balancing act of understanding limits, learning to work within them while simultaneously trying to push those boundaries.
BRAVE is all about the small acts of courage needed to carry on and move forward. To me, being brave is being patient with myself. Taking small steps and testing boundaries all while listening to my body in that moment in time.
About the Series
BRAVE is a light-hearted, humourous comic series on concussions. The 10 part mini-series shines a light on the small acts of courage needed to carry on and find your own way forward following a head injury. The hand-drawn and coloured illustrations that accept inconsistencies parallel the human experience which is disjointed and imperfect.
The creator of BRAVE, Kanika Gupta, lives with Post-Concussive Syndrome.
Disclaimer: BRAVE comic series is not a substitute for medical advice. Rather it provides an honest, first-hand account of what it means to live with a concussion.
About the Creator
Kanika Gupta is a multidisciplinary artist and social entrepreneur who uses visual art, writing and storytelling to create dialogue to generate greater compassion for what it means to be human. Her entire visual artistic practice draws inspiration from and is grounded in her lived experiences.
Visual art first entered Kanika’s world after a concussion as it was the only activity her symptoms could tolerate. Her practice has since evolved and she is now a full-time artist whose work has been presented in curated public art installations at Union Station and Gardiner Museum and exhibited in galleries across Toronto.
Kanika’s artwork and community building endeavours have been profiled internationally, including feature coverage in CBC Radio, Radio-Canada, The Globe and Mail, Canadian Living Magazine, Forbes, The Times of India, The Guardian, Huffington Post.