The story starts with a crash—but not the kind you see on TV. Former Team USA bobsledder William Person maps the quiet damage of micro-concussions, relentless G-forces, and years of migraines, vertigo, and sensory overload that slowly stole his clarity. Then came one hour in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber. He walked out seeing colors he didn’t know he’d lost—and for the first time in years, the world looked vivid, sharp, and possible.
We dig into what that means for athletes and veterans living with CTE symptoms and post-concussion syndrome, translating the science of oxygen, blood flow, and neuroplasticity into clear, practical language. William’s account doesn’t hide the complexity: relief that arrives in windows, rebounds that test resolve, and the discipline required to stack small gains into a life. Along the way, we confront the system that too often says “you’re fine” while athletes fade—legal settlements that offer monitoring without care, research that goes missing in action, and a culture that celebrates speed but ignores the bill it sends to the brain.
Out of the fog comes a plan: a nonprofit recovery center that delivers hyperbaric oxygen therapy alongside supportive tools—sleep and light hygiene, anti-inflammatory nutrition, autonomic regulation, vestibular work—free at the point of use. We talk cost barriers, smarter fundraising, and why placing a center in the Midwest can make access real for people who don’t have the means to chase treatment. If you care about brain health, athlete safety, veteran care, or just the kind of hope that proves itself with results, you’ll find a roadmap here—and a reason to act.
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