It's 100% frustrating when you just can't function. You can't walk. You can't talk. You can't do anything without having this headache that's telling you to stop, and all you want to do is lie down because you can't function. That's very frustrating.
It's also very scary when you're in that moment, when you're two months into the situation and nothing is getting better. If anything, it's getting worse.
It was very scary, because school has always been very important to me. I want to go to law school. I've known that ever since I was in high school, so it was very frustrating to think, what if I can never read again? What if I can never go to school and sit under a light and listen to my teacher talk? That was something that 100% I couldn't do at the time, for the first five or six months.
It was very frustrating to think, what if this never changes and this is just my life for the rest of my life? That's very frustrating to think about when you're 16 years old. It's frustrating because you don't feel yourself getting better. It's not like a cold where the next day you wake up and you're fine. If anything, you would wake up and feel worse, so it was frustrating not to see any progress.