this post was submitted on 03 Mar 2026
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Please forgive any typos, my brian is still very much recovering. I'm not promoting anything cause nothing I've made yet is really worth much to anyone but my self,and everything is far from polished. I'm just sharing what I'm doing. In November '24, I had a mid level stroke. I've had issues with motor skills, headaches, and short term memory, but for the most part I'm doing quite well. For the last 6-8 months, I build a home server, (AMD 3700x, 64GB of RAM, 6TBNvME, and 2x 12TB HDD, old NVIDIA 2060. I setup up Jellyfin, ripped our 400ish Blu Rays, DVDs, and TV Shows. Setup Navidrone, and ripped our CDs, Home Assistant, AudoBookshelf, ConvertX, MeTube, and several other apps mostly discovered here. I also wrote my own app to track our large physical Media Collection that has a few api calls for pulling info about the items., a dashboard app in the style of the old iGoogle, and I've started working on 2 other apps, one to track medical information like blood pressure, glucose, doc appts, care team, medications, etc. The other app is for TTRPG GMs to run games that will basically be a digital GM Screen with a dozen or so tools.

I was a web developer for 20 years before the stroke so I had some previous entry level experience with this type of stuff, but not on this level. Mine was more for like corporate websites. My doctor believes this process has indeed sped up my recovery significantly. So this is just a post to say thanks for this community that has given me tons of ideas for things to try.

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[–] blackbrook@mander.xyz 19 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

This sounds like a great idea. I would suggest doing also other things that simulate the brain in other ways, like listening to music (or even playing an instrument), visual stimuli (art, nature), physical motion and coordination activities (dance, sports). You may well already do these things, I just felt I should mention it since our culture is so prone to associating brain with mental logic specifically and forgeting how much these other things involve the brain.

Learning a language is another thing with really strong evidence for brain development /preservation.

[–] irmadlad@lemmy.world 12 points 15 hours ago (2 children)

like listening to music (or even playing an instrument),

I have found great solace in music. I've been playing stringed instruments since I was 5. I've been a fan of music all of my life. I create music and post on SoundCloud. The benefits of just listening to music I think gets overlooked.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 6 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

The benefits of just listening to music I think gets overlooked.

Hard agree. And it's a shame because we have more music at our fingertips now than ever before, from every possible time and place in history. I'm from an era (70s) when just putting a record on and listening to it all the way through was a thing, but I'm not sure how many folks realize today that music can be an event in itself: not as background, but as foreground. Putting it on, sitting in a chair, and just listening while doing little to nothing else.

It's hard to get time to do it, but when I do it's heaven. And it absolutely resets my brain in positive ways: afterward, I just feel good. I actually think it might qualify as an ersatz form of meditation, in that a person is not mentally attending anything else while doing this, just listening and letting the auditory experience wash over them. It's difficult to quantify, but the benefits are very real.

[–] irmadlad@lemmy.world 4 points 7 hours ago

Music is the window to the soul and everyone's view is different.