Mitcham stroke survivor Holly Holmes, 28, is one of the hundreds of people living with communication difficulties after a stroke.

Holly, a mother of one and a former trainee nurse, has had to work extra hard on her recovery. Holly had her first stroke in April this year, and just six months later, as she was beginning to recover, she had a second stroke.

The strokes left Holly with right sided weakness and a communication difficulty called aphasia. Holly can’t read or write, and she struggles to talk.

Holly said “The whole time after my first stroke I felt as if I was in a big bubble; no one could come near me, no one spoke to me, and I may as well had been invisible. 

My mum helped me take care of my seven-year-old son Andre; I felt like I’d lost all of my independence. I couldn’t even help Andre with his homework anymore. With aphasia it’s so easy to feel trapped in your home. Attempting to speak can be tiring and also embarrassing.

Having a communication difficulty is terrifying. No one can ever realise just how lonely aphasia is. Over the last month with the help from my amazing speech therapist, I’m making huge improvements".

The Stroke Association’s Lost for Words campaign aims to raise awareness of the challenges stroke survivors with communication difficulties can face, and help and support them.

Lucy Hayes, Communication Support Coordinator at the Stroke Association, said: “After a stroke, around one in three people like Holly have difficulty communicating, which can be both terrifying and isolating. Holly’s gone from strength to strength with the support from local speech therapists, and she has so much to be proud of.”

More than 350,000 people in the UK have aphasia, a communication disability which can be caused by stroke.

The Stroke Association is urging people to show their support for stroke survivors who are lost for words and make a donation. For more information, visit www.stroke.org.uk/lostforwords.

Based on information supplied by Daisy Dighton.