Great to hear your weight is stabilising. There isn’t any enjoyment in eating food when it doesn’t taste great but you are doing the right thing by eating it regardless. I really hope that by doing that you eventually get your taste back.
Slow and steady wins the race. This is a marathon not a race. And its a bit of a roller-coaster ride. These are terms you will frequently read in here. Oh, and two steps forward one step back.
It was 6mths or more for my sense of taste to return.
Fatigue will at least become more manageable as things improve, if it doesnt go altogether.
Cognition, for me, is a trickier one to predict or describe how it goes. That was as a bit of a weird one for me as we were in a car showroom at the time. It just switched on that day just as we were buying a car. Suddenly I didnt need my hubby to sort out all the paper work, I found I could deal with it all myself and he was just backup
That’s just how some improvements go, like flipping a mental switch. It just take months and years not days and weeks.
Prior to having a TIA I enjoyed chocolate. 6 months on I no longer njoy the taste of chocolate- it has lost its appeal. Apart from losing the taste for chocolate i still have difficulties in chewing food. Keeps sticking on my teeth and have to push it back into my mouth. Feel as if its made my teeth feel weaker.