Recovery isn't linear.
But it is possible.
Rewire specializes in traumatic brain injury rehabilitation — speech drills, balance retraining, and cognitive mapping exercises guided by therapists who measure progress in minutes recovered, not months elapsed.
NEURAL ACTIVITY · RECOVERY IN PROGRESS
Last Tuesday I drove my daughter to school for the first time since the accident. My therapist had me practice the turn-signal sequence forty-seven times on a simulator. Forty-seven times. It worked.
Marcus
14 months post-injury · Diffuse axonal injury
How We Work
Therapy designed for
how brains actually heal.
Not every TBI is the same. Neither is every program. We build yours around your injury pattern, your goals, and your life.
Neuroplasticity-First
Every session is designed around the brain's documented capacity to rewire. We don't manage deficits — we target the neural pathways that can rebuild them.
Measurable Milestones
Weekly assessments track reaction time, word-retrieval speed, and balance deviation in millimeters — not impressions.
of Rewire patients return to at least one previously lost daily task within 18 months.
Caregiver Integration
Family members attend structured coaching sessions. The recovery happens in the clinic; it continues at the kitchen table.
Low-Sensory Environments
Therapy rooms are acoustically tuned. No fluorescent flicker. No competing sounds. Designed for brains that are working harder than they ever have.
Phase 1
Acute Care
Hospital to first evaluation — weeks 1 through 6
“The first thing I remember clearly is a therapist showing me a photo of my own kitchen and asking me to name every object on the counter. I got four out of eleven. She wrote them all down and said: next week, five.”
Diane
Moderate TBI, frontal lobe
“Nobody at the VA had mentioned Rewire. My wife found them at 2am on her phone in the hospital parking lot. The intake coordinator called back in under an hour.”
Tom
Blast-related TBI, veteran
“They told us what to expect before we expected it. The fatigue, the emotional swings, the days when everything she'd gained seemed to disappear. Having a name for it made it survivable.”
Rosa
Car accident, diffuse axonal
Phase 2
Inpatient Rehabilitation
Intensive daily therapy — weeks 6 through 20
“Three sessions a day. Speech at 8, occupational at 10, physical at 2. I hated every minute. I also made more progress in those six weeks than in the entire year before.”
James
Severe TBI, motor cortex
“They had me make coffee every morning. Not because I needed coffee. Because the twelve-step sequence — grinding, measuring, waiting — was the cognitive workout. By week four I was doing it without the laminated prompt card.”
Priya
Anoxic brain injury
“My speech therapist timed me reading a sentence aloud. Week one: 22 seconds. Week eight: 7 seconds. She kept the chart on the wall where I could see it.”
Kevin
Moderate TBI, temporal lobe
Phase 3
Outpatient Milestones
Three sessions per week — months 5 through 12
“The neuropsychologist showed me my cognitive mapping scores side by side — month two versus month seven. The difference looked like two different people's brains. It was still my brain.”
Anita
Motorcycle accident, frontal TBI
“I went back to work part-time in month eight. My boss didn't know. My Rewire team did — we'd spent three months simulating exactly that environment.”
David
Sports-related TBI
“Balance boards, laser targets on the wall, walking heel-to-toe on a line while naming months backwards. It sounds absurd. I can now walk down stairs without holding the rail.”
Sandra
Fall, occipital TBI
Phase 4
Community Reintegration
Life beyond the clinic — months 12 through 18
“Last Tuesday I drove my daughter to school for the first time since the accident. My therapist had me practice the turn-signal sequence forty-seven times on a simulator. Forty-seven times. It worked.”
Marcus
Diffuse axonal injury
“I gave a five-minute presentation at my daughter's school. About TBI. About recovery. I used no notes. My speech therapist was in the back row.”
Elena
Pedestrian accident, moderate TBI
Free Downloads
The guides nobody handed you
in the hospital corridor.
Every resource below was built from questions our patients and families asked us in the first 90 days. Download what you need. Share what helps someone else.
After Diane's story, her husband asked for exactly this.
Caregiver 30-Day Checklist
Week-by-week tasks for the first month home — medication schedules, environmental modifications, communication strategies.
Tom found us at 2am. This guide is for the people still awake at 3am.
VA & Insurance Navigation Guide
Step-by-step instructions for VA referrals, prior authorizations, and appealing TBI rehabilitation denials. Written by a former VA case manager.
Priya used our coffee-making protocol. These are the printable versions.
Daily Cognitive Exercise Pack
14 printable exercises — sequencing tasks, working memory drills, word-retrieval grids — calibrated for moderate TBI at home.
For the clinicians who know their patient needs more than 90-day follow-up.
Referring Provider Intake Protocol
Clinical intake criteria, referral form, and expected timelines for ER physicians and neurologists coordinating TBI rehabilitation.
Ready to Begin
The fog does thin.
Let's build the map.
Our intake team responds within two business hours. No referral required. We work with all major insurers, VA benefits, and self-pay arrangements.
A 20-minute intake call — no forms, just conversation
Neuropsychological screening within 5 business days
A personalized program proposal before any commitment