... Simpson’s first TBI occurred more than 2 decades ago when she was in 10th grade, resulting in a year’s hiatus from sports and significant decreases in her grades and standardized test scores. Common medical advice at the time encouraged people with concussions to stay home ... a dark room and avoid exercising the body or brain. She returned to soccer and played at the collegiate level for the University of Maryland. During a game her sophomore year, she experienced her fifth documented TBI during a collision, which ended both her soccer career and her plans to ... intense memorization. The effects of the TBI required her to change her life goals. She became a sideline reporter for a major league soccer team and vice president of marketing and communications, but shortly before a 2018 broadcast, a 40-pound railing in the newly constructed stadium came loose ... side of her head, causing her eighth TBI. In the past 5 years, Simpson has seen over 30 doctors, surgeons, therapists, psychologists, psychiatrists, and other specialists in a quest for relief from pain and other TBI symptoms. She spent much of the first year after the 2018 injury in bed, feeling weak ... dazed and experiencing intense migraines. She had two surgeries, received multiple injections, and at times was taking as many as 20 pills each day. Reestablishing typical abilities—such as dressing herself in the morning and driving at night— ... required physical, vestibular, speech, occupational, ocular, and cognitive behavioral therapies....