Thinking about the future after a burn

This section covers:

  • Focusing on the short term
  • Impacts on plans and expectations
  • Worries about the future
  • Hopes for the future

It can be an overwhelming time when someone has been burnt, and it can raise questions about what may lie ahead. There can be impacts on plans for the future, and concerns as well as hopes for the future.

For some people we talked to, there weren’t many long-term impacts from a burn. In the early days, however, there could be uncertainty about what the future held. Raffaella had found it difficult when she wanted information about her recovery and future but “everybody answers… “We don’t know””.

Sinead spoke to two surgeons separately who gave different outcomes after her daughter had been burnt; she had “a glimmer of hope” which “then the next day” was dashed.

Focusing on the short term

For some people, like Holly, the initial focus was on “getting through every day” in “survival mode”. She explained, “at that point, with a two-month-old baby who doesn’t sleep and everything, it was literally day to day, hour to hour”. Tom also told us he “didn’t really have much time to think about anything other than the immediate” situation.

When her son was burnt, Holly told us she needed to take things one day at a time.

Others thought ahead right away to the future impacts of a burn. When Abi’s son was burnt, she told us she felt anxious about the future and immediately assumed her son would need long-term treatment: “I assumed, in all honesty, that it was going to be skin grafts, a hospital stay, perhaps operations and then, obviously, scarring”.

Over time, there could be a realisation that there might be ongoing or longer-term impacts. This could be a daunting realisation. As Raffaella explained, “I remember my consultant said to me ‘You know, this is going to be a long journey’ and I was like ‘What does he mean, a long journey?’ Like, you know, I couldn’t quite understand”. She had originally expected that everything would be “done” once her bandages came off, before realising “this is for life”.

Impacts on plans and expectations

Burn injuries had significant impacts for some people we talked to. Gary, who was burnt in a road traffic collision which required surgery to amputate his lower right leg, initially felt his “life was over, 100%”. Before the accident, Gary was a keen footballer and had ambitions of playing professionally. He said that he felt his future had been “taken away” from him and he found this “really hard to deal with”.

Helen Y also felt like her future had changed after she was burnt and that she would never be able to play tennis, “the sport she loved”, again. Soon after her injury, she donated to charity lots of her clothes which would have shown her burn scars because she was worried about other people seeing them.

Gary initially felt like the future had been taken away from him when he was burnt.

Natasha felt that, as she grows older, there is more of an impact of her burn injuries in terms of how she feels about her appearance: “it’s a shame that it’s affecting now more than it has ever, but I think that’s just come with the growing up process of being a woman in her 20s”.

Worries about the future

Some of the parents we spoke to were worried about how their child’s burn would affect their health, confidence, or appearance as they grew up. Amy and Chris Y said that, although “at the moment” their son William was not bothered by his burn, they were concerned that one day he would feel self-conscious about it. They were worried that William’s scars would affect any future romantic relationships, and Abi initially had concerns about this too, when her son was burnt.

Chris Y and Amy were worried that their son would feel self-conscious about his burns in the future.

Holly, whose son was burnt as a baby, worries about how he will feel about his appearance as he grows up.

After the shock and upset of a burn, some people felt worried about other accidents happening to them or their family in the future. Since her son was burnt by hot water, Abi and her family have become “very wary” about things like hot drinks around children. She explained, “everyone’s like, “Let’s just drink them in the garden away from him completely”. We won’t even leave them in our hands or on the table. So, everyone’s a bit affected by it”.

Hopes for the future

Some people, like Raiche, felt that it was important also to think about how things can improve in the future – for example, with ongoing recovery. Gary described pushing past “lots of thoughts” doubting himself, such as about living independently, as he considered what mattered to him and his future: “I want to prove it to myself more than anything nowadays”. Although his injuries had impacted upon his career plans, he described the enjoyment he now feels volunteering to make a different with young people.

Gary volunteers with the fire service who saved his life after he was involved in a road traffic collision.

Natasha, who finds that her burns impact on her confidence at the moment, hopes this will be an evolving process and that, “as time goes on, I’ll be able to reflect on that and hopefully I’ll become more used to it and start liking it”.

You can read more here about people’s reflections on finding positive meanings from their experiences with burns.

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