So many athletes, especially power athletes, never think about “what happens if”. They spend years of grinding, becoming stronger, hitting new PRS and building a body and the mind that feels unstoppable. They do not slow down to consider how they will continue to go if the body that worked so hard to build ever failed. And this can happen to anyone – no matter how powerful you are, things can change at a time. This is exactly what Logan Barber met in September 2024 when he suffered what his neurosurgeon named one of the largest bleeding strokes they had ever seen.
Around 2:30 am On the day of his event, Logan got up for work, read a message from his wife, ShakiHe was in Australia at that time, he grabbed his foot in the bedding and stumbled. He joined the floor, his head hit hard. A punching ring fills his ears and a blind headache followed almost immediately.
His legs gave him out, so he dragged himself to the floor, asking his mother, who helped take care of their 10 -month -old daughter. Moments later, everything went dark. For the coming weeks, he fell into what he describes as a dream state, ignoring how close it was to lose everything.
Logan and Stacie Barber
Before his stroke, Logan and Stacie lived an active, led life. Logan worked a naturally demanding manual work four days a week, while Stacie balancing her roles as a power coach and physiotherapist. Outside of work, it was the typical pair of fitness, competing in powerlifting and Olympic elevation, smoothing through training.
After the stroke, everything changed. Logan spent more than three weeks in a coma, over five weeks in a ventilator, and two months limited to a hospital bed. Through all of this, Stacie stood next to him – the rock and the most intense lawyer. Both agree that its relentless support and practical approach played a huge role in its remarkable recovery.
“When we were in the first hospital, after having a stroke, they didn’t treat him in terms of rehabilitation,” Stacie recalls. “They said that their protocol was not to work with any patients until they were removed, so it was in it for three weeks … which is three weeks of late recovery, so I started working with him from the beginning … making the sensory stimulation.
Logan and Stacie Barber
But to take Logan the care he needed, and the care he knew he would want was not easy. Based on the background of physical therapy, Stacie struggled relentlessly to move him to a facility that prioritized the recovery from day one. Her persistence attributed her. Just two days after his arrival at the new hospital, Logan was out of the ventilator, from the heavy drug and the start of physical treatment. Stacie says that the change in the environment and the early principle to restore were the points in its recovery.
The stroke did not only destroy the logan of course – it took a heavy spiritual tax. For weeks, he fell in and out of consciousness, unable to separate reality from dreams. Understanding his boundaries was just as harsh. His brain and his body often felt out of sync, convincing him that he could do more than he really could.
At one point, he didn’t even recognize Stacie, believing he was a scam. In an episode, she called “Code Blue”, thinking she would call on the police to remove her. They can laugh about it now, but at the moment it has shown how much the stroke had uploaded its world.
His restoration focused on both the body and the mind, starting with the Stacie project that started at the hospital. During last year, Logan faced speech therapy, natural therapy and vision to recover the spectacle he lost completely after the stroke. The recovery of his vision became an important turning point. Passing the vision test of his field meant that it could lead again, a huge step towards recovering the independence that had stolen the stroke.
Logan and Stacie Barber
“They said it was unheard of in the time frame that he was able to get his permission back because they thought they would need 20 to 30 visuals of vision and was able to get his permission back to 12 visits,” Stacie says.
Much of his early physiotherapy was the restructuring of the basics: walking correctly, enhancing the left side of his body that lost function, re -education of his handle and rebuilding his balance, which brainwashes are often compatible. All the time, Stacie drove him through the weight and band exercises to rebuild the power and keep him forward.
Now, Logan is back in the gym that chases his old numbers. His body is not where he was (he was pulling 745 pounds in the deadlift before), but he refuses to stop. The road was brutal and calculating who is now no pain.
“There were points where I was really depressed,” he recalls. “I mean, having this weakness of the left and not to go back to my normal routine is really sucking, but no matter what, I am not going to improve if I do not do things, so I can either sit down and let it get worse and reach or just continue.”
Logan and Stacie Barber
But now his focus is to hit new PRS. He is back in the gym, training hard, but there is a deeper reason that drives him – to be there for his daughter, to live a normal life with her and stacie, and to handle everyday moments with them.
“I hope that my story at least serves as an incentive and in fact gives people hope in the end, that I have made this recovery, yes, I had the weight background, the background, but my progress, and it may be different from man, is possible.