Posts Tagged ‘Stimulation’

Well, here it is.  My final book.  At least, for now.  If anything else particularly word-worthy happens between now and whenever, you can read about it here on the blog.  If I get enough really, really interesting blog entries put together before I wind up staggering after imaginary butterflies down the hallway of some nice and safe place where they will keep me warm and safe and protected… maybe there will be another book.

But this is my last effort for now.  This book comprises my entire history with Parkinson’s disease… from my first remembered experience with it in 1972, through the struggle to find a diagnosis, through the nonchalant years where having Parkinson’s was the same thing for me as being bald, through the changes of 2006-7 when my symptoms got worse, through the deep brain stimulation clinical trial and the subsequent “droolfests,” through the continued decline of 2008 and 2009, to reaching the point in late 2010 where I’m filing for disability retirement.

No family drama.  No overt political viewpoints.  Just stuff about my life as a guy with Parkinson’s and the other crap that annoys me.

How is this book different from other books written by other people with Parkinson’s?

Beats me.  I tried to read one someone gave me as a gift one time, years ago, but I couldn’t get through it.  It depressed the hell out of me.  The last thing I wanted to write was a “So I close in saying that I may have had a tough break, but I have an awful lot to live for…” kind of book.  I didn’t want to thank God for the blessing of Parkinson’s disease so that, through my suffering, I might better understand the suffering of others.  I didn’t want to write about flowers and lollipops and unicorns and how every cloud has a silver lining.

I wanted to write a funny book.  And there are times, gentle reader, when this fucking disease is funnier than a Three Stooges Marathon.  (Right now, I can hear my Mom saying, “The Three Stooges aren’t funny.”  But let’s ignore her.)

When a doctor tells you that you’re too young to have Parkinson’s but it might be Lou Gehrig‘s disease… and it turns out to be Parkinson’s?  That’s funny!

When your neurosurgeon, up to both fists in your brain, sends a text message to your wife in the waiting room that says, “Mrs. Schmalfeldt, you will be happy to know that we opened two holes in your husband’s head and found brain in BOTH of them,” THAT’s funny!

When a big, African American OR tech who looks like he would be more at home wearing a football jersey with the number “98” on it approaches you with a catheter and tells you to “think pleasant thoughts,” THAT’s funny!

When, after brain surgery, your post-op nurse is wheeling you down for a CT scan and you engage in conversation with a police officer and the nurse tells the cop, “Go easy on him, officer.  He’s already had his brain picked enough today,” THAT’s funny!

When your wife threatens in one breath to wrap you in bubble wrap, and in the next breath suggests using a cattle prod when you freeze while walking, THAT’s funny!

So… I wrote a funny book.

And, in places, it’s an angry book.

I’m angry about the eight years wasted during the Bush administration when federal funding for embryonic stem cell research was outlawed.

I’m angry about religious hypocrites who worry more about the rights of frozen cells in a petrie dish that will NEVER become babies than they are about my ability to walk without freezing or falling.

I’m angry that, because as a nation we don’t like thinking about or looking at old people, we don’t have a serious effort to raise awareness about Parkinson’s disease.

But mostly, I think it’s been a very funny joke.  That’s what I mean to convey with this book.  I want that message to be read by the person newly diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, someone who has had it for awhile, someone who has a loved one with the disease, or someone who is thinking about approaching a neurologist to see what’s been causing that odd twitch in his right hand.  I want my words… the words of someone who has known about his disease for nearly 11 years (but had symptoms for at least two years before the diagnosis)… to comfort and to confront.  To let you know that although it’s a progressive disease, it isn’t fatal.  And to confront YOU to confront OTHERS with your disease.

Michael J. Fox, God love him, hid his disease for nine years.  I told my radio listeners the day after I got the diagnosis.  I volunteered for brain surgery because what they learn might help someone down the road.  When I die, my body — all of it — is being donated to science.

So if you have Parkinson’s or know and love someone who has, read my book and find a similar experience you’ve had and smile about it.  If you don’t have it, read the book and see why YOU should dig into your pocket and help fund the research that might — MIGHT — keep you or someone YOU love from getting it.

But, most of all, just read the book and learn something.  Parkinson’s is not “a Russian novel” like that idiot in the movie “Love and Other Drugs” tells the Jake Gyllenhaal character, saying that if he knew then what he knows now about the disease, he would have run from his fiance like a rabbit.  Parkinson’s is a “Keystone Kops” silent movie comedy.  You know what’s going to happen.  But hopefully, you’ll get some laughs along the way.

Buy my book. 100 percent of the proceeds go to the National Parkinson Foundation and the Charles DBS Research Fund at Vanderbilt.

Moreover, it’s the last one I’m gonna write.

Probably.

Maybe.

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(Editor’s Note:  A story about another brave brain surgery volunteer.)

Minneapolis, MN (PRWEB) April 15, 2009

What would prompt someone to say “Let’s stick wires into someone’s brain, run voltage through it, and see what happens!”? So asks activist and author Jackie Hunt Christensen in her important new book, LIFE WITH A BATTERY-OPERATED BRAIN: A Patient‘s Guide to Deep Brain Stimulation Surgery for Parkinson’s Disease (Langdon Street Press; April 2009; ISBN 978-1-934938-26-3; $ 16.95).

Beyond answering the “whys” that arise in considering Deep Brain Stimulation Surgery, Hunt Christensen offers her unique perspective in this comprehensive book. LIFE WITH A BATTERY-OPERATED BRAIN (www.lifewithbobbook.com) is designed to be a highly readable guide for people with Parkinson’s disease (PD), exploring the benefits of this particular surgery on many motor symptoms of the disease. “Deep Brain Stimulation is a process, not an event,” explains Hunt Christensen.

The author has firsthand knowledge of the procedure more commonly referred to as “DBS” and lived with Parkinson’s disease for more than seven years before electing to be evaluated for DBS surgery. Ultimately, she was deemed a good candidate for the surgery, and DBS seemed like her only logical option–a choice that has been validated post-surgery, as Christensen now enjoys life with most of her motor symptoms well controlled. Parkinson’s disease, the author is quick to point out, does not end, but DBS is meant to be a long-term treatment.

Now Jackie Hunt Christensen offers readers a resource that was previously unavailable: a step-by-step look at her own journey, as well as information on a typical evaluation process, medical statistics, questions to ask neurosurgeons, opinions from other DBS patients, the programming process for DBS, and much more.

“I wrote this book as way of giving back to the community,” Hunt Christensen said. “DBS has given me back so much of my life! I want to share what I’ve learned from my own experience and others’ to help inform the decisions being made every day by others looking for those same results.”

LIFE WITH A BATTERY-OPERATED BRAIN is a must-read for those who are considering Deep Brain Stimulation–and for those who love them. Health professionals can also benefit from reading the book, as certain diagnostic tools and therapies may not be safe for use on DBS patients or require specific precautions.

Being released by Langdon Street Press today, LIFE WITH A BATTERY-OPERATED BRAIN will be available in bookstores and online at Life With a Battery-Operated Brain or Amazon.com.

Jackie Hunt Christensen is also the author of The First Year: Parkinson’s Disease, An Essential Guide for the Newly Diagnosed and has published numerous articles and editorials regarding both Parkinson’s and environmental issues. In 2006, she won the Milly Kondracke Award for Outstanding Advocacy from the Parkinson’s Action Network in Washington, DC.

Jackie, her husband, and two sons ages 17 and 12, reside in Minneapolis.

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