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Stroke of Insight
Jill Bolte Taylor
Neuroanatomist Jill
Bolte Taylor had an opportunity few brain scientists would wish
for: One morning, she realized she was having a massive stroke. As it happened
-- as she felt her brain functions slip away one by one, speech, movement,
understanding -- she studied and remembered every moment. This
is a powerful story of recovery and awareness -- of how our brains define us
and connect us to the world and to one another. (Recorded February 2008 in
Monterey, California. Duration: 18:44.)
The Transcript
of the Video
I grew up to study the brain because I have a brother
who has been diagnosed with a brain disorder, schizophrenia. And as a sister and
as a scientist, I wanted to understand, why is it that I can take my dreams, I
can connect them to my reality, and I can make my dreams come true -- what is it
about my brother's brain and his schizophrenia that he cannot connect his dreams
to a common, shared reality, so they instead become delusions?
So I dedicated my career to research into the severe mental illnesses. And I
moved from my home state of Indiana to Boston where I was working in the lab of
Dr. Francine Benes, in the Harvard Department of Psychiatry. And in the lab, we
were asking the question, What are the biological differences between the brains
of individuals who would be diagnosed as normal control, as compared to the
brains of individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia, schizoaffective, or bipolar
disorder?
So we were essentially mapping the microcircuitry of the brain, which cells
are communicating with which cells, with which chemicals, and then with what
quantities of those chemicals. So there was a lot of meaning in my life because
I was performing this kind of research during the day. But then in the evenings
and on the weekends I traveled as an advocate for NAMI, the National Alliance on
Mental Illness.
But on the morning of December 10 1996 I woke up to discover that I had a
brain disorder of my own. A blood vessel exploded in the left half of my brain.
And in the course of four hours I watched my brain completely deteriorate in its
ability to process all information. On the morning of the hemorrhage I could not
walk, talk, read, write or recall any of my life. I essentially became an infant
in a woman's body.
If you've ever seen a human brain, it's obvious that the two hemispheres are
completely separate from one another. And I have brought for you a real human
brain. [Thanks.] So, this is a real human brain. This is the front of the brain,
the back of the brain with a spinal cord hanging down, and this is how it would
be positioned inside of my head. And when you look at the brain, it's obvious
that the two cerebral cortices are completely separate from one another. For
those of you who understand computers, our right hemisphere functions like a
parallel processor. While our left hemisphere functions like a serial processor.
The two hemispheres do communicate with one another through the corpus collosum,
which is made up of some 300 million axonal fibers. But other than that, the two
hemispheres are completely separate. Because they process information
differently, each hemisphere thinks about different things, they care about
different things, and dare I say, they have very different personalities.
[Excuse me. Thank you. It's been a joy.]
Our right hemisphere is all about this present moment. It's all about right
here right now. Our right hemisphere, it thinks in pictures and it learns
kinesthetically through the movement of our bodies. Information in the form of
energy streams in simultaneously through all of our sensory systems. And then it
explodes into this enormous collage of what this present moment looks like. What
this present moment smells like and tastes like, what it feels like and what it
sounds like. I am an energy being connected to the energy all around me through
the consciousness of my right hemisphere. We are energy beings connected to one
another through the consciousness of our right hemispheres as one human family.
And right here, right now, all we are brothers and sisters on this planet, here
to make the world a better place. And in this moment we are perfect. We are
whole. And we are beautiful.
My left hemisphere is a very different place. Our left hemisphere thinks
linearly and methodically. Our left hemisphere is all about the past, and it's
all about the future. Our left hemisphere is designed to take that enormous
collage of the present moment. And start picking details and more details and
more details about those details. It then categorizes and organizes all that
information. Associates it with everything in the past we've ever learned and
projects into the future all of our possibilities. And our left hemisphere
thinks in language. It's that ongoing brain chatter that connects me and my
internal world to my external world. It's that little voice that says to me,
"Hey, you gotta remember to pick up bananas on your way home, and eat 'em
in the morning." It's that calculating intelligence that reminds me when I
have to do my laundry. But perhaps most important, it's that little voice that
says to me, "I am. I am." And as soon as my left hemisphere says to me
"I am," I become separate. I become a single solid individual separate
from the energy flow around me and separate from you.
And this was the portion of my brain that I lost on the morning of my stroke.
On the morning of the stroke, I woke up to a pounding pain behind my left
eye. And it was the kind of pain, caustic pain, that you get when you bite into
ice cream. And it just gripped me and then it released me. Then it just gripped
me and then released me. And it was very unusual for me to experience any kind
of pain, so I thought OK, I'll just start my normal routine. So I got up and I
jumped onto my cardio glider, which is a full-body exercise machine. And I'm
jamming away on this thing, and I'm realizing that my hands looked like
primitive claws grasping onto the bar. I thought "that's very
peculiar" and I looked down at my body and I thought, "whoa, I'm a
weird-looking thing." And it was as though my consciousness had shifted
away from my normal perception of reality, where I'm the person on the machine
having the experience, to some esoteric space where I'm witnessing myself having
this experience.
And it was all every peculiar and my headache was just getting worse, so I
get off the machine, and I'm walking across my living room floor, and I realize
that everything inside of my body has slowed way down. And every step is very
rigid and very deliberate. There's no fluidity to my pace, and there's this
constriction in my area of perceptions so I'm just focused on internal systems.
And I'm standing in my bathroom getting ready to step into the shower and I
could actually hear the dialog inside of my body. I heard a little voice saying,
"OK, you muscles, you gotta contract, you muscles you relax."
And I lost my balance and I'm propped up against the wall. And I look down at
my arm and I realize that I can no longer define the boundaries of my body. I
can't define where I begin and where I end. Because the atoms and the molecules
of my arm blended with the atoms and molecules of the wall. And all I could
detect was this energy. Energy. And I'm asking myself, "What is wrong with
me, what is going on?" And in that moment, my brain chatter, my left
hemisphere brain chatter went totally silent. Just like someone took a remote
control and pushed the mute button and -- total silence.
And at first I was shocked to find myself inside of a silent mind. But then I
was immediately captivated by the magnificence of energy around me. And because
I could no longer identify the boundaries of my body, I felt enormous and
expansive. I felt at one with all the energy that was, and it was beautiful
there.
Then all of a sudden my left hemisphere comes back online and it says to me,
"Hey! we got a problem, we got a problem, we gotta get some help." So
it's like, OK, OK, I got a problem, but then I immediately drifted right back
out into the consciousness, and I affectionately referred to this space as La La
Land. But it was beautiful there. Imagine what it would be like to be totally
disconnected from your brain chatter that connects you to the external world. So
here I am in this space and any stress related to my, to my job, it was gone.
And I felt lighter in my body. And imagine all of the relationships in the
external world and the many stressors related to any of those, they were gone. I
felt a sense of peacefulness. And imagine what it would feel like to lose 37
years of emotional baggage! I felt euphoria. Euphoria was beautiful -- and then
my left hemisphere comes online and it says "Hey! you've got to pay
attention, we've got to get help," and I'm thinking, "I got to get
help, I gotta focus." So I get out of the shower and I mechanically dress
and I'm walking around my apartment, and I'm thinking, "I gotta get to
work, I gotta get to work, can I drive? can I drive?"
And in that moment my right arm went totally paralyzed by my side. And I
realized, "Oh my gosh! I'm having a stroke! I'm having a stroke!" And
the next thing my brain says to me is, "Wow! This is so cool. This is so
cool. How many brain scientists have the opportunity to study their own brain
from the inside out?"
And then it crosses my mind: "But I'm a very busy woman. I don't have
time for a stroke!" So I'm like, "OK, I can't stop the stroke from
happening so I'll do this for a week or two, and then I'll get back to my
routine, OK."
So I gotta call help, I gotta call work. I couldn't remember the number at
work, so I remembered, in my office I had a business card with my number on it.
So I go in my business room, I pull out a 3-inch stack of business cards. And
I'm looking at the card on top, and even though I could see clearly in my mind's
eye what my business card looked like, I couldn't tell if this was my card or
not, because all I could see were pixels. And the pixels of the words blended
with the pixels of the background and the pixels of the symbols, and I just
couldn't tell. And I would wait for what I call a wave of clarity. And in that
moment, I would be able to reattach to normal reality and I could tell, that's
not the card, that's not the card, that's not the card. It took me 45 minutes to
get one inch down inside of that stack of cards.
In the meantime, for 45 minutes the hemorrhage is getting bigger in my left
hemisphere. I do not understand numbers, I do not understand the telephone, but
it's the only plan I have. So I take the phone pad and I put it right here, I'd
take the business card, I'd put it right here, and I'm matching the shape of the
squiggles on the card to the shape of the squiggles on the phone pad. But then I
would drift back out into La La Land, and not remember when I come back if I'd
already dialed those numbers.
So I had to wield my paralyzed arm like a stump, and cover the numbers as I
went along and pushed them, so that as I would come back to normal reality I'd
be able to tell, yes, I've already dialed that number. Eventually the whole
number gets dialed, and I'm listening to the phone, and my colleague picks up
the phone and he says to me, "Whoo woo wooo woo woo." [laughter] And I
think to myself, "Oh my gosh, he sounds like a golden retriever!" And
so I say to him, clear in my mind I say to him. "This is Jill! I need
help!" And what comes out of my voice is, "Whoo woo wooo woo
woo." I'm thinking, "Oh my gosh, I sound like a golden
retriever." So I couldn't know, I didn't know that I couldn't speak or
understand language until I tried.
So he recognizes that I need help, and he gets me help. And a little while
later, I am riding in an ambulance from one hospital across Boston to Mass
General Hospital. And I curl up into a little fetal ball. And just like a
balloon with the last bit of air just, just right out of the balloon I felt my
energy lift and I felt my spirit surrender. And in that moment I knew that I was
no longer the choreographer of my life. And either the doctors rescue my body
and give me a second chance at life or this was perhaps my moment of transition.
When I awoke later that afternoon I was shocked to discover that I was still
alive. When I felt my spirit surrender, I said goodbye to my life, and my mind
is now suspended between two very opposite planes of reality. Stimulation coming
in through my sensory systems felt like pure pain. Light burned my brain like
wildfire and sounds were so loud and chaotic that I could not pick a voice out
from the background noise and I just wanted to escape. Because I could not
identify the position of my body in space, I felt enormous and expensive, like a
genie just liberated from her bottle. And my spirit soared free like a great
whale gliding through the sea of silent euphoria. Harmonic. I remember thinking
there's no way I would ever be able to squeeze the enormousness of myself back
inside this tiny little body.
But I realized "But I'm still alive! I'm still alive and I have found
Nirvana. And if I have found Nirvana and I'm still alive, then everyone who is
alive can find Nirvana." I picture a world filled with beautiful, peaceful,
compassionate, loving people who knew that they could come to this space at any
time. And that they could purposely choose to step to the right of their left
hemispheres and find this peace. And then I realized what a tremendous gift this
experience could be, what a stroke of insight this could be to how we live our
lives. And it motivated my to recover.
Two and a half weeks after the hemorrhage, the surgeons went in and they
removed a blood clot the size of a golf ball that was pushing on my language
centers. Here I am with my mama, who's a true angel in my life. It took me eight
years to completely recover.
So who are we? We are the life force power of the universe, with manual
dexterity and two cognitive minds. And we have the power to choose, moment by
moment, who and how we want to be in the world. Right here right now, I can step
into the consciousness of my right hemisphere where we are -- I am -- the life
force power of the universe, and the life force power of the 50 trillion
beautiful molecular geniuses that make up my form. At one with all that is. Or I
can choose to step into the consciousness of my left hemisphere. where I become
a single individual, a solid, separate from the flow, separate from you. I am
Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor, intellectual, neuroanatomist. These are the
"we" inside of me.
Which would you choose? Which do you choose? And when? I believe that the
more time we spend choosing to run the deep inner peace circuitry of our right
hemispheres, the more peace we will project into the world and the more peaceful
our planet will be. And I thought that was an idea worth spreading.