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Cohen - Head case: my brain and other wonders

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    Head case: my brain and other wonders
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A spirited, wry, and utterly original memoir about one womans struggle to make her way and set up a life after doctors discover a hole the size of a plum in her brain.

The summer before she was set to head out-of-state to pursue her MFA, twenty-seven-year-old Cole Cohen submitted herself to a battery of tests. For as long as she could remember, shed struggled with a series of learning disabilities that made it nearly impossible to judge time and spacestanding at a cross walk, she couldnt tell you if an oncoming car would arrive in ten seconds or thirty; if you asked her to let you know when ten minutes had passed, she might notify you in a minute or an hour. These symptoms had always kept her from getting a drivers license, which she wanted to have for grad school. Instead of leaving the doctors office with permission to drive, she left with a shocking diagnosisdoctors had found a large hole in her brain responsible for her life-long struggles....

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The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way. Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the authors copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.

For anyone who has ever felt invisible

A labyrinth is an ancient device that compresses a journey into a small space, winds a path like a thread on a spool. It contains beginning, confusion, perseverance, arrival, and return. There at last the metaphysical journey of your life and your actual movements are one and the same. You may wander, you may learn that in order to get to your destination you must turn away from it, become lost, spin about, and then only after the way has become overwhelming and absorbing, arrive, having gone the great journey without having gone far from the ground.

Rebecca Solnit, The Faraway Nearby

Itll be no use putting their heads down and saying, Come up again, dear! I shall only look up and say Who am I, then? Tell me that first and then, if I like being that person, I shall come up; if not, Ill stay down here until Im somebody elsebut, oh dear! cried Alice, with a sudden burst of tears, I do wish they would put their heads down! I am so very tired of being all alone here!

Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland

May 2, 2007

Neurology Exam

Portland, Oregon

Inside my stomach it feels bright and cold like those old cartoons where the crow swallows a mercury thermometer and reels around the room clutching his gut, hiccupping in percussive squeals. My purse is clamped tightly under my arm; the gold clasp digs into my armpit. I am with my fatheror my mother; I dont remember who drove me and who was at work. I didnt drive myself because I cant; which is why Im here. Im not moving to Southern California for grad school without knowing first how to drive, and since I was fifteen no ones been able to teach me how to and no one, including me, has been able to reason out whats stopping me. When I try to drive I get disoriented, overwhelmed, and tired, but doesnt everyone at first? Both parents will be summoned to the next appointment.

I think that my mother was with me. Shes the one who teased out the first thread by calling the Physical Therapy Department of Providence Hospital; where we are now, but instead were in the Neurology Department. When my mother called Physical Therapy asking to speak to an occupational therapist about my symptoms (disorientation, exhaustion, not knowing left from right, not understanding where to place my hands on the steering wheel during a three-point turn) and to schedule an appointment with a driving specialist, the occupational therapist who answered the phone told her that my symptoms sounded neurological. In retrospect this sounds obvious, but of course, in retrospect it all sounds so obvious. In this waiting room, where I am the youngest person by forty years other than my mother because the neurologist specializes in geriatric assessment, nobody knows anything yet. Were all sitting together in the cell reserved for anticipation.

The physical therapist recommended that I see Dr. Volt, who is known for solving puzzles. The scheduling happens around me during phone calls that are later reiterated to me. I fill out paperwork, sign medical information release forms, mail them to the receptionist, and wait.

This afternoon we wait for half an hour I think, but since Im particularly inept at calculating time as it passes I cant be sure of this either. The wait feels simultaneously slow and fast; interminable and bound to be over far too soon. I dont especially look forward to being granted entrance to the other side of that door.

This is an experiment for all involved: the neurologist, my parents, me. The previous evidence, stacked in a filing cabinet in my parents garage, suggests that this is another pointless exercise. The first file ( TestingDyslexia ) dates back to kindergarten. Theres also middle school ( TestingADD/ADHD ) and high school ( TestingMotor Visual , TestingVision ). The files are full of my handwriting samples in both print and cursive, my drawings of squares overlapping circles, Scantron sheets, more drawings that I made when a school psychologist asked me to show her what a happy girl looks like, what my family looks like; the happy girl has wings and wears a crown. There are yellowing copies of worksheets with the prompts I am good at: and I am bad at:, unsolved math problems, and pages of typed notes from various school district learning specialists. In the file dedicated to my driving issues, there are old failed tests, flashcards, and handbooks. My parents are both researchers. My mother is a librarian and my dad is a philosophy professor; I am their longest-running joint research project.

I imagine a long-running quiz show, led by a host with a fiberglass smile and a skinny mic. Name That Learning Disability has been on-air since 1984, when it took me several months to learn how to tie my shoes in kindergarten. Its been running since then, featuring episodic intervals of test bubbles to fill in, blocks to stack in the correct pattern, flashcards to name.

Each round of testing was gingerly posited to me with the same phrasing. Were just trying to figure out whats really going on. Whats really going on is that I am horrible at math; I dont know my left from my right; I cant judge distance, time, or space, read maps, travel independently without getting lost; or drive. As long as Ive had these issues, Ive had coping strategies. You may think that Im kind of odd in that wacky-professor sort of way. Id forget my head if it wasnt screwed on straight, et cetera. But you would never realize that as Im walking next to you down the street, you are leading us both.

The trouble is routine, schedule, structure. This is why the academic world works well for me, part of why Im headed to grad school in a couple of months. Semesters, breaks, three-hour classesits like having someone cut up my year into small little sections with a knife and fork and feed them to me.

The trouble usually starts with getting anywhere on time. From elementary through high school, getting me out the door and off to school was next to impossible for my mother, a daily ritual of exasperation. Finding all of my books, my other shoe, all a mess.

Once when I was in elementary school, I waited two hours for a school bus that never arrived. I didnt know that it was a snow day, and neither did my mom, who had assumed that Id gotten on the bus. I dont know when a child gains a sense of time, or if this is something that another child would do. I dont doubt that without a watch Id do the same thing again, today.

One of the great tensions in my life is in the concept of a reasonable amount of time. Wearing a watch should solve this problem, but how long until I should check my watch again? Is it time yet to check my watch again? Should I wait longer? What about now? No, not yet. Because I swear, if I look at it one more time and it still says that its been only two minutes since I last checked it, I will scream. Right here, right now, I will crumple up and die. The bus will never come, but I cant leave because I have to get to work; still, I swear I am certain that the bus will never ever arrive. It has been two minutes. It has been an ice age. Dinosaurs have been wiped off the planet, human beings drag their knuckles and scrawl in caves, make fire and learn to walk upright, invent the wheel, create and drive cars, go grocery shopping, and still Im here waiting for the bus. Check the watch: five minutes. Progress. My life is spent either waiting or leaving someone waiting.

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