Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Thursday, May 12, 2016
Throwback Thursday
Remembering the smallest apartment in history-- it could not fit a Murphy bed! Total living space, including kitchen and bathroom, was something like 12 ft x 15 ft. And Ben and his bro and his Dad built the heaviest loft bed ever. He could barely slide in on top, but it held bookshelves, desk, and computer below. It was Ben's first home in Bloomington...
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
My strangest 20 minutes ever
I had a strange day on Monday. I started the morning with the bright, flashing lights of the aura of a migraine-- nothing unusual about that. I have been experiencing migraines since I was 5 or 6 years old, so for about 50 years now. It was bothersome, but not the worst headache I've ever had.
I sat down to watch the news at lunch time, and started getting the aura from a second headache. So, I closed my eyes for a few minutes, until I heard the beep-beep of an e-mail notification from my phone. I opened the phone and saw something sort of like this:
I couldn't make sense of it. I worked for several minutes trying to make sense of the e-mail. I was just about to give it up to horrible corruption of some kind, when I could make out a word or two, but the sentences made no sense whatsoever. As I kept working, another word here or there would come clear to me. The last word I was working on had only 2 letters in it, but i could not figure it out. I guessed some short words to try to figure it out by the context, but couldn't. I remember thinking, "This is just a two-letter word. I must know it. Why can't I read it?" Finally, it cleared up for me, and it wasn't strange at all. It was the word "do".
The first thing i did was call Dave's office and leave him a message. Then I went to the bathroom mirror to see if i was drooping. I thought maybe I was having a stroke. But no, I wasn't confused, I knew where and who i was and what I was doing. But I had not been able to read a simple e-mail.
Dave called, and I lost words several times. I knew what I wanted to say, but could not get the word out of my mouth. He headed home, and I called the doctor's office. I left what i hope was a cogent message for the doctor's scheduler, but I could not remember my phone number to leave it on the recording. They did manage to call me back anyway.
Well, after a doctor's appointment and a brain MRI, we are pretty clear that I did not experience a stroke. What we think I did experience was transient aphasia, which can happen with the types of migraines that produce auras. One of the sites I have read describes it this way:
You can read more about this reporter, Serene Branson, and her story here.
I will be heading to the neurologist in the future to talk about this, but it seems there is no permanent damage being done, and when it is over, it is over. I am glad I was home at the time, and not teaching or out grocery shopping! At the advice of one of the sites I read, I now have some cards in my wallet that basically say this:
So, if I have another episode and am out and about, I will be depending on the kindness of someone nearby. And thank you to those of you nearby (locally or virtually) who were praying for me. I am grateful that I am not in the permanent aphasia camp, and that it passes quickly. And I hope I can better understand what stroke and brain injury folks face all the time. I just find myself grateful for so very much!
I sat down to watch the news at lunch time, and started getting the aura from a second headache. So, I closed my eyes for a few minutes, until I heard the beep-beep of an e-mail notification from my phone. I opened the phone and saw something sort of like this:
I couldn't make sense of it. I worked for several minutes trying to make sense of the e-mail. I was just about to give it up to horrible corruption of some kind, when I could make out a word or two, but the sentences made no sense whatsoever. As I kept working, another word here or there would come clear to me. The last word I was working on had only 2 letters in it, but i could not figure it out. I guessed some short words to try to figure it out by the context, but couldn't. I remember thinking, "This is just a two-letter word. I must know it. Why can't I read it?" Finally, it cleared up for me, and it wasn't strange at all. It was the word "do".
The first thing i did was call Dave's office and leave him a message. Then I went to the bathroom mirror to see if i was drooping. I thought maybe I was having a stroke. But no, I wasn't confused, I knew where and who i was and what I was doing. But I had not been able to read a simple e-mail.
Dave called, and I lost words several times. I knew what I wanted to say, but could not get the word out of my mouth. He headed home, and I called the doctor's office. I left what i hope was a cogent message for the doctor's scheduler, but I could not remember my phone number to leave it on the recording. They did manage to call me back anyway.
Well, after a doctor's appointment and a brain MRI, we are pretty clear that I did not experience a stroke. What we think I did experience was transient aphasia, which can happen with the types of migraines that produce auras. One of the sites I have read describes it this way:
It is now understood that Migraine aura is the result of an electrical wave that pulses across the brain called Spreading Cortical Depression. As the unusual electrical wave spreads across the brain, our neurons fire in an abnormal way and our brains can become confused. We see things that aren’t there. We may feel, hear or smell things that aren’t there too. Even our sense of time and space may be altered. As the spreading cortical depression hits the parts of our brains responsible for these and other functions (such as language) we experience strange aura symptoms.Strange indeed! This weird thing even happened a few years ago to a TV news reporter while she was trying to cover the Grammy Awards on the air:
You can read more about this reporter, Serene Branson, and her story here.
I will be heading to the neurologist in the future to talk about this, but it seems there is no permanent damage being done, and when it is over, it is over. I am glad I was home at the time, and not teaching or out grocery shopping! At the advice of one of the sites I read, I now have some cards in my wallet that basically say this:
Hello! My name is Chris. I sometimes have transient
migraine-relate aphasia which makes me unable to
process language for short periods (15-20 minutes).
Could you help me? Please call my husband Dave at
XXXXXX and let him know where I am and that I am
having trouble. Thank you!
So, if I have another episode and am out and about, I will be depending on the kindness of someone nearby. And thank you to those of you nearby (locally or virtually) who were praying for me. I am grateful that I am not in the permanent aphasia camp, and that it passes quickly. And I hope I can better understand what stroke and brain injury folks face all the time. I just find myself grateful for so very much!
Friday, May 06, 2016
How my son makes me jealous
This is how my youngest makes me jealous-- he texts me pictures from his trip to the British Museum in London today!
Wednesday, May 04, 2016
Tuesday, May 03, 2016
Rime of the Ancient Warriner's
In honor of teacher appreciation week, I share a lovely poem, especially for those of us who teach composition. (HT: Cindy Marsch :-)
The Rime of the Ancient Warriner’s by Robert Boynton
It is an ancient Warriner’s
And it stoppeth every wight
From doing what is best to do
When learning how to write.
It mixes skills and drills and frills
With exhortation solemn,
And stacks itself on classroom shelves
Column after column.
Amoeba-like, it splits itself
Into scope and sequence clones,
With names alike as Mike and Ike
And wholly writ by drones.
(It transmogrifies itself with ease Into
Little, Brown, and Hodges
And Bedford, Crews and Ebbitts
And a hundred other stodges.)
It names the parts and modes and marks
It’s a taxonomic rite—
And multitudes are led through it,
And still they cannot write,
And go as ones that have been stunned
And are of sense forlorn,
Much sadder and unwiser wights
Than ever they was born.
The Rime of the Ancient Warriner’s by Robert Boynton
It is an ancient Warriner’s
And it stoppeth every wight
From doing what is best to do
When learning how to write.
It mixes skills and drills and frills
With exhortation solemn,
And stacks itself on classroom shelves
Column after column.
Amoeba-like, it splits itself
Into scope and sequence clones,
With names alike as Mike and Ike
And wholly writ by drones.
(It transmogrifies itself with ease Into
Little, Brown, and Hodges
And Bedford, Crews and Ebbitts
And a hundred other stodges.)
It names the parts and modes and marks
It’s a taxonomic rite—
And multitudes are led through it,
And still they cannot write,
And go as ones that have been stunned
And are of sense forlorn,
Much sadder and unwiser wights
Than ever they was born.
Monday, May 02, 2016
Another project finished
I finally finished a quilt for Emma's "big girl" bed. It was promised before they began building their house, and the house was finished before I was! But here it is, with the happy recipient. The final picture shows it in place on Emma's bed.
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