Archive for brain

What It’s Like To Get A Brain Shunt for Christmas

My most unusual gift ever, was a little brain shunt. I didn’t actually get it for Christmas; I received it back in the summer. Since it’s working well more than twenty-five years later, it is one of my best gifts—even counting Christmas.

I had never known anybody who had a brain shunt, so I concluded that people who get one don’t live long. I would have felt better if someone would have yelled out, “Hey everybody, I am really enjoying my brain shunt!”  But not a word!

Mine fits just under my scalp on the back corner of my head. After describing it to a friend, I asked if he would like to feel my shunt?  He said, “Yeah, have you got it in the car?”

Some people don’t want to feel it. When someone does, I feel very close to the person while they are feeling it! I guide them all I can: “Can you feel that little ridge on the back left corner of my head?”  As soon as they locate it I tell them not to mash it too hard or my ears will bleed—they jerk away their hand.  (I always get a laugh with that one!)

After they realize that I was kidding, they usually say something like, “Yeah, that’s neat. The motor is very quiet, too, isn’t it?  I can’t even feel it vibrate.”

I explain that there are no moving parts, no bells and whistles, and it doesn’t go “bump in the night.”  There are no exposed wires, buttons, cranks, or handles; no belts and pulleys.  It doesn’t activate garage doors when I drive through a neighborhood.  I tell them I paid extra to get the silent, gravity-flow model so I can lead in silent prayer.  Some are impressed; others wonder.  (All the while, I’m having fun!)

Almost everyone asks about headaches. I tell them, “I didn’t get it because of headaches. If I have a headache, I take Tylenol.  (I’ve only had one headache in twenty-five years.)

I explain that I got it because of loss of short-term memory resulting from a severe concussion in an auto accident. When they ask, “How long have you had that problem?”  I respond, “What problem?”

Then I explain: “I couldn’t remember a person’s name right after being introduced. Or I would look up a phone number and forget it before I could dial. Or I’d want to call a name and couldn’t remember it.” Frequently, one will say, “Oh! That happens to me all the time.” I tell them maybe they need a brain shunt like mine.

One of my big concerns as I anticipated surgery was that half my head would be shaved. I remember the nurse coming toward me with what appeared—in my prone position—to be four-foot long electric sheers. She gave me half of a Kojak special—right down to my scalp.  To everyone who took delight in telling me that I looked like Kojak (Theo Kojak of the old TV show), I said, “I’m making a list of people who want to have their head shaved to look like Kojak. May I add your name to my list?”

Did you know it takes six to eight weeks for hair to over-come the “four-foot-sheering” and to reestablish itself?

I don’t have any regrets about getting my shunt. I got the gravity-flow model and I have no fear of the motor backfiring and blowing out my brains. I don’t have to worry about it moving around, about slippage, unraveling, splitting, or buckling up on me.  That’s a lot to be thankful for at Christmas.

The Way the Brain Is Made

Through extensive research I have found that every time you sneeze, all of the numbers in your head advance by one digit. The implications of this fact are fascinating. I can prove it if we agree upon a few assumptions as we think about it together. Think of a low number and call it out. (I will assume that you called out the number 8.) By this theory, before you sneezed the last time, that number would have been 7. (See what I mean!)

Pick another low number that is higher than 15. (I will assume that you called out 20.) Now hold that number for a moment. What number do you get when you add the numbers 40 and 50? You get 90! Correct? Now, subtract your previously high number of 20 from 90—what number do you get? That is correct, you get 70. At this rate, it will take you 70 more sneezes to get from 20 to 90. And that is just one column of numbers in your head.

Get ready now! Here comes the blockbuster: just as that one column of numbers advanced one digit per sneeze, ALL NUMBERS in your brain, unilaterally, and simultaneously move forward one digit each time you sneeze. Think of it! According to this theory, all numbers advance like a moving wall of digits with each of your  sneezes.

As you keep sneezing, all numbers keep advancing and they begin to bunch up in the front of your head. The bunched up numbers could be the reason for your headaches. I feel sorry for you, but this just illustrates that life is tough!

There are some facts we are dealing with here:

  1. Sneezing is usually involuntary, and you will keep doing it.
  2. A reasonable amount of sneezing is desirable because, the more you sneeze, the higher numbers you will have in your brain.
  3. The higher numbers you have to work with, the better you will be in math. (If you only have low numbers, it is more difficult to work big math problems that require large numbers and lots of them.)

This in my advice on the matter: Sneeze as often as you can! Run up the numbers in your brain as high as possible! Maybe, one day you will have enough numbers to balance your checkbook!