This book, Brain on fire: My Month of Madness, is about the author Susannah Cahalan, a young woman who has a disease which no doctor could figure out and her journey to find a diagnosis. Susannah had many symptoms which ended up fundamentally killing her brain. Susannah gets put in a hospital after having another seizure and was labeled violent, psychotic, and a flight risk. Susannah had to stay in the hospital twenty-eight days before being released with the diagnosis, Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis. Susannah has been treated and officially cured, but still struggling with memory loss,using her experience to help others. Susannahs purpose for writing the book is to inform readers about Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis. I am confident this…
Richard W. Wrangham is a Professor of Biological Anthropology at Harvard University. He had a long term study in Kanyawara chimpanzees and he was well known for his work in the ecology of primate social system. The book Catching Fire refers to the activities of our human ancestors when they began to use fire to practice cooked diet. Although the topic is pretty academic, but Richard used simple sentences and words to explain his ideas well. Yet the proof is still preciseness with provided evidences, and the conclusion is convincible. Hence, this source should be trustable.…
sickness she was unable to continue her teaching career which brought in the majority of the…
Brain on Fire by Susannah Cahalan is a memoir retelling the story of the struggles of mental illness. Susannah Cahalan was in her twenties when she first started experiencing the symptoms of her rare brain disease. It took many tests and several doctors until the correct diagnosis of anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis was found. Although Susannah’s memories from the hospitals are practically non existent, she used her journalism skills to piece together the story and write her book. In which Cahalan writes not only to show people the struggle of living through a mental illness, but also to shed light to the issues in the medical field and what needs to be improved.…
Epilepsy is a common neurological disorder characterised by recurring seizures. Different types of epilepsy have different causes. Accurate estimates of incidence and prevalence are difficult to achieve because identifying people who may have epilepsy is difficult. Epilepsy has been estimated to affect between 362,000 and 415,000 people in England. In addition, there will be further individuals, estimated to be 5–30%, so amounting to up to another 124,500 people, who have been diagnosed with epilepsy, but in whom the diagnosis is incorrect. (NICE CG)…
In Fires in the Mind, by Kathleen Cushman, a majority of her words were on mastery and motivation of youth. Kathleen spent a great deal of her time questioning children about different aspects of deliberate practice, mastery in/out of school, and what it means to be a master. In her journey to find answers, she found that many kids already practice deliberate practice outside of school in extracurricular activities (sports, crafts, hobbies, etc.) and wanted to see if the same applied to inside school as well. She discovered, through the kid’s words, that they felt they couldn’t practice the same because it was boring, or irrelevant to them. With that in mind, it provoked many ideas on how to build the class to be engaged and motivate them…
One of the workers for the Coffeehouse, Polly, passed away. Mattie, was somewhat close to her. Her Mother, would not let Mattie attend the funeral. This upset Mattie very much but, she remembered “Polly happy, joking, maybe stealing a kiss with Matthew, then bursting through the door to tell me” (15) Mattie would look to happy memories of her and the ones she has lost throughout the story to help her get through it. Not too long after Polly died, Mother became sick. The doctor said that there was “And I assure you, there is no fever in this house” (66). In the end, Mother ended up being misdiagnosed, she had the fever. She sent grandfather and Mattie away to the country so they wouldn't catch…
3. Mrs. Turpin is the main character of this short story and proves to be a dynamic character. In the beginning of the story Mrs. Turpin immediately starts judging everyone in the waiting room of the doctor’s office. While observing these people she was thinking to herself how grateful she was that she was a white woman with a nice home and land as opposed to being “white trash” or black. She even says that she believes that poverty stricken black people cannot get into Heaven because they don’t measure up to certain standards. She views poor and black people to be lesser than her until the very end of the…
In a materialistic culture, such as one that the United States has become, objects or possessions often have a surface value of relevance to consumers, but the underlying sentiments in these objects are lost or nonexistent. Contrasting that type of culture, these ideals can be romanticized in writing, film, and other forms of media. This is evident with Stieg Larsson and his ability to make commonplace tools pits of deeper meaning that exclaim their symbolism to readers of The Girl Who Played With Fire. Consequently, in Larsson’s work, a car, a book draft, and a computer help to develop an intriguing plot and dynamic characters.…
Karen is a 30-year-old single woman. She was referred to a psychiatrist after six visits to her primary care physician complaining of headaches, body aches, sharp pains above her left ear, and a ringing in both ears. She was convinced she had a brain tumor, but a CAT scan revealed no physiological cause.…
There are about 5.7 million of American adults who suffer from manic-depression illness. Manic-depression is another name for bipolar. What is bipolar disorder? Bipolar disorder is a disorder in which the brain experience manic high (enthusiastic) and low (depression). The nonfiction story "An Unquiet Mind: Memoir of Mood and Madness" relates to bipolar disorder and influence of society.…
Lizzie also has a support worker who visits her once a week. She has the…
Her father died from a disease contracted while handling soiled laundry on the trains when she was 12, leaving their family without financial means because her mother didn’t work.…
Through out the novel, Susanna portrayed a number of abnormal behaviors that interfered with her ability to function. The first symptom, and probably the most important, Susanna had thoughts of suicide and eventually attempted it. Her motives ranged, using anything as a reason to kill herself, as she says in the book “My motives were weak” (Kaysen 36). From not wanting to write a paper to making a stupid remark, she used these as reasons to kill herself. Unfortunately, at age 16, Susanna took 50 aspirin and swallowed it with a fifth of vodka. Family had found her about to pass out, and so they rushed her to the hospital to have her stomach pumped. This attempt occurred in 1965. Along with the suicide attempt, she possessed self-mutilating behaviors as well. She took part in an act that she called “wrist banging”. She would slowly bang her wrists on the edge of a metal chair, causing her wrists to swell and bruise. She used this behavior through her stay at the hospital and the time ranged, from a half hour to multiple hours and would do it in the evening. She also had a short period of face scratching as well.…
Her memory of Edward telling her to not be reckless and to take care of her replayed in her head every time she does something reckless. The recurring memory stimulates by her emotions and the traumatizing memory stored in the temporal lobes stimulated her occipital lobe for her to actually “see” Edward again. The shock of adrenaline and dopamine rushed through her body as soon as she does something suicidal or reckless. This presented Borderline Personality Disorder various times when she went on a motorcycle with guys who tried to rape her about a year ago, when she threw herself off a cliff during a big storm and a evil vampire in the water trying to avenge her dead vampire boyfriend. She also learned how to ride a motorcycle despite the fact that she almost cracked her head open on a huge rock. She always had bad coordination and balance which mean she was born with a defect in her…