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Posts Tagged ‘paralyzed’

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Photo: Jerry Olson for Here & Now
With dogged determination and the help of a world-renowned medical staff, Dr. Daniel Grossman has returned to work as an emergency room physician at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

The other day, my sister and I were chatting with her brain surgeon about a pediatric brain surgeon we knew who once lived in her surgeon’s town. His name was Fred Epstein, and he was not only a celebrated surgeon but a fine human being. I have a friend who still says she would “take a bullet for Fred.” A biking accident at an unmarked construction site injured Fred’s own brain so severely he could no longer practice. And yet, as he gradually recovered much of his mental capacity, he was sought out regularly by former colleagues to consult on difficult tasks.

I am thinking of Fred, now deceased, as I read about an emergency room doctor who has returned to work after a paralyzing bike accident.

Jeremy Hobson and Chris Bentley report at WBUR radio, “Monday mornings are one of the busiest times of the week in the emergency room at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. On one Monday in May, a middle-aged man tells Dr. Daniel Grossman he’s been feeling weak and having heart palpitations. …

“Both the patient and the doctor are in wheelchairs — the patient because he’s visiting the emergency room, and the doctor because of a spinal cord injury. Grossman, 37, lost the use of his legs less than a year ago, and he’s already back at work. …

“Grossman says [of the accident]. ‘I had a weird feeling around my stomach, like a numbness in my mid-abdomen, and I knew that I couldn’t feel my legs. So you had this feeling of being disconnected from the world and from your body. And everybody around me was freaking out.’ …

“Today, Grossman lives on his own. He’s more comfortable in his wheelchair, though he still worries about falling out of it. …

” ‘The only answer to overcoming the fear and the skill is to keep doing things until you’re comfortable doing them,’ he says. …

“Grossman acknowledges he’s needed to pay close attention to his mental health since the accident. But he says early on during his recovery, he faced a choice.

” ‘Option A is, “You are paralyzed, what are you going to do about it?” Option B is, “You are paralyzed. Let’s sit and wallow in self-pity.” I decided for option A, and honestly I think most people do decide for option A,’ Grossman says. ‘But option B seems really easy. That self-pity component seems pretty reasonable.’ ”

More at WBUR, here.

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Art: Tomihiro Hoshino

For more than 30 years, a woman from Hokkaido, Japan, who stayed at our house while studying the local PTA has been sending me magnificent calendars.

The calendars are from a talented artist and former athlete whose paralysis led him to master holding a brush in his mouth. His name is Tomihiro Hoshino.

An article at AccessibleJapan reports, “Tomihiro Hoshino was an experienced 24-year-old gymnastics teacher with a real passion for the sport. An active mountain climber and gymnastics instructor, his life changed completely as he was demonstrating a double somersault technique to a group of junior high school students. Hoshino unfortunately injured his neck during the maneuver and since that day he has been completely paralyzed from the neck down.

“The accident was a serious blow to this extremely active person who was forced to lay motionless for nine years in a Gunma orthopedic Hospital where he was kept under heavy surveillance for respiratory problems and complications as a result of the injury. He and his family never gave up hope that his physical condition would stabilize and improve. Although it took nine years, and he came close to death many times, there was always hope for the future.

“Many say that this hope came two years after his accident. In 1972 one of the patients that had stayed in the same room as Tomihiro Hoshino was being transferred into a different hospital. He asked that the staff, as well as all of the people that stayed with him, to sign a card as a memento of his time in the hospital. Tomihiro couldn’t come up with a solution as to how he would be able to sign his name for the man but with the help of his mother he was able to hold a pen in his mouth and eventually sign Tomo. This would be the beginning of how Tomihiro would begin his career in writing and painting.

“The second event that produced real inspiration for Tomihiro Hoshino was a time that a friend brought him flowers and left them in the window. …

“He was moved to start expressing what they meant to him. He began to gradually draw flowers and eventually became an adept painter with his mouth. …

“Tomihiro Hoshino has successfully produced hundreds of pieces of artwork, many of his essays and poems have been published and his work is displayed in permanent exhibitions at the Tomihiro Hoshino Museum. …

“If you are interested in Tomihiro Hoshino’s works, you can purchase them on Amazon or visit his art gallery in Gunma, Japan.”

More at AccessibleJapan, here. Read about his museum here. Those who read Japanese may click here.

I feel lucky to have had this decades-long friendship with a woman in Hokkaido. Although we haven’t seen each other since the 1980s, her daughter, Mika, came to visit while living in New York. Mika helped decorate our Christmas tree that year. Nowadays, I never do the tree without thinking of her.

Image: Tomihiro Art Museum

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