I have mentioned in previous posts that
Corticobasal Degeneration effects how I walk, how I talk, and the control of my
emotions. Perhaps it’s paranoia, but
when my walking is particularly halting I feel like people are watching me, and
that is bad. What is worse is when I
have a difficult time making myself understood in conversation. But the worst thing to deal with is the
inability to control my emotions. It can
be down right embarrassing.
Joy has tried to accompany me on most of my visits
to my neurologist, Dr. Callahan. She was
there the first time that he mentioned CBD as the likely diagnosis. After Dr. Callahan said the words,
Corticobasal Degeneration, there was something of an awkward silence. Never one to allow things to get too heavy
and genuinely trying to lighten the mood, I said, “Well is this something that
kills you or does it just make you wish you were dead?” I don’t know if Dr. Callahan had ever
encountered such an abrupt question, but he proceeded in a very calming manner
to tell us what we might expect. On the
emotional front the first thing he mentioned was the lack of any sort of filter
on what I might say. Driving home Joy
commented that she should have told Dr. Callahan that I had been “filter-less”
the whole time she had known me! Most
folks who know me well are probably nodding their head at Joy’s statement. But, that was not all to expect. CBD can lead you to become compulsive, doing
things without really thinking through the consequences. It can also lead to being obsessive about
routine, always feeling the need to do things the same way, to having a pattern
to follow. When I heard this I began to
imagine myself like the TV detective, Monk, or to update the image, Sheldon
Cooper of the Big Bang Theory. Perhaps one of the definitions of normal is
to be able to navigate between being obsessive and compulsive.
Perhaps the worst aspect of my lack of emotional
control is being overwhelmed and becoming tearful so easily. The medical term for this is Pseudobulbar
Affect or PBA. Technically this can be
either inappropriate laughter or crying, but so far I have only manifested the
sad side of that coin. What is
particularly hard about this is not knowing when it is going to hit. I can be watching something on TV or trying
to tell someone about something of only mild emotional impact and I find myself
choking up. To put it another way, the
intensity of my emotional reaction to things is way out of whack. I have probably cried more in the last year
than I did in the previous twenty.
There is also an interplay between my walking,
talking, and emotions. I have been
privileged to preach six times since I retired.
I have noticed that when it came time to walk to the pulpit my legs
would stiffen up, making my gait particularly difficult. I see this as tied to the emotion of the
moment. Emotions can also cause my
speech to slur. This is true whether I
am becoming tearful or trying to tell something I find funny. Joy says that I don’t laugh the way I used
to. Her observation is that my mouth
seems paralyzed when I laugh. I have
noticed that when I tell something funny my voice begins to slur the closer I
get to the punch line. The emotion is
effecting my speech.
I am not sure what the cumulative effect of all
this will be on me. I like to think of
myself as an essentially positive person with a well-developed sense of
humor. I don’t want that to change, but
it seems at times I am no longer in charge of my emotions. In my more somber moments I have thought
about how all of this will impact those who know me, especially those who know
me well. It is my hope that this blog
will serve as an explanation and a reminder of happier times.
beulah@mail.postmanllc.net
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