Saturday, December 05, 2009

Craving conversation


Human speech is like a cracked kettle on which we tap crude rhythms for bears to dance to, while we long to make music that will melt the stars. Gustave Flaubert

There are times when I would give anything for a normal, free-flowing conversation. I spend most of my time with my family members who have some type of language disorder.

There's Marcus, who suffered a severe traumatic brain injury at the age of 2. The left hemisphere of his brain was so damaged that now, according to his last CAT scan, there is very little brain tissue left on that side and it has been replaced by cerebrospinal fluid. So I guess it's a testament to the plasticity of a young brain that his right hemisphere took over the language responsibilities. He is able to understand a great deal of what he hears on the news, especially with the extra visual input of the video, and sometimes he surprises me by some fairly sophisticated vocabulary he uses. But his ability to pronounce words is impaired, as is his grammar. He has difficulty with memory and often fails to understand something simple I'm trying to tell him. He also has a habit of using a very repetitive, circular type of conversation, in which he basically says the same thing in about a dozen slightly different ways...a habit that really tests my patience at times.

Gabriel, as I have mentioned before, tends to obsess on certain topics like the Mafia, the Queen of England, rappers and gangsters, etc. His hebephrenic schizophrenia also causes him to be on the silly side, so he'll make really silly jokes over and over again. For example, he says, "Coolie (the dog) was making gang signs," and he thinks this is hilarious. He jumps from topic to topic, in a schizophrenic stream of consciousness. His memory skills are very poor, so he asks the same questions he asked yesterday, or even earlier in the day, because he has literally forgotten the answer or that he even asked the question before. I try to engage him in more normal conversation, but often my efforts are met with a total lack of affect and/or interest. When he's quoting someone, for some reason he assumes a very high pitched voice, and has taken to flapping his hands when he's talking as well.

Tevis, who spends most weekends with us, is a different challenge. He has the WORST stutter/disfluency I've ever heard, repeating the beginning sound or word or phrase up to a dozen times. He has a certain amount of apraxia and a very nasal quality to his speech, so he is pretty hard for most strangers to understand. He also asks questions repetitively, ones he has asked a hundred times and knows the answers to. (I personally think special education teachers inadvertently reinforce this, as they are constantly asking their students questions to test their skills and knowledge, rather than simply conversing with them.) And he thinks he has to be talking about 55 minutes out of every 60! But, to Tevis' credit, although he has a measured IQ of about 40, he has a lot of common sense, is very observant, is tuned into other people's feelings, and has picked up a lot of information he's heard. For example, when I told him that we might move to St. Louis, and they have more snow up there. "You need to get a car with 4 wheel drive, in case we get stuck in the snow," he opined. In some ways, he's more functional than Gabriel, which makes me very sad.

And then there's my mother. I remember the days, when the kids were young, that I used to call her every day, just to talk, blow off steam, get advice. As she got older and a little more cranky, I called less often, as I wanted to avoid her complaints. What wouldn't I give now to have a normal conversation with her, complaints and all? Her stroke last year left her with Wernicke's Aphasia. She understands what is said to her, and knows what she wants to say, but much of what she says comes out as gobbledy-gook or the Jabberwocky of Lewis Carroll. I call her and ask how she's doing. She can now answer automatically, "Oh, pretty good." But then she continues, "I was just lasting here frankly on the clasp. The man was spelling the sepler today, and it was something, but we got it done." Somehow I understand that she is sitting on the couch and that her personal care aide came and did the laundry, which there was a lot of. I often think of that scene in "Saving Private Ryan," in which the young medic, sitting in a darkened, deserted ruin of a church, talked about how his mother would come home from the late shift and would want to talk with him. "She'd stand in the doorway looking at me... and I'd just keep my eyes shut. And I knew she just wanted to find out about my day - that she came home early... just to talk to me. And I still wouldn't move... I'd still pretend to just be asleep. I don't know why I did that," the young soldier says quietly, with pain and regret in his voice.

Even when my other kids lived at home, it wasn't any better. I had the "cocktail party" speech that is a feature of Non-verbal Learning Disability and hydrocephalus/spina bifida. I listened to the circular reasoning of Fetal Alcohol Effect. I tried to tune out the insults of a sociopath. I was bombarded with the emotional abuse and the narcissistic monologues of a borderline personality. And I had to use intense concentration to understand the language of severe spastic/athetoid cerebral palsy.

When I was working, I used to have the opportunity for normal conversation sometimes. Now, I didn't get much of that from my co-workers; the "Me-generation" doesn't engage in much give-and-take with anyone twice their age, it seems. I did enjoy conversation with some of the parents of my patients, especially those who were closer to my age. But we were under instruction from the agency to refrain from conversation about our personal lives, so I felt some restraint in my interactions. Some parents....well, let's just say there wasn't much to talk about with them, like the mother who complained when I dared to take a whole week off when my dad died. But now that I'm not working, my interaction with others outside my family has been limited. OK, I admit it, I'm something of a hermit, though not entiredly by choice!

To my readers who have children who are non-verbal, you might be thinking, "What is she belly-aching about? At least her kids are able to talk!" I know that I am very lucky that all of my children, even the ones who have very significant disabilities, are verbal. It's just that sometimes a little normal conversation would "melt the stars."

1 comments:

Mimi Manypaws said...

Love the quote by Gustav as a jumping off point. The intricacies of the English language allow for such subtleties in meaning.Even so, it's so easy to misunderstand each other. I applaud your bravery, your courage and your obvious strength. Thousands couldn't handle.

May I say I'm proud to tell people of your sacrificial life? I do.