I…I just can’t think of a downside
to this?
Giggling at a funeral?
Cant appreciate a good hallmark
movie?
Maybe it might get tiring but that
would such a small price to pay!
When I have my stroke this is what I am going to shoot for.
Malcolm
Myatt, 68, had a stroke. It affected the frontal lobe of his
brain--the part of the brain that governs emotions. As a result, he's
lost the ability to be sad:
Experts
have confirmed that it is not uncommon for strokes to cause
psychological, emotional and behavioural changes.
The
retired lorry driver said: "I am never depressed. Being sad
wouldn't help anything anyway. I would definitely rather be happy all
the time than the other way round. It's an advantage really.
"The
stroke could have become my worst enemy but I wouldn't let it. Now I
barely even notice that I don't feel sadness.” [...]
Many
of the psychological changes that occur after a stroke are down to
the physical damage of the brain, and will depend upon which part of
the brain has been affected and the extent of the damage, The Stroke
Association said.
Dr
Clare Walton explained: “When a stroke strikes, the blood supply to
the brain is cut off, brain cells die and permanent damage can be
caused. Every stroke is different, and the area of the brain that’s
damaged will determine how the person is affected.
Link
-via Glenn
Reynolds |
Photo: Caters
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thrill me...dripsome brain droppings here.