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Illness Without Metaphor
A LIFE SHAKEN: My Encounter with Parkinson's
Disease, By Joel Havemann, Johns Hopkins University Press: 176
pp., $24.95
LUCKY MAN: A Memoir, By Michael J. Fox,
Hyperion: 260 pp., $22.95
The Los Angeles Times; Los Angeles, Calif.; Jun 16, 2002;
ABRAHAM VERGHESE;
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| (Copyright, The Times
Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 2002 All rights
reserved) |
In its end stages, Parkinson's disease can
reduce its victims to a frozen, rigid, mute, unblinking,
locked-in state. In writing about their struggles with this
disease, Joel Havemann and Michael J. Fox display the opposite
qualities: nimbleness, great passion, hyper- alertness and an
awareness of what is meaningful in life--as if the disease has
blessed them with special vision and a unique voice. The beauty
of such a narrative stance is that it not only transcends the
illness but surprises and captivates the reader.
Both men can recall the exact moment when the
first symptom appeared that heralded the onset of this
degenerative condition. Havemann, a journalist with the Los
Angeles Times, was at a restaurant eating dessert; the task of
spooning raspberries from his plate to his mouth was suddenly
impossible. Fox, the actor, woke up one morning to find a " ...
message in my left hand. It had me trembling. It wasn't a fax,
telegram, memo, or the usual sort of missive.... In fact, my
hand held nothing at all. The trembling was the message." The
trajectory of both men's lives was altered from that moment on,
and these memoirs are the result.
"A Life Shaken" opens with Havemann sitting
in his office at the Washington bureau of The Times. He is on a
deadline and work is piling up, but his arms and legs shake
uncontrollably. He can do nothing but wait for his pills to take
effect. When, after a long time, they do, he notes: "With
Parkinson's it feels so good just to feel ordinary.... When my
pills are working, I can move as smoothly as the next guy. I can
live life pretty much as I did before Parkinson's landed me in
the windowless room."
Befitting Havemann's vast experience as a
journalist, "A Life Shaken" works hard to educate the reader
about Parkinson's disease, a condition associated with the triad
of tremor, rigidity and diminished movement. There are diagrams
of the brain and basal ganglia, and illustrations of the means
by which the neurotransmitter dopamine affects movement and
muscle tone, and how its depletion in Parkinson's patients can
affect muscle control in the entire body.
He reviews the history, the surgical options
and the promising research in Parkinson's disease. But
Havemann's scientific discourse never feels burdensome, perhaps
because we have identified with him so keenly from the opening
pages, and we find ourselves seeking the same knowledge about
Parkinson's that he has discovered.
His own Parkinson's saga has evolved over 11
years, beginning as he managed a demanding job as a foreign
correspondent in Brussels. His aging father's illness, his
mother-in-law's dementia and the pleasures and trials of
marriage and fatherhood often eclipsed his own battles to
control his symptoms.
Meanwhile, "every week, every month, every
year, the Parkinson's beast grows fiercer." But, he says,
"Parkinson's wins if it makes me focus on the long term--and
give up. My strategy is to concentrate on the short term--and
keep going." By the end of the book, we find ourselves rooting
for this person we did not know before.
By contrast, we all feel we know Fox before
we pick up his book. But perhaps we only thought we knew him. In
"Lucky Man," Fox writes: "Contrary to the happy-go-lucky image I
cultivated, there were things that worried me more than I'd let
on. My health, however, had never been one of them." He was
completely unprepared for the "two words the neurologist
bludgeoned me with that day: Parkinson's disease."
After this first chapter, detailing the onset
of his illness, Fox takes us back to his childhood in Canada
where he was one of five children born to a Canadian army
officer and his wife. Being "tiny and decidedly hyper compared
to the other kids in that family, I was considered something of
an oddity." His thespian bent led to an audition for a Canadian
television part and then a move to Hollywood, where he
struggled. His big break came in 1982 when he was cast in the TV
series "Family Ties." "Pacific Bell had long since cut off
service to my apartment, and as I spelled out my contract
demands--modest by today's standards, but incredibly lucrative
given my financial straits--I was standing at a pay phone
outside of a Pioneer Chicken franchise."
Fox writes, always with humor but also with
insight, about his subsequent rise to stardom and the other
milestones in his life: his marriage, his first child, his
drinking and subsequent sobriety. When he was diagnosed with
Parkinson's in 1991, he went into a sort of denial, not seeing a
neurologist, popping the pills for Parkinson's disease which he
carried loose in his pocket so that he could always be "on" when
he was on camera. By 1994, "My unwillingness to let [wife] Tracy
and [son] Sam see a version of me any less than ideal put a
certain distance between us ... so I lowered my guard at home,
allowed myself to be open with my symptoms around my family.
What a relief it was to relax for a change."
Unlike Havemann, Fox chose ablative
neurosurgery to relieve the symptoms on his left side.
Parkinson's often affects one side of the body before spreading
to the other. The surgery involves screwing a halo onto the
skull, taking radiographic pictures and, after careful
measurement, passing a needle into the brain to destroy specific
cells. It is hazardous but can dramatically relieve certain
symptoms.
The surgery was successful, but to his great
dismay, symptoms soon developed on his right side. In 1998, Fox
went public with his disease, and his celebrity did much to
bring attention to it. "In the last couple of years, I've gone
from talking to my agent on a cellular phone to discussing
cellular biology with some of the world's leading scientists."
Havemann and Fox both hope that a cure for
the disease will come soon, perhaps in their lifetime. President
George W. Bush's announcement last year of severe restrictions
on funding fetal stem- cell research seems particularly
shortsighted after reading these memoirs. The Michael J. Fox
Foundation, as if to counter this Luddite trend in Washington,
has offered a $2.5-million grant to the first researcher able to
create a line of cells that produces dopamine.
The authors of these two poignant memoirs are
very different men. What they have in common, however, is not
just Parkinson's, but the fact that both have led interesting
lives and both write well. One senses that their memoirs would
make good reading whether or not they had Parkinson's disease.
But their affliction has given them a heightened sense of
observation, a unique narrative stance, which allows them to see
the world in a different light. And both men have been
"lucky"--the sense in which Fox titles his book--in finding
meaning in their lives. It is precisely the sort of remove and
insight that so often escapes people who are in good health.
Credit: Abraham Verghese is
a physician, writer and the author, most recently, of "The
Tennis Partner." |