Few people over the age of 10 would list "Happy Birthday" among their favorite songs. But Harvey Alter, now 62, has a special fondness for it. It helped teach him how to talk.
One morning in June 2003, Alter, then a self-employed criminologist, was putting a leash on his dog, Sam, in preparation for a walk when suddenly he felt dizzy and disoriented.
"My thoughts were intertwined, not making sense," he said in a recent interview. "I knew I was having a stroke."
At St. Vincent's Hospital, doctors diagnosed an ischemic stroke, caused by a blockage in blood flow to part of the left half of his brain. As a result, the right side of his body was temporarily paralyzed, the right side of his face drooped and he had trouble coming up with the right words and stringing them into sentences - a condition called aphasia.
Within hours of his stroke, Alter met with Loni Burke, a speech therapist. At first he was completely nonverbal; within a few days he could say small words.
"Mostly, he said, 'No,' " Burke recalled, "because he was frustrated that he couldn't speak."
1 comments:
Great! Music is therefore an excellent therapy. A touch of music in one’s life makes a really big difference. I like hang drum handpan.
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