A Quote from 1747 Just As True Today

Here is a note I received from a colleague that I received this week. I think it was cool enough to share with you.

“Speaking of enlightenment, I’ve been reading Machine Man, a book written in about 1747 by a French doctor, Julien Offray de la Mettrie. He was one of the earliest to say out loud that the brain could produce the mind without a transcendent soul to animate it — for which he was ridden out of town on a rail. And in the course of his argument, he wrote something that made me think of you, especially your idea that we can have the brain we want.

“When the brain is both well-organized and well-educated,” he wrote, “it is like perfectly sown, fertile earth which produces a hundred-fold what it has received.”

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14 Comments

1.
Christina
Posted January 15, 2009 at 9:28 pm | Permalink

Hi,
I just read your book Driven to Distraction, I just started a job as a personal trainer and model and I can’t afford your services but I would still like to meet you because I never keep a job for more then 1 year, is there any way I can meet you.I’m afraid I’m going to loose this job because of my past history. Please!
Christina Cha Cha Cha

2.
Dr. Gee
Posted January 17, 2009 at 12:44 pm | Permalink

Is there a written citation or an archive of what Dr. Insel stated at the APA annual meeting in ATL (2005)? I have scoured databases and have found nothing…I need it for a school paper.

Suggestions?

Gee

3.
Posted January 19, 2009 at 7:12 pm | Permalink

I have generations of family members with behavior disorders. It wasn’t until I had seen the Dr. Amen PBS segment that it occurred to me that medicine is not full servicing.
If the brain is an organ like the pancreas, liver, heart why are we family members having to watch and live with suffering human beings! My Mom is bi-polar now with Parkinson’s, my sister is either bi-polar or Borderline Personality and now my adult daughter who is insulin dependent I believe is also borderline personality. All the physicians do is offer meds like Prozac or talk therapy.

Dr. Amen, how do we get the medical community to image the brains of behavioral suffering souls in order to have a remedy tailored for their unique situation and brain disease??

4.
Hanna
Posted January 20, 2009 at 4:05 pm | Permalink

I bought the MM at Any Age and Change your Brain Change your Life. Both books helped me tremendously.

5.
Ronne Mickey
Posted January 21, 2009 at 6:11 pm | Permalink

What is the best appetite suppressant when taking psychotropics?

6.
SJ Gay
Posted January 22, 2009 at 11:21 am | Permalink

I eagerly read your e-news, Dr. Amen, and enjoyed the PBS production. Bought a couple of your books, and now am wondering if you will be courageous enough to do comparative imaging studies on the homo/hetero brains –similarities/differences of which haven’t been explored adequately. A hot button issue, to be sure, but you have the wherewithal and others don’t!

7.
Geana
Posted January 30, 2009 at 6:08 pm | Permalink

From what the doctor at the Amen Clinic in Tacoma said after our son had the SPECT scans done I expected to find some brain exercises on the website, like specific games or puzzles designed to help with memory and whatnot. I’m not finding them. Am I not looking in the right place, or did I misunderstand him?

Geana

8.
Lynne
Posted February 5, 2009 at 11:50 am | Permalink

Last March my mother died from a very rare disease known as Creutzfeldt-Jakob, which is a prion disease (like mad cow). CJD afflicts the brain cells so that systematically the brain becomes sponge-like and the patient becomes completely disabled and unable to speak, and death follows. Though not painful it progresses very rapidly.
Do you have any information regarding this brain disease, Dr. Amen?

9.
Chris Kiely
Posted February 9, 2009 at 10:03 pm | Permalink

@Christina Cha Cha Cha & other ‘Distractables like myself:

“Driven To Distraction”

http://www.amazon.com/Driven-Distraction-New-Recognizing-Attention/dp/0743529006

and the sequel

“Answers to Distraction”

http://www.amazon.com/Answers-Distraction-Edward-M-Hallowell/dp/055337821X

excellent books about AD(H)D, were written by Drs. Hallowell & Ratey, not Dr. Amen.

Dr. Amen also has a book on AD(H)D, Attention Deficit (with or without Hyperactivity) Disorder:

“Healing ADD”

http://www.amazon.com/Healing-ADD-Breakthrough-Program-Allows/dp/039914644X

and this AD(H)D link (also at the bottom of this page):

http://www.amenclinics.com/clinics/information/ways-we-can-help/adhd-add/

Please do yourself and everyone in your life the biggest, best favor you’ll ever do yourself and your loved ones: if you think you are attention-challenged (the fact you wrote to the wrong medical author’s website seems to indicate you may be on the right track!) connect with EXPERTS on AD(H)D for diagnosis & treatment such as those at Dr. Amen’s or Dr. Hallowell’s clinics. Every therapist (too many to count) I’ve met has said they ‘know about & treat AD(H)D’. Most have their own agenda, or diagnostic sub-specialty, & like many specialists in medicine, they find (& treat, sometimes with disastrous consequences!) not necessarily what is wrong (or right) with the patient, but rather whatever it is they have been taught/interests them most. Take (GREAT!) care. You, your life’s potential, your loved ones are worth it; and the wrong treatment can be FAR worse than no treatment at all on your finances, body, mind & spirit!!!
Peace – and good luck!

http://www.amazon.com/Healing-ADD-Breakthrough-Program-Allows/dp/039914644X

10.
Miriam Clevelandl
Posted February 13, 2009 at 9:05 pm | Permalink

I am mother and housemate to a 48 yr. old son suffering from (variously described as) ADHD and OCD. Needless to say, I am suffering too. He is very bright and taking a college course on the computer, has recently lost a job, and has a failed marriage in his history. He has trouble staying focused, which might well explain dropping out of college numerous times and spending habits that lead to more than one bankruptcy. I will read these books but he probably won’t.

11.
Terri
Posted February 26, 2009 at 9:07 am | Permalink

Our nation has an entire generation (and now on our second) of youth that are addicted to LEGALLY prescribed drugs: Xanax, Prozac, Lexapro, Seroquel….. and the list goes on..

This is frightening to say the least. Until oor unless our medical / psychological / hhealth providers begin to make different choices on treating the individual by including the BRAIN in a more holistic approach to various psychological, mental and pysiological disorders, I fear our nation is doomed to become a society of mindless, drug addicted zombies …… completely under the control of ‘the powers that be’.

Just my two cents.

Thanks for the opportunity to share.

12.
Posted February 28, 2009 at 10:17 pm | Permalink

Dr Amen. I saw your Improve Your Brain… show on OETA shortly after being forced to go on a medical disability due to “Brain Fog”, memory problems (MAJOR absent mindedness) and excessive daytime sleepiness all attributed to a confirmed diagnosis of Idiopathic Hypersomnia. I am only 45 years old and until a year or two ago was a highly respected cardiovascular sonographer at a leading heart hospital and on adjunct faculty for the local Sonography BS program.

MRI and EEG were normal so I requested a PET scan which was severely abnormal but I can not find a Neurologist or Psychiatrist in Oklahoma that knows what to do about it or believe the PET scan means anything without other diagnostic abnormalities.

My temporal, parietal, thalamus and posterior most occipital lobe all showed marked hypometabolism consistent with what is seen in advanced AD but I don’t have AD as far as they can tell and my psychological cognitive function tests mostly came back normal to above normal except for areas of attentiveness and mental focus which were well below normal.

I have done extensive research and know that the thalamus (especially SCN) is the major player in promoting either sleepiness or attentiveness and the amygdala and hippocampus are important pathways for the temporal lobes, parietal lobes are indicated in time perception (mine is way off) and my memory problems are mostly specific to recall of declaritive memory and although I never had ADD symptoms before the stimulent therapy I need to stay awake also seem to make it impossible to maintain an uninterupted train of thought.

I equate the symptoms and normal anatomic tests along with the mostly normal cognitive test results as my individual hardware components each check out as individual components but my “software” or “operating system” has crashed and remains unstable.

I also have brittle IDDM post Whipple procedure at 24 years old so there are blood glucose and gut digestive cofactors involved as well.

Any ideas? My insurance will not pay for out of state elective treatments etc as it is an EPO but I think your people are the only ones that might be able to help my brain to work again.

13.
Posted March 1, 2009 at 12:07 am | Permalink

A little more follow up – the basal gangia were also hypometabolic so there is evidence for subcortical involvement.

I should mention I had two possible internal head trauma events.

1. MVA with C2 and C3 fractures requiring a Halo brace for two months but no screening for or diagnosis of concussion other than the CT on my neck.

2. A bad fall on the ice with the back of my head hitting the ice first and everything else in the air as I was coming down. I’m pretty sure I had at least a mild concussion because I knew I was with a group of friends in general (acutally one of several youth leaders and a large youth group at an ice rink) but I could not remember my name or which people withing the group I knew. I went to check my blood sugar I think out of ingrained habit associating confusion with hypoglycemia and then started to take an insulin shot (again mechanical habit my glucose was not high) and fortunately another leader knew I had already taken my insulin earlier and saw the dazed look on my face.

A group of leaders prayed for me at that point and I started to regain normal awareness and I did not think much about it after that.

In both above cases there were no acute lingering effects and both predated my education for a BS in Sonogrpahy from the OUHSC which is a very demanding program. My grades and success were much higher for this than for my BBA in Marketing that happened before the Whipple and the two possible internal head trauma events.

The excessive daytime sleepiness and some mild forgetfullness began around two years after the two events above and around six years after the Whipple procedure.

14.
Jerry
Posted November 17, 2009 at 5:11 pm | Permalink

I am looking for a little direction here… I have a granddaughter in a very bad position inwhich she is becoming (in my opinion) a victim to medical malpractice. She”s had a history of unusual reactions to meds, for example Ridlen actually hyped her up and triggered outbursts. At the age of 16 she became addicted to streetdrugs and stole her cousins car to go get her drugs and was arrested for Grand Theft Auto while her drug dealer escaped on foot. She was placed in the custody of Okla Juvenile Affairs (OJA) and sentence to 7 mos in the Juv. Detent. system. Since no beds were available she spent months in a holding facility where she was diagnosed “in depression” and given Prozac that triggered irratic behavor and violant outbursts and she made comments about hearing voices. When she finally got a bed in a private JUV Detent Center she was refered to a mental health facility that added Abilify to her presciption. She than become suicidal. She was then transfered to that mental facilty where she made several suicide attempts, one of which she was actually able to choke herself unconscious using a pillowcase while being under a 24 hr suicide watch. A little research on my part revealed a very real possibility that her medication was causing her problems. I showed her court appointed atty evidence that Abilify causes suicidal tendencies and that when Prozac is used with Abilify it literally amplifies the effects. The atty refused to use my evidence because neither he nor the judge were doctors. The judge ordered that she was to remain under OJA custody in the mental health center and that since she was uncapable of making rational decisions on her own that the Mental facilty was authorized to adminster any medications that they deemed suitable. So now she is 17 in a mental health facilty, heavily sedated under the influence of medical doses that would knockout an elephant, under the custody of OJA, still exhibiting irratic behavor and violant outbursts but she is no longer considered suicidal and says that her anger makes her want to hurt herself. OJA says that she cannot begin her 7 month program until she is deemed mentally competent… Also when she was arrested she was very skinny, now living under sedation her pants size has gone from a Jr 4 to a Ms 14. What can be done to help this poor girl ??

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