At the age of 19, Ian Waterman was suddenly struck down at work by a rare neurological illness that deprived him of all sensation below the neck. He fell on the floor in a heap, unable to stand or control his limbs, having lost the sense of joint position and proprioception, of that "sixth sense" of his body in space, which we all take for granted. After months in a neurological ward he was judged incurable and condemned to a life of wheelchair dependence. This is the first U.S. publication of a remarkable book by his physician, Jonathan Cole. It tells the compelling story, including a clear clinical description of a rare condition, of how Waterman reclaimed a life of full mobility against all expectations, by mental effort and sheer courage. Cole describes how Waterman gradually adapted to his strange condition. As the doctors had predicted, there was no neurological recovery. He had to monitor every movement by sight to work out where his limbs were, since he had no feedback from his peripheral nerves. But with astonishing persistence Waterman developed elaborate tricks and strategies to control his movements, enabling him to cope not only with the day-to-day problems of living, but even with the challenges of work, love, and marriage
Author(s): Jonathan Cole
Publisher: MIT Press
Year: 1995
Language: English
Pages: 216
Foreword by Oliver Sacks LX
Preface by Ian Waterman XV
Acknowledgements xvi
Glossary xix
Prologue 1
1 Ian the Third 3
2 Gastric Flu 10
3 The Physiological Loss 24
4 Down 35
5 Outward Bound 47
6 Sent to Coventry 64
7 Skinning a Cat 78
8 Coming Alive Again 87
9 In the Bleak Midwinter 101
10 Life’s Work 110
11 The Physiology of Cheating 122
12 Senses and Sensibilities 138
13 The 29th of February 152
14 The Daily Marathon 163
Notes 181
Bibliography 191
Index 193