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I'd like you to imagine
what it would feel like
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if for two whole minutes
your left arm was continuously flapping,
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your eyes were constantly rolling,
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your jaw was clenching so hard,
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that it felt like your teeth
were about to break.
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And every ten seconds,
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you were forced to let out
a loud, high-pitched screech.
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This is how I lived
at the young age of six.
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Every waking moment, seven days a week.
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And these were only some of my symptoms.
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When these symptoms surfaced,
my life literally changed over night.
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I could no longer go to school,
see my friends or even eat out,
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because my tics would attract
the attention of everyone in the room.
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In search for a cure, we flew to New York
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to meet with the best pediatric
neuropsychologist my parents could find.
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But the doctor did not give us
the easy remedy we had hoped for.
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Instead, she diagnosed me
with an incurable neurological disorder,
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Tourette's syndrome.
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Oftentimes, medication can be
an essential and valuable part
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of many treatment processes.
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But in my case, the drugs
only made things worse.
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One drug put me in a wheelchair,
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because my legs had gotten so numb,
that I couldn't move them.
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Another one caused me to hallucinate.
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I would see green people running after me,
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threatening to boil me in a pot
and drink me as soup.
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And it was really scary.
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We tried drug after drug
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to find something that would bring me
some sort of relief.
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But every single attempt
just ended up making things worse.
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It is estimated that in 2013
in the United States alone,
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the prescription drug expenditure
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to treat neurological conditions
and mental illness
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was about 89 billion dollars annually.
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But imagine if there were a way
to treat these conditions
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without a price or without side effects.
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Imagine if your doctor prescribed you
a daily dose of music.
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I'm here today to share with you
my personal experience with music,
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and the effect that it had
on my neurological disorder.
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Tourette's syndrome
is essentially a series
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of involuntary movements
and sounds, known as tics.
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And the best way for me to really describe
what it's like to have Tourette's syndrome
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is something I'm sure
you're all very familiar with --
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the hiccups.
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You can try to stop yourself from the act.
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You can hold your breath and count to 10,
or drink water upside down,
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but there is just nothing
you can do about it
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until the sensation passes
and the hiccups have taken their course.
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I often lay on my bedroom floor
after an attack of tics,
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feeling exhausted and in despair.
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My equally desperate mother
would attempt to soothe me and herself
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by putting on some music.
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She would play peaceful music,
to soothe our aching hearts.
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And we'd lie together on the floor,
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and allow the beat
of the drums to uplift us.
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And as the rhythms and the tunes unfolded,
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our spirits would rise,
our moods would be lighter,
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and we would be rejuvenated.
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Very soon, and rather unknowingly,
I became an addict of this newfound drug.
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When I found myself slipping
into my bouts of sadness and self-pity,
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I would rush to the 88 keys of my piano,
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knowing in my heart that the tones
and rhythms from each one of those keys
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would soon set me free.
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At the time, I didn't realize
how much music was helping me.
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It was just something I did by default.
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When I wrote my songs
it wasn't to impress anybody,
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it was just a release.
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But the more I played,
the less my symptoms surfaced,
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and the intensity of my attacks reduced.
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So I became curious as to how
these songs were soothing my symptoms.
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And I wondered if there were
any other cases of medicinal music.
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So I began to search.
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I found that there was
a highly successful US congresswoman,
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Gabby Giffords, who was shot in the head.
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She lost her ability to speak.
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Because the ability to speak
and the ability to sing
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lay in two separate parts of the brain,
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her doctors brought in
music therapist to work with her.
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The therapist encouraged her
to sing her thoughts,
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since she was incapable of speaking them.
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And through this technique,
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the congresswoman was finally able
to regain her speech.
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Music helped heal Gabby Giffords.
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Scientists have found that music causes
our brains to release a natural painkiller
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known as oxytocin,
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and a feel-good chemical dopamine.
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Dopamine is essential
for a healthy nervous system,
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and strongly impacts emotional health.
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Music also affects our heart rate,
breathing and pulse rate,
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as it stimulates blood flow.
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In addition, it lowers
our cortisol levels,
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thus reducing anxiety,
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which is a common stimulant
for neurological symptoms.
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In our lifetimes, we are all going to know
someone with a neurological disorder.
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If it's not a family member,
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it could be a friend or a coworker.
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Please help me spread this message.
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Music has the ability to uplift our lives
and heal us from within.
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I still have Tourette's syndrome,
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I deal with it every day, every hour.
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I'm going to deal with it
for the rest of my life.
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And that means that I have to frequently
excuse myself from my classroom,
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because my verbal tics
can be extremely distracting.
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That means that sometimes
when I wink my eyes involuntarily,
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the guy sitting opposite from me
thinks I'm flirting with him
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when I'm really not.
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And I have to tell him, "Sorry,
I wasn't trying to flirt."
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But the most amazing thing is
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that when I sing, play music
and even just listen to music,
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I don't tic.
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I've been onstage numerous times
in highly stressful situations,
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with thousands of people watching me.
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And while I do tic before my performance,
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when the music starts,
the tics take a back seat.
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So, I may have written my own lyrics
and composed my own music,
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but in reality I realized
it was the music that composed me.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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(Music)
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I think I took my mask off too soon.
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'Cause you were there
and then you were not
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I think I pushed it all onto you
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I should have dragged it out
-
dragged it out
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I think that maybe each time
I lose a bit of myself I put it back on
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Just to fake ti till I break
my own heart in two
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And oh I wanted you
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To know the real me
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And take it seriously
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But now
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I'm not loving you
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I'm not loving you
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I'm not loving you
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I thought I could trust you
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But you're running away
from me and my mask
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I'm not loving you
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I'm not loving you
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I'm not loving you
-
right now
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I think I took my mask off too soon
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because you screamed when I pulled it off
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You told me you were
unprepared and like that
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just like that
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I think that maybe this time
it hurt more than it ever has before
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I think maybe this blow
I took was a little more
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a little more
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And oh I wanted you
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To know the real me
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And take it seriously
-
But now
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I’m not loving you
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I'm not loving you
-
I'm not loving you
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I thought I could trust you
-
but you're running away
from me and my mask
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I'm not loving you
-
I'm not loving you
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I'm not loving you
-
right now
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(Applause)