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What it's like to have Tourette's -- and how music gives me back control

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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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    (Tic)
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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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    (Tic)
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    And these were only some of my symptoms.
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    When these symptoms surfaced,
    my life literally changed overnight.
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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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    (Tic)
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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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    (Tic)
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    Tourette's syndrome
    is essentially a series
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    of involuntary movements and sounds,
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    known as tics.
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    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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    (Tic)
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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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    (Tic)
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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 therapists to work with her.
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    The therapists 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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    (Tic)
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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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    (Laughter)
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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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    (Tic)
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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've realized
    it was the music that composed me.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    (Tic)
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    (Music)
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    (Singing) 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 it till I break
    my own heart in two
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    And oh I wanted you
    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
    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
    I'm not loving you
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    I'm not loving you
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    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
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    And like that
    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
    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
    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
    I'm not loving you
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    I'm not loving you
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    Right now
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    (Applause)
Title:
What it's like to have Tourette's -- and how music gives me back control
Speaker:
Esha Alwani
Description:

Esha Alwani began writing songs when she was six years old, shortly after being diagnosed with Tourette syndrome. And she noticed something amazing: whenever she played music, her involuntary tics suddenly went away. Listen along as Alwani explores the power of music and delights the audience with an ethereal performance of her piano ballad "I'm Not Loving You (My Mask)."

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:55

English subtitles

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