Dilbert Gets His Voice Back
Okay, don’t ask me what I was doing on the Dilbert blog, but this is a pretty fascinating story. The dude who created Dilbert lost his voice 18 months ago. He spoke totally normally his entire life, and then boom, he lost his voice.
As regular readers of my blog know, I lost my voice about 18 months ago. Permanently. It’s something exotic called Spasmodic Dysphonia. Essentially a part of the brain that controls speech just shuts down in some people, usually after you strain your voice during a bout with allergies (in my case) or some other sort of normal laryngitis. It happens to people in my age bracket.
I asked my doctor — a specialist for this condition — how many people have ever gotten better. Answer: zero. While there’s no cure, painful Botox injections through the front of the neck and into the vocal cords can stop the spasms for a few months. That weakens the muscles that otherwise spasm, but your voice is breathy and weak.
The weirdest part of this phenomenon is that speech is processed in different parts of the brain depending on the context. So people with this problem can often sing but they can’t talk. In my case I could do my normal professional speaking to large crowds but I could barely whisper and grunt off stage. And most people with this condition report they have the most trouble talking on the telephone or when there is background noise. I can speak normally alone, but not around others. That makes it sound like a social anxiety problem, but it’s really just a different context, because I could easily sing to those same people.
Okay, so that’s weird and terrifying, right? I do not need something new to fear in life. But, my little goblins, there is a happy pot of gold at the end of this greasy rainbow . . . he got his voice back yesterday! This is incredible:
The day before yesterday, while helping on a homework assignment, I noticed I could speak perfectly in rhyme. Rhyme was a context I hadn’t considered. A poem isn’t singing and it isn’t regular talking. But for some reason the context is just different enough from normal speech that my brain handled it fine.
Jack be nimble, Jack be quick.
Jack jumped over the candlestick.I repeated it dozens of times, partly because I could. It was effortless, even though it was similar to regular speech. I enjoyed repeating it, hearing the sound of my own voice working almost flawlessly. I longed for that sound, and the memory of normal speech. Perhaps the rhyme took me back to my own childhood too. Or maybe it’s just plain catchy. I enjoyed repeating it more than I should have. Then something happened.
My brain remapped.
My speech returned.
Not 100%, but close, like a car starting up on a cold winter night. And so I talked that night. A lot. And all the next day. A few times I felt my voice slipping away, so I repeated the nursery rhyme and tuned it back in. By the following night my voice was almost completely normal.
I quote Crispin Glover from Rubin and Ed when I say, “Wow!”
(Thanks to Boingboing.)
October 26th, 2006 at 5:11 pm
Wow. That *is* amazing! If I didn’t hate the dilbert blog so much I would be even happier for him.
December 1st, 2006 at 8:05 pm
dilbert’s owner has ALWAYS been just like the (why wouldn’t his blog wear you down?) guys in IT who want you to kiss their ass while their greasy collars flop over and their jc penny’s pants shine you on. he Knows everything, he’ll tell you a little, and when you get smart, he dives like the beaver in the mucky pond, down below where he knows More and you can’t hold your breath that long. Thanks for reminding me of how much I’ve hated him while I’ve laughed.