Let's Be Less Stupid: An Attempt to Maintain My Mental Faculties (16 page)

BOOK: Let's Be Less Stupid: An Attempt to Maintain My Mental Faculties
8.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

= qui

= v, but really u, as in
but
, but nasalized

= me

= tsi

SCORING:

Award yourself 1 point for each correct symbol you circled. Deduct 1 point for each incorrect symbol you circled. Ten points for each correct English pronunciation.

0–4:
You call that a hippocampus? More like an amoebacampus.
5–10:
Your hippocampus is now the size of a nectarine.
10+:
Your hippocampus grew so much it can no longer be housed inside your skull and needs to live alone in an apartment.

Don’t say sayonara to the Cherokee just yet. There is one more language quiz. Yes, this is the only book with
two
syllabary-related amusements. I didn’t say it was a good thing.

DIRECTIONS:

Convert the following sentences into Cherokee script. You do not have to translate the English words into Cherokee; simply transliterate the Latin characters into Tsalagi phonemes. If there is no corresponding Cherokee character, use English. Spelling counts—a lot. Here’s an example:

Gregory Peck is cute =

Does my big toe look infected? = ___________?

Where can I buy ointment? = ___________?

It needs to be amputated = ___________?

Ouch = ___________?

Left-footedness runs in my family = ___________?

Would you like a mint? = ___________?

 

ANSWERS:

Does my big toe look infected? =

Where can I buy ointment? =

It needs to be amputated =

Ouch =

Left-footedness runs in my family =

Would you like a mint? =

Shock It to Me, Baby

T
wo thousand years ago the Roman emperor Claudius, on the recommendation of his doctor, pressed electric eels against his forehead to ease his headache. For at
least twenty minutes a day every day for the past four months, I have fastened a small apparatus to my head, treating my brain to pulses of electricity in hopes that the stimulation will make me more stimulating. Judging from the quality of this paragraph and the length of time it took me to write it, I’m doubtful that the electrons and protons are doing their trick.

The device I’ve been using—the Fisher Wallace Stimulator—looks like a garage door opener with a tail of two wires. At the end of each wire is an electrode embedded in a sponge the size of an Oreo. These sponges are placed—wet—against your temples and held in position by a navy headband. Touch one of the sponges while the machine is on and you will feel an unpleasant jolt. The electric current comes via two AA batteries and is about 1/1000 the strength used in electroconvulsive therapy, so no need to worry you will turn into a piece of charcoal. Evidently the device has enough oomph, though, to coax the limbic system (boss of your emotions) into stepping up its production of feel-good neurochemicals like serotonin, melatonin, and dopamine while suppressing the release of the feel-bad hormone cortisol.

The stimulator was approved by the FDA for the relief of depression, anxiety, insomnia, and chronic
pain. There are lots of clinical studies and meta-analyses backing up these claims, and of course there are doubters, too. Chip Fisher, president of Fisher Wallace Laboratories, LLC, the company that manufactures and distributes the device, told me that it has also been shown to improve eyesight and help with autoimmune diseases, Parkinson’s, and ADHD—and he believes it could also make you sharper. Horses who’ve tried it have fewer episodes of cribbing, headshaking, and anxiety. (Hot tip: Electro-Fury at Saratoga in the fifth race to win.)

I should tell you here and now that I know and like Chip Fisher, so anything negative I may have to say about the Fisher Wallace product, let’s blame on Wallace, whom I have never met.

Citing the reverse women-and-children-first principle, I persuaded my boyfriend to try it before I did. Within minutes of turning on the controls, he had a slight headache. Isn’t it reassuring when therapy has an effect, even one that is painful or potentially harmful? At least you know the thing is working. When I tried the machine, I saw a faint flickering of light due to the electricity passing through the optical nerve. If there’d been a bulb inside my head, it would have needed changing. Neither of us had any aftereffects (strange
dreams are a commonly reported occurrence), but I am still hoping that if I keep the therapy up I will be able to open a garage door telepathically.

Other books

Stay Dead: A Novel by Steve Wands
Asimov's SF, September 2010 by Dell Magazine Authors
The Best Intentions by Ingmar Bergman
Dead Harvest by Chris F. Holm
Seven for a Secret by Mary Reed, Eric Mayer
Blondetourage by Allison Rushby
Bucky F*cking Dent by David Duchovny