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Change afoot! Redefining the Journey

Murfitt elevation

For years, I’ve worn “Shaky Leadership” like a badge of honour. It was my nod to both the literal and metaphorical tremors of life—a playful take on leading despite the wobble. But today, I sit here with a steadier hand and an ever evolving understanding of my story, I find myself standing at the crossroads of reinvention.

Let me explain.

For those who’ve followed my journey, you know I was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. You’ve read about the ups and downs, the battles with medication, the experimental brain surgery, and the sheer willpower it took to stay upright—physically and emotionally. I wore the diagnosis as part of my identity, like a slightly itchy sweater that I’d grown used to.

But life, as it turns out, had a plot twist in store.

After years of living under the Parkinson’s umbrella, a neurologist brave enough to delve deeper discovered something new: Functional Neurological Disorder (FND). While that might sound like something conjured up in a medical thriller, it’s actually a condition rooted in how the brain and body communicate. Imagine if your brain were sending texts, but autocorrect kept changing “walk” to “wobble” or “rest” to “panic.” That’s FND in a nutshell.

Here’s the kicker: it’s not degenerative. No “worse with time” clause. No ticking clock. No medication. No brain stimulation. Just a chance to rewire, rebuild, and reclaim my life. It brings with it great relief and hope. Though hiding in the shadows of those two attractive pillars is a surprising swarm of guilt, shame and grief. A puzzling mix of emotion to be worked through as they eat away at my identity and test my resilience. It is some of the best news a ‘Parky’ can get – yet its not a cure, it is not a return to regular life, the sharp claws of its tight grip are perhaps even more invisible than ever before.

Parkinson’s may no longer define me, but the lessons it taught me—about perseverance, adaptability, and the importance of humour—are here to stay.

And so, “Shaky Leadership” must also evolve. After all, the shaky days are (mostly) behind me. There’s still the occasional metaphorical stumble, like when I attempt to assemble IKEA furniture, but those don’t count. Days are challenging no doubt, and my body remains unpredictable, but the shaky mind for one is returning to clarity, the smog of medication and electricity is lifting. I can’t describe to you the feeling of a mind returning to your control – when you hadn’t realised it had escaped in the first place! As such, this will likely be my last post to this page, as I retire it to the archives and turnover a new leaf.

This isn’t just a name change; it’s a mindset shift. A chance to focus on stability, on resilience, on the stories of overcoming that make us human. I’m trading in the shaky badge for something that better reflects the ground I now stand on—solid, albeit occasionally uneven, footing.

Advocacy and Community

Advocacy has always been close to my heart. My experience with Parkinson’s disease gave me a profound appreciation for the challenges faced by people living with disabilities, and I’ve worked hard to advocate for awareness and support in the Parkinson’s and broader disability communities.

Now, with this new diagnosis, I find myself at the start of another journey: exploring the world of FND. I know there must be communities out there—spaces where stories are shared, insights are exchanged, and advocacy thrives—and I’m determined to find them. Over time, I hope to use my voice in this space too, just as I’ve done for Parkinson’s. Advocacy isn’t just something I do; it’s a part of who I am.

I want to thank you for supporting ‘shaky leadership’ and my journey up ‘til now and hope I can repay that support into the future. I will continue to provide what I see as absolutely crucial support for parents and schools through my role with ‘Cybersafe Families’in 2025, whilst I also turn attention to a new venture…

Sharing my skill set with Murfitt Elevation

As I pivot into this new chapter, I’m excited to begin shaping Murfitt Elevation, a space where I’ll bring together my leadership experience and my personal journey of resilience to offer something truly unique: practical, human-centred support for leaders.

My focus will centre broadly on:

1. Leadership Strategy: Supporting principals and educational leaders to make informed, confident strategic decisions in a world where change is the only constant.

2. Leadership Wellbeing: Offering tools and insights into self-care, time management, reflection, delegation, and building sustainable habits to ensure you can lead effectively without losing yourself in the process.

Having faced some of life’s most complex challenges, I bring a trusted perspective that inspires and supports. I understand the pressures of leadership, and I know what it means to navigate uncertainty while staying grounded. My goal is to empower leaders to thrive—not just professionally, but personally.

If you’re ready to explore how we can work together, whether it’s through one-on-one coaching, team workshops, or strategic consulting, I’d love to hear from you. Let’s redefine what it means to lead with resilience, purpose, and wellbeing at the forefront.

So here’s to the future: advocacy, elevation, and a commitment to making every step forward meaningful.

Thank you again,

{insert cool sign-off tag here}

Todd

Add Dementia to the list…

* Please don’t use this blog to prepare for neuropsychological testing…the specifics relating to the tests have been changed to avoid any prompting or possible influencing of results on my account…😁

The black line drawing of a piano danced off the page, tormenting me with memory after memory of every previous interaction we had shared. From the plastic toy I couldn’t play as a toddler, to Billy Joel’s ‘Piano Man’ blasting from Beechy’s top of the range speakers. And yet, mysteriously, it refused to remind me of its name. 

“It’s like an organ.” I stammered out, eager to turn the page and continue the test, but Rochelle was having none of that.

“It has another name Todd, a more common name.”

“I know it does…it’s so obvious…but it’s not coming right now, I don’t know why.”  

No doubt picking up on my growing frustration, the neuropsychologist kindly allowed me to turn the page where I was greeted by a simple drawing, but an obvious one. “An Elephant.” In my mind I was wiping the sweat off my brow, the first one must have been just nerves…a little test anxiety (the irony of a principal with test anxiety doesn’t escape me.)

I looked up for affirmation from Rochelle and was very relieved to see the gentle nod and hint of a smile. I turned the page with a small sigh of relief. 

Another simple black line drawing was presented in front of me. This one was ridiculously easy…so easy…the level of difficulty of this question was … beginner.

“Todd?”

“It’s a nut.” My mind was scrambling for the answer – and knowing it was easy wasn’t helping. Gum nut? No. Chest nut? No. Peanut? No – that’s not even a nut Todd, its a legume, remember….aagh!

“I know you’ll want to know what sort… it’s from an oak tree, squirrels love them and stockpile them for the winter…” I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry at this point, this was about testing my cognitive function, and all I could do was develop a warped, version of twenty questions that the neuropsychologist had no intention of engaging in.

I slumped in my chair… statistically I knew it was no more likely for me than for the general population, but now there was only one word swelling in my mind, greedily absorbing all my positivity. How could I possibly expect to run a school with Dementia. 

I glanced at the clock.

It was nearly 3pm. My appointment had started two hours earlier, and we were only just starting the test. An eerie, unfamiliar shadow of despair was beckoning me and although grim, there was a comfort within it’s bleak, black presence that was drawing me ever closer.

Rochelle’s voice of wisdom seemed distant at first, but pulled me back into the room. “When did you take your medication last?” 

“I am due for my dose at 3pm.”

“And how long does it usually take to start working?”

“Actually, it’s quite quick…within 15 minutes or so.” I finally caught up with her train of thought and leapt aboard! I shook my pills out from their container – two 200mg levodopa tablets and a 200mg entacapone tablet (my most regular cocktail) – grabbed my wife’s pink water bottle, that I had borrowed for the day, and gulped them down. 

Rochelle offered to refill the bottle, which gave me a few minutes to breathe and await the miraculous effects of modern medication.

Whether it was the medication, or the kind and gentle prompting from my neuropsychologist, or a combination of the two, my test anxiety – if that is even what it was – seemed to melt away. My clarity of thought improving by the minute and before long I hit my strides and was cruising through the test – I even went back and got ‘the nut’!

The black line drawings, gave way to progressively harder challenges. Testing reading and vocabulary, problem solving, and short term memory. By 4pm Rochelle had tallied up the results and was able to give me the feedback that I had desperately needed to hear. My cognitive function was excellent (despite what my brother’s say) with a particular spike in my ability to think outside the square, which I believe is a good thing…😬.

There was no reason to think that my cognitive function should be an obstacle for the surgery. Another box ticked, but I was utterly drained and regretted driving myself to the test immediately. I needed a hug or at least to be nursed out to the car. Sadly, although I had spent the last three hours exposing my thoughts, challenges and abilities to Rochelle…I knew I couldn’t ask that of her. She did have a request of me though…

And so as I dragged my feet, a little disoriented from the whirlwind of emotions and thoughts playing havoc inside my head, I was quietly thankful, knowing that there would now be one more familiar, friendly face in the operating theatre with me.

Bionic Man (Part 2 of 2)

So I now require regular charging and need to avoid roundhouse kicks to the chin…

With the first probe nestled into its target location. Rob picked up my forearm – testing for rigidity. Amazingly, he could pick up some relaxing of tone immediately – even before the current had been switched on – a ‘leshioning effect’. He then slowly paced me through increasing levels of electricity being emitted by the electrode.

We needed to determine just how much amperage it would take to have a significant improvement – and how much I could handle before incapacitating side effects gripped me and made life unbearable.  Rob started the ball rolling with 0.3mA. A tingling sensation, almost pleasant and not unlike a very mild pins and needles, surrounded my right foot.

Rob explained that when first turned on, the electricity can pulse a little, emitting more electricity before settling down.  We waited patiently for 30 seconds to make sure it passed, and obligingly it began fading immediately. My right arm loosened. He asked me to make a fist with my left hand – which should not usually have an effect on your right side. However for me, this action of making a fist in one hand would always turn the other arm into that of the ‘tin man’ patiently awaiting Dorothy – at the mercy of the elements; with the oil can mockingly just out of reach.

I gave Mary a squeeze.

Rob’s smile confirmed what I could already feel. Still loose. I was beginning to enjoy myself. As we climbed through 2, 4, 6mA… I felt better and better.

It’s working.

This is amazing!

At each increment Rob had me concentrate on my body – carefully trying to take note of any difference, the smallest patch of numbness or tingling. We would then run through speech exercises to ensure I wasn’t suffering any impediment, which can be a common side effect when stimulating this part of the brain.

“Puh, puh, puh..me, me, me..kay, kay, kay…British constitution”.

Some finger co-ordination: touching my own finger tips together in sequence; touch his finger, touch my nose, finger, nose, finger, nose. 

Finally my eye-tracking. “Keep your eyes on my finger, Todd”. His outstretched pointer finger leading my eyeballs, left then right, then left again. Too easy. Keep on cranking up the voltage!

Though, as life often relishes in reminding us, ‘all good things must come to an end.’

As we progressed further towards 8mA, I noticed the temperature climb. Subtly at first. Then exponentially. I broke into sweat and my confidence and comfort level came screaming back down to earth, crashing through the surface and tunneling towards the molten core.

“Please stop,” I begged as my plastic safety goggles fogged up.

Rob tried to reassure me, “We’re nearly finished”.

These following seconds were tough. At the time I couldn’t comprehend why they wouldn’t just turn the electrode off. But my feedback was providing Rob with further detail to triangulate the most perfect final location of the electrode. He hurriedly put me through my tests. 

“Puh, puh, puh..me, me, me..kay, kay, kay…British constitution”.

It sounded as though this ‘Energiser bunny’ was given inferior batteries.

Finger….Nose…. Finger…Nose. Not sure if it is sweat or tears sliding down my flushed cheeks.

“Follow my finger.” 

My eyes lagged with buffering akin to Netflix on the NBN. 

Not for the first time, nor the last, today – I was left pondering Einstein’s theory of relativity. Surely it had been minutes or hours of discomfort not the seconds that the devious clock suggested.

Then miraculously, the oven switched off abruptly, as the electricity eased back and then switched off completely.

That was intense. I had no emotional capacity to feel anything other than relief. Though a glimmer of concern must have been alight in a dark corner somewhere in my mind.

‘Is this blindness going to be permanent?’ I wondered as I tried unsuccessfully to make out some faces in the room. I could not clear the fog that had engulfed the theatre. Like a mysterious mist hiding all manner of monsters, limited only to my imagination.

Something approached me from the left. If I could move my head, I might have shimmied back in fear. The sweat that my body had delivered so efficiently in its attempt to cool me seconds earlier, now clung to me like a damp, cold sheet. My shivering brought on shaking. Not a minute ago I was desperate to be released from the torment of being on fire. Now I shook, freezing cold and blind.

I could sense the figure reaching out toward my head, yet I was powerless to defend myself. I squeezed Mary once more and relented. 

My anaesthetist lifted my goggles and I could smell the alcohol on the wipe, and as if with Jesus’ own spit and dirt combo; he cleared the fog on my plastic safety goggles and instructed for warm air to be blown between my sheets of a pretty amazing operating table.

“Okay, that’s the test probe done.” Rob’s face now as clear as ever. “Time to do it all again with the permanent electrode. Nearly half-way there Todd!” 

The lights in the theatre blinked off, minimising any electrical interference and allowing for the best possible signals to be picked up by the equipment. As Matt once more positioned the electrode; this time, the one destined to become one with my brain; as my body, over time, would coat it with proteins,encouraging it to assimilate with the brain matter around it; and like a migrant worker completing their citizenship exam, it will become a welcome, functioning part of the whole.

Having a good indication from the first test probe. Rob was able to move quickly through the tolerable range of electricity, and before long I was back at my limits.

It grew hotter. Sweat emanated from every pore. My speech slowed. My eye tracking failed. So tired. 

Once again, the odour of the alcohol wipe acted as smelling salts and my alertness lifted in harmony with the fog.

“Time to switch sides Todd. Matt will lock that lead in place and then there will need to be some more drilling”.

“Beautiful.” I lied – to myself more than anyone – although I was glad to see a few mouths turn slightly upward at the corners. One of the first management lessons I learned was “a happy worker is a good worker” -sage advice.

Despite the challenge of using different technology for the first time; Matt had my lead locked in place in no time. The pneumatic drill whirred to life.

A jet engine doesn’t quite describe the drilling in the right side of my skull. Instead the image of a helicopter comes to mind.

Still, I was left without ear protection and my head was being forced against the rotor mast.

This time there was room for more than only vibration and noise…

I have a filling in a molar at the top, right side of my jaw. I could feel it wriggle free.

The vibration and noise, though overwhelming to the senses, seemed to take a back seat, as every past negative dentist experience flooded my mind, mingling and moulding into a ball of orthodontic terror. That all too familiar pain of an exposed nerve radiated through my jaw up to the point of drilling and seemingly down through my body, yet also left and right. Like the points of a compass. I grimaced, and felt – rather than saw – my aneasthetist’s concern raise a notch as he edged closer.

Vibration, noise, shooting nerve pain…and then finally; silence.

“What’s the matter Todd?” The empathetic eyes of my anaesthetist, peering over his surgical mask added a mystical, almost telepathic quality to his question.

“I think I lost a filling.”

Although I was being honest, the absurdity of the moment yanked my sense of humour from behind the dark curtain in my mind; where it momentarily had retreated, curled itself up in a fetal position and rocked back and forth. I smiled and pushed the lingering pain from my thoughts, so very thankful to be untethered from the Boeing CH-47 Chinook.

The test probe was in place before I knew it, and Rob was once again walking me through the various tests, as the technician amped up the electrode.

Something was wrong.

My back arched, unnaturally. I grimaced with discomfort and I could hear myself begging for Rob to halt the procedure. As a feeling that I can only describe as that of fingernails dragging across the surface of a chalkboard (only amplified perhaps 100 fold)  gripped me and for perhaps the first time I questioned whether this had all been the wrong choice. Rob squeezed my left hand and instructed for the technician to roll back the power, and as that most disturbing feeling graciously subsided, I became aware that I had lost my grip of Mary in my right hand.

I was left completely depleted. Physically and emotionally. I desperately wanted to yield to the building black thunderclouds of fatigue that had been storming toward me from the horizon. Once again, Rob intervened. He guided me to reserves I didn’t know existed, as he patiently explained what had happened.

My wonderfully unique, asymmetrical brain includes a subthalamic nucleus that is considerably smaller on the right side than the left. This region of the brain is surrounded by a bank of fibres and our brave scout electrode, had found itself nestled into these fibres causing the excruciating discomfort.

“This is why we want you to be awake Todd. Nothing on the scanners could have alerted us to what you were feeling. From your MRI data the electrode was perfectly positioned.”

I shuddered with disbelief at the thought of waking up with that feeling, and the fear and misunderstanding that would have been just as unbearable.

Matt and Rob then discussed very briefly the new co-ordinates, and buoyed by a deep sense of relief I shook off the fatigue and stepped forward with them, finally with an accurate understanding of what Rob had meant by me being an active participant in this surgery.

With the test probe farewelled, replaced by the second new permanent addition to my brain. The lights flickered off and I was once again treated to the very rare and remarkable audio experience that is listening to my own brain’s electrical activity.

Fatigue now clawed at the door, finding cracks and boring holes; determined to break through. My eyes struggled to stay open as I failed to follow Rob’s finger for the last time, my speech slurred and my co-ordination left my control. We had reached the limit.

Rob smiled, thrilled with the result; as Matt once again got to work with tidying up. Locking the lead into place, before placing my scalp back into position and stapling me up. 

The white hot pain of a staple biting into place reminded me that my work here was done. There was no need for me to be conscious for the remainder of the procedure – they still needed to connect the wires down through my neck to a computer and battery in my chest just like Tony Stark.😉

“Do I need to be feeling this?” I enquired of Matt, who answered by calling out to my anaesthetist …

“KNOCK HIM OUT!” 

Bionic Man (part 1 of 2)

“Risin’ up, back on the street

Did my time, took my chances”

– Survivor

I’ve decided that my desire to have some sense of continuity and timing to my posts, needs to take a back seat to sharing the phenomenal experience of last week… 

How often are we presented with the opportunity to really look at and appreciate the amazing world we live in.

I perched on the edge of the uncomfortable vinyl mattress of the hospital bed; which despite its ability to raise or lower your legs, and to bring you closer to your lovingly prepared – no doubt –  yet appetite suppressing display of food; holding you forcibly upright to minimise baked bean stains on the thin bedspreads which attempt to impersonate a doona, by inadequately covering an oversized bath towel and lying atop crisp, white sheets.

My wife sits in the designated supporter’s chair, that sadly is too often left empty in many other rooms. She shoots me a puzzled look, at what would have seemed an out of context smirk taking shape on my face, which when combined with my new, excessively short back and sides hair style, was likely coming off a little more creepy than I had intended. Before the moment could become awkward, the instantly recognisable beat started. Mandy’s puzzled look melted away into a soft chuckle, which erupted into an average yet purposeful shared rocking out to “Survivor’s – Eye of the tiger”. 

The first technological marvel of the day, with no more than a mobile phone and a Spotify account we can carry with us the ability to soundtrack our lives. In the space of my short lifetime the leap from making mix-tapes by recording the radio on my brothers ‘ghettoblaster’ – to instantly streaming any one of millions of songs would be not even in the realm of possible science fiction – should I be able to attempt to explain to 12 year old me.

Our reality tv quality performance of ‘Eye of the tiger’ was cut short, by a last minute but welcome visit from my sister in law – ducking in before starting work – conveniently in the same building. Embarrassment was up there amongst many emotions, which somehow all seemed preferable to taking note of the ‘elephant in the room’, carrying satchels of fear, a grey sense of mortality and buckets of potential tears. Our embarrassed laugh was again abruptly interrupted, this time by the squeak of the wheelchair that beckoned for me to climb aboard, as hospital staff processed into the room. With the instruction given to Mandy to “Say your goodbyes” the elephant stampeded over her,  sloshishing its saltwater cargo all over my scantily gowned shoulder. 

My mindset was concreted in though, my determination steely if not cold. I had a quick cuddle and then made it clear, “It’s not goodbye. I’ll see you in a bit” and in the Spotify of my imagination, I cranked the volume up on ‘Eye of the tiger’. With slight of hand akin to a street magician, I palmed my relic of St Mary MacKillop, and climbed into the wheelchair, as though it were no more than a roller coaster cart at a theme park.

Perhaps a ghost train fits better, as I made my way up the corridor. I’m sure my imagination was in full flight, but it seemed as though every person we passed knew I was heading for surgery. Sad stares bore down on me, and I was reminded of a scene in ‘The Green Mile’; my ears pricked up almost expecting to hear someone holler: “Dead man walking”. I shook that picture out of my head – not helpful Todd.

We pulled up in the waiting bay outside imaging, where I was introduced to the first of many heroic characters – My anaesthetist and his assistant. They cleverly engaged me in conversation, achieving what I suspect were two goals.

1. To find out if there were any yet undisclosed pieces of information that might impact on the plans for administering any anaesthetics throughout the procedure.

2. (Probably most importantly) distract me as they located a suitable vein and inserted the first of many attachments to the backside of my left hand.

They were a great team and connected with me very quickly. Putting me at ease and bravely agreeing to help lighten the mood, as I again felt the caring but ominous gazes full of well-intentioned pity of onlookers as they wheeled me on into the CT scanning room. At this point the room resembled more of a Formula 1 pit, than a hospital room. A well organised and synchronised team scurried together, as I was rigged up into my head gear – a heavy ring that encircled my head with plastic ‘bullets’ that screwed right through the flesh securing it to my skull. The action of which was fore-shadowed by the nasty little pricks of local anaesthetic in six evenly spaced locations around my head. 

Firmly screwed into my frame, I had a chance to take a load off and rest on what now seemed like my ‘bed away from bed’. As I moved in and out of the CT scanner, and it whirred around me, try as I might I could not keep still. Technicians tried their best to adjust me – time and time again, to the correct position, but it seemed each time they dashed off to escape the radiation, having been off my medication for 24 hours now, my neck would go into dystonia and cramp just enough to tug the frame out of alignment. Still as frustrating as that must have been, my apologies were met graciously and – although essentially untruthful, I was politely assured “No, it’s not your fault.”

Eventually it was decided that the scan was good enough (I suspect they gave up!) and like ‘Bran the Broken’ heading to lure the Night King; on I was wheeled flanked by those charged with protecting my life into theatre. Completely reliant on the team around me, my future now lay in the hands of the experts already steeling themselves for the battle.

As I eased myself out of the chair and nurses helped me onto the operating table that presented like an altar – the clear focus of the room, where careful preparations were metitculously taking place. My frame was clamped, and I felt my neck tug as I was locked into place. From this point, my head will not be able to adjust to any motion; presenting a steady and still target for my neurosurgeon. At the same time, by limiting my head’s ability to counter movement from my body, an unlikely seizure or other violent movement, would no doubt break my neck.

Like a wobbly tooth, I couldn’t help myself from testing the clamp out. I attempted to roll my head left and then right, up and then down. Sure enough the hardware did its job and I became aware that my field of vision was restricted to only what sliding my eyes along their horizontal and vertical planes could achieve. It was then that I spotted my Neurologist standing at a computer screen in the back corner of the room. His task at that time was to analyse the CT scan taken earlier, in conjunction with the pre-surgery high definition MRI scan, to create co-ordinates for my surgeon to guide him as he probed his way from the top of my skull, through an asteroid field of vital brain functions, on the way down to the target zone, millimeters away from my brain stem.

Some memories are cloudy, though I’m sure it was ‘Gun’s n Roses – Knocking on heaven’s door’ that prompted me to roll my eyes toward my Anaesthetist, “Who’s playlist is this?” I enquired, silmultaneously appreciating the selection so far, for their quality and their irony.

“It’s Matt’s music” he responded, and although a tiny detail, the enormous weight of responsibility that sat squarely on the shoulders of my Neurosurgeon became clear to me. The consequences of a cough, a nervous twitch, a distraction…

On cue – Matt’s voice. “Okay Todd. This is probably the most painful part. It will sting a bit as I put some local in…” A good description in the end. I pictured the needle penetrating my scalp and spraying the anesthetic from left to right. My jaw tightened and I grimaced through the sting, I  adjusted the volume of the music in my head ‘…it’s the thrill of the fight, Risin’ up to the challenge of our rival’.

As I prepared myself for more injections, the delay was unnerving me. It must have been 20 or more seconds since the last jab. I cautiously opened one eye and then the other, before risking the question to my anesthetist “Is that it?’ Is he finished with the local?”

“Yep – all done Todd.” I couldn’t help but be flooded with renewed hope. If that was the hardest bit, I don’t know what all the fuss is over… I clearly misunderstood Matt’s comment.

‘Most painful’ and ‘hardest’ do not always correlate.  

“I’m still at least 10 minutes away” I sensed a little irritation in my Neurologist’s voice as the volume in the room dropped a level. I was caught between wanting my team to take their time – no need to rush this –   but also, the niggling thought of ‘How long does local last?’

“Ok, that’s it.” Rob’s targeting work in the corner was done, explaining to someone that the angle of the CT scan was out of alignment (due to my cramping neck) adding a layer of complexity to his critical targeting co-ordinates.  He relayed his list of co-ordinates to Matt, via an assistant who was transcribing on a slightly out of view whiteboard. Matt was also busy. He made a long c – shaped incision in my numbed scalp and folded it back on itself revealing my skull. I then mentally pictured him selecting his drill; as others went to work, fixing a drop sheet from the ceiling down to the front, still attached part of my scalp, to provide a barrier between the ‘messy side’ which was Matt’s domain; and the parallel dimension that I could see, which bore no resemblance to the confronting scene behind me. ‘Rob’s domain’ was clear of gore and as he settled in beside me gripping my hand with one of his own and resting his other reassuringly on my leg. My consciousness was entirely on this side of the dropsheet and would remain there for the rest of the show, effectively as far as fear and trauma goes, it wasn’t hard to distract the menacing  thoughts of my bared skull, blood, and drilling; as Rob stole my focus, talking me through each step, and his clear articulation of his expert understanding of every detail, kept me where I needed to be – on his side of the dropsheet.

It’s time. Rob shares with me that Matt will begin by drilling into the left side of my skull and as the left brain controls the right side of our bodies, we would be focussing on just that. As he made his way around to my right, I subconsciously transferred Mary into my left hand and tightened my grip. I was warned that the drill would be loud and unpleasant but would be over in a matter of minutes. In my mind I was nodding ‘…and the last known survivor stalks his prey in the night’ – though of course my head was perfectly still…Let’s do this.

Words could never adequately prepare me for the drilling. It started as one would expect with the sound of a pneumatic drill – a little too close to the ear but not terribly uncomfortable. Then, the drill bit made contact with bone.

Nothing else in the world existed.

My eyes instinctively closed. All was black.

My whole skeleton vibrated intensely and I might as well have been strapped to the engine of a Boeing 747. The only thing capable of taking the attention of my senses from the vibration, was the noise. The vibration. The noise. Maybe an exploding 747 engine…

Long minutes elapsed. The pilot relaxed the throttle. And the sounds of the theatre – able to compete again – ushered in reality. 

“Wow, yeah…that was loud.” An ironic smile escaped me, knowing that there was no way to accurately interpret my perspective – in English, at least. 

“Gee you have a thick skull!” Matt offered from behind the dropsheet, yeilding a broadening of my grin to near ‘Cheshire’ status. My brothers would have loved that. He then went about tidying up the hole with an instrument not requiring a jet engine; and inserting the first wire which would act as both a scout and electrical test, expertly piloted by Matt, to its target location deep into my sub-thalamic nucleus. Thankfully as pain free as predicted.

Rob’s look was intense, demanding my attention. He carefully and deliberately reminded me of my role. With all the imaging in the world and with the experience of hundreds of these operations behind them, it was only me who could report feelings of discomfort, tingling, numbness, or any sign that the electrode could be causing unwanted side-effects; or alert Rob to the need to adjust the target location – this was the whole purpose of staying awake. Although already tiring I committed myself to the highest level of alert that I could muster.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Craziest of Weekends

The familiar buzzing of my phone vibrating on top of the leaning tower of books – that I will get to, I promise – upon my bedside table; wakes me from my semi-comatose state. It also serves to alert me that it must be past 6am; as a surprisingly delightful treasure I found recently is the ‘Quiet Hours’ function on apple devices – blocking any communication attempts from getting through to me whilst I focus on the Goliath battle with my insomnia…or sleep.

The message coming through caught me a little off guard as it was the first of a cascade, which is right now somewhat blowing my mind. In the last two weeks, Mandy and I have had the pleasure of liaising with a very friendly journalist and impressive photographers from the Advertiser. In my head I had pictured a small column of an article being buried somewhere obscure, within a weekday paper on a slow news day. I had also thought that being Parkinson’s Awareness month in April – if it were to feature at all it would have its place in a few weeks time, perhaps as a small part of a larger awareness campaign.

The messages of support kept flowing, and so I reached for my trusty Advertiser app, fired it up, and realised that today is Sunday. The Sunday Mail? That is pretty widely read I would think? But it’s huge, how have people already found my little article? I smash the download button as the app updates to today’s digital paper, and as the progress bar slowly fills it is hard not to reflect on the serene simplicity that I recall, once upon a time, being part of my routine; to walk, pick up some milk or bread and a copy of the Sunday Mail, to pull apart and share with my housemates. A routine that continued with my girlfriend, fiancé then wife – Another priority for the list of lifestyle choices to reinstate!

Download completed, I flicked through the pages resisting the temptation to skip through the ‘high priority’ news to somewhere near the back where an article about me would hide away nervously looking at its shoes, hands in pockets, hoping to be invisible.

With a ridiculous sense of timing, another buzz, and the screen of my phone lit up with “Page -12 – not bad!!!” (Quality feedback is a current improvement goal for my PA – who no doubt would prefer not to be named so let’s just call her “Kylie McWife”.) I flick the two pages required to reach the co-ordinates provided by Kylie. The featured image of this post is what awaits me. I can’t begin to describe the firework that this sets off in my ever so slowly but surely, degenerating gray matter.

  • Pride and gratitude for my beautiful students and the community they represent.
  • Comfort and strength in the image of my family.
  • Astonishment (and I’m pretty sure ego) at the size and location of the article.
  • Joy for the spotlight that this may shine on Young Onset PD.

Loitering in their shadow amongst these more welcome and smile inducing pyrotechnics; I can also make out the familiar shape of discomfort and embarrassment, with a hint of ‘What the heck am I doing?’

L-dopa Challenge

Adding to the complexity of soaking in the drama of the morning, is the frazzled mindset and beyond depleted energy levels of this – though still very determined – featherweight contestant in what seems a fanciful quest for the heavyweight title. Battered and bruised from the latest bout, which went the distance – that was in this instance the entire last two days.

As part of the lead up to, and one of many important steps to ensure candidacy for ‘Deep Brain Stimulation’. I have just yesterday completed an L-dopa challenge, under the watchful and expert eye of my neurologist Associate Professor Robert Wilcox; and in collaboration with the incredible team who will ultimately make the decision as to whether or not I will benefit from – and therefore be eligible for – this potentially life changing, yet not without risk procedure.

The L-dopa challenge was essentially this:

Step 1: Take my 6am meds as usual, but abstain from my 10am and 3pm doses.

Step 2: Check into hospital at 4 for a quick observation and further instructions from Dr Wilcox.

Step 3: Enjoy the beautiful scenery that is my wife, who lovingly (and perhaps sadistically) committed to opening the ominous dark door with me. Knowing full well, that what lay behind was a deviously twisted carnival mirror. The thought of what would reflect back at me, has dominated my dreams for weeks.

Step 4: Share our ‘hospital dinner’ (not a bad effort Flinders – I’ve definitely cooked worse!) and again skip my usual meds at both 8pm and before bed at 10pm.

Step 5: Prepare for sleep. Sorry for oversharing – but this does involve an unusual pre-bed tinkle. My admiration and honest pride in the powerful jet – that for the very longest time had been embarrassingly hypercoloured from the dyes and additives in 25 months of medications – running near crystal clear; was rudely interupted by what felt like incredibly violent ‘shiverring’. Though these tremors made my current task slightly more difficult than when I was a toddler, mum will be happy to know the clean toilet seat was left down and despite missing my hands with the automatic soap dispenser a few times, I very cautiously (as my legs seemed coated in thick, viscous tar) made my way back into the bed, curled up under the thin doona and just as if the tremors were simply cold induced shivers, they released me into something like stillness.

Step 6: Sleep. I actually let myself believe I could do this. Ignoring the clue that Dr Wilcox had left right in front of me – that he had arranged for some ‘Vallium’ in case I thought I needed it at any time. By 4am however, I could no longer block out the pain that my rigid legs were firing up my body. The ache attacking my whole left side broke my determination to resist the need for artificial sleep enhancements – beyond, of course, the kind hearted, enthusiastically delivered (“Thar ya goo Loorve! Be careful iz hot and they oonly had these tiiiighni coorps so iz very full”) delicious warm MILO, that I had conjured up my best 8 year old impression, to ask for!

I hit the ‘Assist button’ – setting off an alarm! Didn’t I know, that I was supposed to hit the ‘nurse’ button? – (I am sorry!) My nurse came rushing in with two others – I cancelled the alarm, but succumbed to the Vallium to encourage anything that might resemble sleep.

Step 7: Sleep. Or at least daze myself enough to distract from my screaming legs. Horribly disrupted, but at least a mild version of rest was shortly brought to a close by Dr Wilcox just after 6am.

“Time for the challenge!” This man rarely ceases to amaze me. I know he has a family. My highly trained eye (or ear I guess) has picked up throughout our time together that he is far from an absent father. Yet he appears to conjure so many hours to be present for patients? Here he is now transformed into a personal trainer; motivating patients who resembled the many ‘extras’ in Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’ film clip, to climb out of bed and perform various feats. The difficulty level of these tasks should have amounted to catching a fly that has already long ago met its spray can concealed demise. However after moving into the corridor with the staggered shuffle of a stranger – most confrontingly – I spent the next 15 minutes climbing the peak of Mt Everest.

“Don’t worry Todd.” The ever evolving, authentic care in Dr Rob’s voice; had me questioning whether my preference for doctors who are ‘straight shooters’ and ‘don’t sugar coat any bad news’, was perhaps a poorly constructed shield of perceived masculinity. He proceeded to pull out my numerous bottles of pills, that had been stylishly travelling in their purpose-built, tastefully constructed ‘Parkinson’s SA grab bag’ and masterfully (my psychiatrist described Dr Wilcox’s ability to get the most out of medications as “wizardlike”) concocted a combination for me to bring me back towards my best.

“I’ll be back in an hour for you to do the challenge again, you’ll start to feel much better.” Before Dr Rob made his way out – his next patient waiting to be roused by him from what sounded like a very volcanic world of slumber; he left me with some brief but important tips for eating my hospital breakfast.

Within minutes I felt my fuel tank filling, I hadn’t even noticed that my vision was blurry, but layers of fog, cleared away. My limbs loosened and I walked almost unencumbered to the bathroom; showered, dressed, absolutely devoured the delicious breakfast (the dead arse of a rhino may no doubt have seemed equally desireable I suspect), as the torment of the last 18hrs had obviously left me famished. I lay back and my eyes gently closed – I was comfortable. With a full belly, background noise and my gorgeous wife (who had driven to the hospital at dawn’s crack, despite entertaining by herself some long overdue friends, who had booked the Murfitt Hotel) lying by my side; I slept.

Briefly.

“Whoa, what a difference!” Rob greeted me with apparent joy – probably equal parts of happiness for me and what I imagine would be great satisfaction that comes with the clear evidence that you are good at your work. “Ready for the challenge?”

I swung my legs out of bed and although only just woken; the all to recent memory of the incapacitated stranger masquerading as me, filled me with a renewed virility. Although still a country mile from being physically well, I couldn’t wait to smash my last effort at the challenge – even with the knowledge that I was jacked up with performance enhancing drugs to almost Lance Armstrong levels.

There was very little of the ‘tar’ that enveloped me earlier, and I didn’t need any convincing that the medication, thankfully as it always has, wrapped itself around me like a disguise, allowing me to walk amongst others, my secret, new, but real self – undetected.

The improvement in my score for the challenge was well beyond what was required to indicate DBS would be beneficial. As Dr Wilcox put it, “Another box ticked.”

I am scheduled to meet my neurosurgeon next week, who is also tasked with the important responsibility of deeming my suitability as a candidate for this surgery. All going well, my expert team will then begin collaboration on the extraordinary mission to first find 😉 my brain and then manipulate it with electricity. To install in me, a computer upgrade and powersource that I pray will reduce my dependancy on medication and in doing so bring some balance to the difficult up and down cycle that is sadly part and parcel of treating Parkinson’s Disease.