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Born on a
Blue Day - Inside the Extraordinary Mind of an Autistic
By: Daniel
Tammet
A Book Review by:
Paul Harris, OD
At a recent OEP Regional Clinical Seminar on
the optometric care of patients on the autism spectrum, Dr. Vicky Vandervort
gave me an unexpected surprise when she handed me a copy of this book. This
is an engaging story about Daniel Tammet a high-functioning man who talks
about his life with Asperger’s in a way that makes it quite accessible.
Daniel suffered a seizure early in life after
which he seemed to emerge with heightened affinity for numbers and the
emergence of synesthesia, the association of sensory experiences with each
other. Daniel experiences numbers as having many very interesting qualities
including size and color. He strings them together into landscapes that
allow him to remember long strings of numbers. Then taking a walk back
through these landscapes, he calls off the sights he sees.
His early interest in numbers on top of his
Asperger’s and the results of the single seizure left him as a savant in the
area of numbers and calculations. He can easily translate just about any
calendar date to the day of the week in seconds and can do some extremely
difficult calculations in seconds. He has been known to do long division
and carry the results out to more than 100 decimal places. Rather than
actually calculate in his mind he simply intuits the answer and it comes to
him in the form of a landscape in his mind that he “reads” off through his
synesthesia.
For all the special qualities he has during
most of the book I was thinking about the number of patients, families and
loved ones connected in some manner with those who are on the autism
spectrum. It would be valuable and uplifting to read through this book.
Thus, my strong recommendation that every health care professional who works
with patients with autism to not only read the book themselves but have the
book available as part of an in-office library.
Additionally, a documentary entitled Brainman
was done and which can be viewed on line at
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2598363071375453449 .
Here is a paragraph that I found particularly
interesting as it relates to the visual process:
“When I walked, even out on the street, I
always kept my head firmly down and watched my feet as they moved. Often I
would bump into things and suddenly stop walking. My mother walked with me
and kept trying to remind me to bring my head up, but even when I did it
would quickly fall back down again. Eventually, she asked me to pick out a
point – a fence or a tree or a building – in the distance and to keep
watching it as I walked. This simple idea helped me to keep my head up, and
over the following months my coordination improved a lot; I stopped walking
into things and my confidence grew.” (p 87)
It reminds me so much of the prime purpose of
the visual process which is to direct movement and how much better our
movements are and how much more confidence in ourselves we can have when we
move better.
Early in the book he spoke of his ability to
visualize words that interested me.
“I was able to visualize each word in my
head, based on the shape its letters formed. The word dog, for example, is
made up of three circles with an upward line on the first letter and a
downward loop on the last. The word actually looks quite like a dog if you
imagine the upward line as the dog’s ear and the downward loop as the tail.
Similarly, the two os in ‘look’ reminded me of a pair of eyes.” (p 51)
Here is a statistic I had not heard before.
Keep in mind that this is from the UK. However, I would suspect that
conditions are pretty similar here in the US.
“Research in 2001 by the U.K.’s National
Autistic Society indicated that only 12 percent of those with
high-functioning autism or Asperger’s syndrome had full-time jobs. In
contrast, 49 percent of people with other disabilities and 81 percent of
people who are not disabled were in employment in 2003, according to the
U.K.’s Office for National Statistics.” (p 147)
Thanks again to Dr. Vandervort for giving me
the gift of this book. I hope that my writing here stimulates you to get a
copy of the book, to watch the video and to recommend the book to others.
Free
Press, 2006
ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-3507-2
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