Growing herbs and plants in his backyard, DeBaggio's life is bound with nature, and attentive to its dramas. Do you think this is intentional? Note, for example, the repetition of the experience of lying in bed watching a light show of yellow images, or the memory of finishing reading The Catcher in the Rye and going out in search of "phonies." What is the effect of these echoes in the text?ħ. Losing My Mind has passages that are repeated at times, particularly in the second half. Without memory you lose the idea of who you are." These two sentences succinctly capture what is so terrifying about Alzheimer's if you could not remember your first kiss or your last address or your wife's name, would you still be you? Does DeBaggio's personality seem to change or even dissolve over the course of these 200 pages?Ħ. "For me now, any question of identity becomes profound and difficult. Rule out treatable cause." Do these quotations square with other medical experiences we all may have had?ĥ.
LOSING MY MIND PLUS
An early excerpt reads, "Mild dementia versus age-related memory loss plus anxiety.
Sometimes DeBaggio quotes directly from his doctors' notes, which are often chillingly clinical. Does this change over the course of the narrative? Do you think his experience of the disease is uniquely self-conscious and insightful?Ĥ. The author writes, "depressed patients often complain that they're unable to concentrate or remember things, while those with dementia are generally unaware of any mental problems." And yet, DeBaggio himself seems painfully aware of his own ever-increasing lapses, at least initially. One reads simply, "This may be my last chance to dream." Why are these remarks so moving? Do they ever remind you of your own privately held feelings?ģ. One of the most poignant aspects of the book is the use of short italicized quotations from DeBaggio's journal - dispatches from his most personal thoughts. What is the effect of this technique? Did you notice any interesting juxtapositions?Ģ. Rather than treating these subjects in three separate sections, he alternates between them rapidly, creating a complex texture. One records his memories from early childhood onward, another relates the present-day frustrations of the disease, and the last collects bits and pieces of the latest Alzheimer's research.
As he says in the Author's Note, DeBaggio weaves three distinct threads into this narrative. While keeping up with his family-run herb and plant business, he began work on his new project immediately, writing in his journal to capture the personal angle and researching the latest scientific information on a still poorly understood disease. Diagnosed one beautiful spring day at the age of 57, longtime journalist DeBaggio initially viewed the condition as a death sentence, but also knew he had a story he ought to tell. In Losing My Mind: An Intimate Look at Life with Alzheimer's, Thomas DeBaggio records in heartbreaking detail an experience that few have recounted and no one hopes to share: the onset of Alzheimer's disease.