Music and stroke recovery: a first-hand account (part 1 of 2)
In response to a recent article about music and its healing effects on the brain, I was contacted by Peggy Ward, a professional musician and stroke victim/victor. Her struggles and triumph were so touching, so inspirational, that I asked her to share her experiences with other PTM readers. She graciously agreed, and this segment is the first of two articles about her journey to recovery using music. I hope that you find it as encouraging as I did.
Keep playing,
Mark

October 10, 2002 –the Day That Changed My Life
The nice thing about strokes is the complete absence of pain. In fact, you don’t realize you’re having one until you try to use the part of your body normally directed by the brain’s cells affected by the cutoff of blood.
I had just finished giving my college student her viola lesson and was trying to explain to her how she should set up her beginning student’s hand position when I felt a wave of faintness and decided I should sit down. I was having a TIA (transient ischemic attack) but only knew that I could hardly speak and had to lift my log-heavy left arm with my right hand. After 10 minutes the feelings passed and I felt normal again. Another 20 minute TIA 3 hours later convinced the colleague in my company that I needed emergency attention, and I was admitted to the local hospital. The next morning, I talked the resident physician into releasing me so I could attend the dress rehearsal for that weekend’s chamber music concert.
My family panicked when told about the TIAs and took turns staying with me around the clock. My daughter looked at me when I woke up the second morning, said the left side of my face was sagging, guessed I had had another TIA during the night, and whisked me right back to the hospital. The doctor ordered a multitude of tests, found my right carotid artery blocked 60% and then asked me what I could move. All large muscles were fully functional, the left side of my face and throat were unresponsive, and the fingers on my left hand WOULD NOT MOVE. After devoting the fifty adult years of my life to being a professional violist, you can imagine the emotional impact this news had on me. I lay inert in my hospital bed completely demoralized. The weekend’s concert was canceled.
Two little students brought their violins into the hospital room and played Suzuki’s Perpetual Motion for me; I was then able to give them some suggestions for further polishing. They insisted I should let them have their regular lessons as soon as I got home from the hospital. I called my friend John Kendall, Suzuki’s American liaison, and asked him if it was ethical for me to teach if I couldn’t play. John, now in his 80’s and watching his own ability to play be destroyed by Parkinson’s disease, assured me I had much value as a teacher in spite of a paralyzed left hand. My morale improved considerably.
The occupational therapist visited me at home until I had enough strength to get out of bed. She taught me a progression of movements for the left hand to practice and assured me I could regain functional use of my hand if I religiously followed her instructions for six months. If not, the implication was that I’d never get it back. I asked her to let me try the violin, since it was smaller and lighter than the viola and needed very specific small muscle development, but she completely dismissed the idea as having no practical value – she didn’t know!
Continue to The Road to Recovery
Margaret Motter “Peggy” Ward has her degree in viola performance from the Eastman School of Music. She shared the principal viola chair in the Kennedy Center Opera House Orchestra for fifteen years and played in the Baltimore Symphony and many chamber ensembles. She is currently directing a non-profit community music school in north-central Maryland.
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2 Comments to “Music and stroke recovery: a first-hand account (part 1 of 2)”
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Music and stroke recovery: a first-hand account (part 2 of 2) | Part Time Musician . com — June 6, 2009 @ 5:23 am
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By Bernard Zaslav, August 24, 2011 @ 6:07 pm
Hi Peggy,
I was touched by your Amazon review; I have indeed been the luckiest musician, and I was deeply moved by your account of that TIA. I have experienced myself two in my life, one very recently, so I hold your hand in strength and comradeship. I’m in recovery now from a fall and a subdural hematoma, so I’m hoping to beat this latest bit of bad luck and happy that the memoir is out finally so our instrument of choice may be more widely known and accepted.
Did you perhaps study with Francis Tursi at Eastman, or “Father Tursi” as he was known? Or Martha Katz, who succeeded him? Di you work under my friend, Marin Alsop?
My latest carotid exam had to be postponed, so your story has made me aware that it is long past due.
All the best.
Bernie Zaslav