Radiolab - Happy Birthday, Good Dr. Sacks
Episode Date: July 5, 2024First aired back in 2013, we originally released this episode to celebrate the 80th birthday of one of our favorite human beings, Oliver Sacks. To celebrate, his good friend, and our former co-host Ro...ber Krulwich, asks the good doctor to look back, and explain how thousands of worms and a motorbike accident led to a brilliant writing career.We have some exciting news! In the “Zoozve” episode, Radiolab named its first-ever quasi-moon, and now it's your turn! Radiolab has teamed up with The International Astronomical Union to launch a global naming contest for one of Earth’s quasi-moons. This is your chance to make your mark on the heavens. Submit your name ideas now through September, or vote on your favorites starting in November: https://radiolab.org/moon.Our newsletter comes out every Wednesday. It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about other ways to interact with the show. Sign up (https://radiolab.org/newsletter)!Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. Support Radiolab by becoming a member of The Lab (https://members.radiolab.org/) today.Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @radiolab, and share your thoughts with us by emailing radiolab@wnyc.org.Leadership support for Radiolab’s science programming is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation Initiative, and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yeah, wait, you're listening. Okay. All right. Okay. All right.
You're listening to Radio Lab. Radio Lab. From WNYC. Rewind.
Hey, I'm Leth of Nasser. This is Radio Lab. This week would have been the 91st birthday of a person who I think it's fair to say
is one of the show's all-time favorite human beings, the late neurologist and science writer,
Dr. Oliver Sacks. We had spoken to Oliver Sacks many, many times on this show, and his essays
about his patients, most famously Awakenings and The Man Who Mistook
His Wife for a Hat. They are a model for what we like to do around here, the mix of science and
heart and curiosity. So today what we're going to do for you is to play you a conversation that one
of our other all-time beloved humans, Robert Krawicz, had with Dr. Sacks about a decade ago.
Dr. Sacks was just turning 80 years old at the time.
So to celebrate, Kralwicz sat down with him
and had him explain how thousands of worms
and a motorbike accident led to his brilliant career
as a writer.
I asked him, would you mind sitting down and talking to me
about how you got started and he said well all right the truth is though my
start wasn't all that easy in fact it was kind of rough. I came to New York in
65. He wasn't planning to write essays about science not at all. I wanted to be
a real scientist. The kind that does experiments in a lab.
And he had a research position at Einstein Medical Center in the Bronx, working with...
Worms.
Earthworms?
Right.
Earthworms.
I'm afraid I committed a sort of genocide of worms from the front garden at Einstein.
I collected them by the hundred and by the thousand.
How many altogether? Tens of thousands. The thing about worms is when you give
them a little
poke, you give them a little... They have very quick reactions,
throttle reactions when they curl up. They react faster
than people do and you wonder, well why? So he decided to focus on the wrappers
that surround their nerve cells,
which are made from a very thin substance called
myelin.
So thin, you have to peel it off really delicately.
One is looking for a little amount of myelin
in their giant nerve fibers,
maybe a thousandth of the weight of each worm.
So you're digging up lots of earthworms,
but how do they die? Well I am I don't want to be pressed on that point. We sort of
anesthetize them and put them out. Until very gradually he accumulated a precious
ball of myelin that he could then take to a laboratory to experiment with. Of
course like any good
scientist, he also took notes.
I kept fairly detailed notes in a huge green notebook, my lab notebook. At that time, I
lived here in the West Village. I had a motorbike and I went in daily to Einstein and the Bronx.
I sometimes took the book home at night to ponder over But one morning when I was in a bit of a hurry, I failed to secure it properly to the
Motorbike and when I was on the cross Bronx through way the notebook broke loose and fell off the bike. I
Got to the edge of the road and put my bike on the stand
I could see the book in the middle of the crowded cross Bronx
being really...
The cross Bronx Expressway can get very, very busy.
Very busy, very crowded, very fast, very callous drivers
who instead of respecting this notebook, this holy notebook of mine,
were tearing it sheet from sheet I
Two occasions I made little sallies to try and get into the traffic
But this would have been fatal and so I lost my notebook
And therefore all the data that you had nine months data in it
I know but I can show myself that at at least I had the sample and I could continue
the work with his little ball of precious myelin and sort of make further results. Although
then there was another and even worse accident, which is I lost the specimen of myelin, which
I spent nine months getting. And I mean, the thing that you pulled out
of all these many animals,
it's like, like, how did you lose it?
I don't know what happened to it.
I'm afraid I am a loser.
And then the powers that be got together.
And basically in a very kind but firm way,
they said, Saks, you're a menace.
Go see patients. You'll do less harm. So no more lab work for you? No more lab work for me. And the rest is history.
So now instead of a scientist in a lab, Oliver is assigned to what's basically a
nursing home. The original name had been the Beth Abraham home for incurable
now it was just Beth Abraham hospital up in the Bronx some of my
Contemporary said you know this is the sticks no ambitious doctor would you know would work in a place like this
But I found it perfectly to my liking
Because I could spend a great deal of time with patients.
Though on the day that he arrived, as he stepped into the lobby, he looked around for the first
time and he thought to himself, like, what is going on here?
Because everywhere he looked, he saw people.
Some in chairs, some standing.
Totally still, like frozen.
And though he didn't know this yet, these folks would
become yet another accident, or maybe I should call it a collision, between
Oliver and the science community. One that would be much more painful than
getting exiled from the lab. But this time he would stand his ground and he'd
fight. Yes, right. Well, one of the things... Oliver's frozen patients had gotten sick
back in the 1930s from a fever called encephalitis
lethargica. They'd survived the disease, but it left them, as one doctor put it, as extinct
volcanoes, in whom there was very little behavior and very little sign of mind of an interior.
They'd been stuck at Beth Abraham ever since. And it seemed in 1966 when I went there that there was no hope or no future for them.
But then one year into his new job, a paper came out that said large doses of a chemical
called L-Dopa.
L-Dopa, levodihydroxy-philalanine.
Seemed to help Parkinsonians unfreeze a little bit.
And Sachs thought, well, who knows?
Maybe they could help my patients.
It was a hunch.
So he wrote the Drug Enforcement Agency in Washington asking for a supply of L-Dopa so
he could run a study.
If you've seen the movie, you know what happens next.
Dr. Sayre?
What is it?
It's a f**king miracle.
For the patients with L-Dopa, the changes were to put it mildly, dramatic.
Where are my glasses?
They're on your face.
Thank you.
Can you describe just a little bit what you were seeing?
Well, I was seeing people become alert, attentive to their surroundings, able to move and able to
feel in a way they hadn't been able to for sometimes decades.
Anthony, how are you?
Great man. How are you?
Great too.
All right, great.
Some of these changes Oliver could see and measure, but to get a fuller sense of what was happening,
he wondered what was it like on the inside to suddenly walk and talk and feel after so long.
Wonderful, wonderful.
Said a patient he called Hester, who in one weekend burst out of a 30-year silence. I'm a new person. I feel it. I feel it inside. I'm a brand new person. I feel so
much. I can't tell you what I feel. He gave his patients diaries and he told
them, well tell me what you're feeling and experiencing. Again, here's Hester. I
feel very good. My speech is getting louder and clearer. My hands and fingers
move more freely,
I can even take the paper for a piece of candy, which I haven't done for years."
The following day she wrote,
"...anyone who reads this diary will have to excuse my spelling and my writing.
They must remember that I haven't done any writing for years and years."
And to this she added very poignantly, They must remember that I haven't done any writing for years and years.
And to this she added very poignantly,
I would like to express my feelings fully.
It is so long since I had any feelings.
I can't find the words for my feelings.
I would like to have a dictionary to find words for my feelings.
The government, of course, wanted to know what had happened as well well and they asked Oliver to report what he'd observed on what were called
rating forms. Basically they were charts so if a patient shook less,
Oliver was to mark that change checking a box on a seven-point scale.
So his shakes went from a six to a four, then you know just check the box, numbers were key.
That was what they expected, what they demanded.
And that was enough for them?
That would have been enough for them.
But not for Oliver.
He had seen so much that wouldn't even begin to fit on a seven-point inventory, he said
I'm not doing this.
I then stopped keeping these rubbishy inventories.
Because they didn't say enough.
But as a researcher, as a scientist,
he still had to report what had happened, which was a problem.
Because in the 1960s, medical journals
had an attitude about clinical studies.
They also wanted numbers and patterns and data.
They wanted things that you could measure.
They didn't want stories.
Phenomenal, phenomenological description, if you want to put it this way, had been largely
displaced by laboratory tests of one sort or another. And that these...
Meaning adjectives and adjectives and...
Well, the urea was so-and-so, the chest X-ray so-and-so, and the more human sorts of description had
become rarer.
A hundred years earlier, in the 1870s, doctors did quote patients and did describe scenes
in their clinical studies.
Many of the 19th century accounts are vivid and descriptive.
But as medical machines got better, numbers became more reliable, gradually pushing out description,
with one very singular exception. His name was...
A.R. Luria.
Dr. A.R. Luria was a neurologist living in Moscow in the 1960s.
He still did case studies the old-fashioned way.
One of his accounts of a man with a remarkable memory was startlingly vivid. Yes, so much so that I read the first 20 pages of this, thinking it was a novel.
And I then realized that it was a case history, but the most extraordinary and
detailed I had ever read, but a case history which did not shy away from the human aspects and the
Pathos and drama and then in 1967 I read a book also by dr.
Luria called human brain and psychological
processors and
This is the book you are holding in your hand the book. I'm holding at the moment
Or I should say another copy of that. Yes
When I read the book I got appalled or frightened
and awed by its power and its depth and its narrative sweetness.
Wait a second Oliver, I thought this man is doing exactly what I want to do. And suddenly
he was jealous and maybe more than a little competitive because
this guy was doing it so well. And I thought this man has seen it all. He's writing his thought it
all out in detail. Sooner or later he will see and think and write everything I can. Therefore,
there will be no place for me in the world. Luria will have done it all."
And I tore this copy in two.
I hope you owned this book. It was not the library book.
Well, it was indeed a library book. And I explained to the librarian at Einstein, I
didn't say that I would destroy the book. I said, most unfortunately, I lost the book,
but here is a new copy,
and I got another new copy for myself,
which I'm holding at the moment.
And so both frightened and boosted by Luria's example,
Oliver Sacks sits down
and he writes his manuscript for Awakenings.
And following Luria's example,
he wrote it as vividly as he possibly could,
with quotes, with scenes, with emotions. The book came out in 1974 and what happened? Well when
Awakenings was published many essayists and poets and others liked it very much.
Ordon said he thought it a masterpiece. That's W.H. Auden, the great poet. And it was selected as book of the year by five writers.
On the other hand, there were no medical reviews, whatever.
None.
None.
Well, to be fair, one small journal ran an editorial.
Saying that among the most surprising things
the previous year were the appearance of this extraordinary
book and quote the strange mutism unquote of the profession.
The strange M-U-T-I-S-M.
Yes, the strange mutism.
As in silence.
Yes, as in silence.
This isn't science, some neurologists said.
This is anecdote.
Awakenings is not useful.
It's overwritten. Where's the data and what is Saks doing?
The attacks got personal.
One of the most painful was from a man
who said Saks is the doctor who mistook his patients
for a literary career.
The science community almost unanimously ignored awakenings.
But in the middle of this quiet, out of the blue,
a letter arrived at Oliver's house.
From Moscow. It excited me.
It had beautiful handwriting done, obviously, with a fountain pen.
He opened it and it was from the man himself, A.R. Luria.
And it turns out Luria not only liked awakenings, he liked exactly what the
other neurologists didn't like.
He said the art of description common to the great neurologists and psychiatrists of the
19th century is almost gone now. And he went on to say that awakenings should be revived
and with a great success. Okay, folks, we are going to revive to great success after this short break.
Welcome back.
We are listening to Robert Kralwich interview the late great Dr. Oliver Sacks about how
he tripped and stumbled into becoming a brilliant
science writer. When we left for break, Dr. Sacks had just described receiving a letter of praise
from another doctor writer, one whom he very much looked up to. That letter, Luria's letter, plus
the response from poets and playwrights and moviemakers, gave Oliver the boost he needed
to double down and begin writing book after book after book
in his new but old style.
He wrote stories about husbands who mistook their wives for haths, colorblind painters,
deaf people, Toretters, autistic people, blind people.
His descriptions in all these books are so full of feeling he makes these people come alive.
This is his legacy.
Oliver Sacks is a great Includer. And when I asked him, isn't it possible
that your critics were maybe a little right, that
maybe you overdid it a bit in Awakening, put in too
much description? He says, no.
I would now say that the description was
inadequate. And I think, for example, that even
with ordinary Parkinson's disease, to give an adequate description
of how someone with Parkinson's rises from a chair and makes his difficult way across
a room may need 50 pages of very clear prose. I think that to describe a sneeze and all the feelings
which may proceed and attend and succeed it would require many many pages of
lucid prose. Come on, what is a regular neurologist going to do with 50 pages
about a sneeze? How's he going to use that? Well, you might indeed be able to
use it.
Let me give an example.
No, no.
Fifty pages on a sneeze?
You've just gone from useful to proust.
There's a line here and you've just crossed it.
This is literary.
This is no longer medical writing for doctors.
Well, I try to be and I believe I am a good doctor and a doctor does not just diagnose a disease. That is the least he has to do
that but it's the least of what he does. He is also concerned with the impact of the disease
on the person, their experience of it and how they may adapt or otherwise how they may
respond to treatment. So there is quite a strong individual story,
to be said, of everyone with a disease or an injury.
Or rather, you must expand the notion of medicine.
No, but how far do you expand it?
Because you already have millions of readers.
Your stories have enormous influence.
You're loved.
The only question that dangles here
is what have you done for doctors?
They're your holdouts at this point.
Well, I think things have changed. At first there was this strange mutism, especially
among senior doctors, though I think junior doctors might sometimes have a copy of Awakenings
with a brown paper cover. But now I think narrative has come back into medicine, partly as a thing which is taught
in medical school.
I never thought of it as anything distinct from medicine and makes you realize that science
is fun and science is play.
But...
Okay, so let me just do this.
I have one last question. I'm still going to be channeling your doctor critics when this being your birthday I
feel it's something I should do so if you were to get sick this afternoon and
have to call a doctor and we'll just say hit the name of this doctor happens to
be dr. Oliver Sacks would you trust him to fix you or just talk about you so
very beautifully so people all over
the world will know your story?
Which is that Dr. Sacks best at?
Well, it would depend what I had.
I'm going to give you an example.
Some years ago when I was flying to California, the air hostess, the term was used then, came
around at one point to get orders for breakfast and she said, Dr. Sacks?
And the man next to me said, yes.
And I looked around furiously and anyhow it turned out that he was another Dr. Sacks,
in fact a Dr.
David Sacks and he was a pulmonologist from Stanford. We got chatting a little
bit until there was a call over the loudspeaker, is there a doctor on the plane?
And with Saxean alacrity the two of us got up, converged to the patient who was
a woman obviously just coming to from an epileptic fit.
And as she became clearer, we asked if she'd ever had a seizure before, and she said no.
She was a medical technician, she knew about such things.
I thought that one of her pupils was a little larger than the other.
My fellow Dr. Sacks said he also thought that one of the pupils was a bit enlarged but we
weren't quite sure.
I said, well let's observe and as we observed the enlarged pupil enlarged more. And I looked at Dr. Sacks and Dr. Sacks looked
at me and we said, let's go to the captain. I'm not timid when it comes to doing something
for the patient.
What did you want to tell the captain?
We said to the captain, we think this woman is bleeding in her brain. This caused the seizure and this is also causing pressure in the head and the pupil
and she must be in neurosurgical hands as quickly as possible.
The captain said, okay, and he emergently landed at Denver.
The woman was taken off the plane. And he, um, uh, emergently landed at Denver.
The woman was taking off the plane.
She was successfully operated on.
And she thanked us both.
So I can be-
Now which Dr. Sacks, which of the two should get the lion's share of the credit?
Well, we, we did it together.
But notice that he told it fantastically.
That was the late, the great Dr. Oliver Sacks.
If you're interested in reading more of his work, we recommend literally any of his
books and countless essays.
Although I really loved an anthropologist on Mars and then I was a sucker for his autobiography
on the move.
Yeah.
It's also fun to read his book, Awakenings, and then watch the movie with Robin Williams
playing him.
And we also, we have tons of episodes with Dr. Sacks talking about his life, his patients,
just Google Radiolab and Dr. Oliver Sacks, and so many will pop up.
And that's it for today.
Live your best life! And part of
that obviously is tuning in again next week. Hi, I'm Rian and I'm from Dunagall in Ireland.
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is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation,
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Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred T. Sloan Foundation.