The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat

by

Oliver Sacks

Equalization and Adaptation Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Neurology Theme Icon
Conceptions of Mental Illness Theme Icon
The Neurological Community Theme Icon
Equalization and Adaptation Theme Icon
Illness as a Gift Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Equalization and Adaptation Theme Icon

On of the most important insights in The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat is the idea that people with neurological disorders adapt to their conditions. Often, people have a tendency to think of mental illness as a static phenomenon—something that alters the “normal” human mind, leaving it permanently fragmented or impaired. However, many of the case studies in Sacks’s book suggest a subtly different perspective: although neurological disorders alter human beings’ minds and behavior, people also react to their disorders, consciously or unconsciously, to recreate a sense of stability that most people take for granted. Oliver Sacks’s mentor, the neurologist A. R. Luria, used the term “equalization” to refer to this way of compensating for a neurological disorder. On many occasions, Sacks uses Luria’s term, while also alluding to a more general process by which patients adapt to their conditions in order to preserve their dignity or self-control.

In many of the episodes from The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, patients with rare neurological disorders lose their knowledge of themselves—something that most human beings take for granted. In response, many of these patients find unique ways to recreate some form of “self.” In some cases, patients who lose a major aspect of their self must consciously train themselves to compensate for their loss. For instance, when a woman named Christina loses her sense of proprioception—the intuitive awareness of one’s own body—she learns how to rely upon her five senses to maintain awareness of her own body. Most human beings, thanks to the power of proprioception, intuitively know where their arms are without needing to look—Christina, however, trains herself to use her eyes to locate her arm, consciously recreating her sense of self.

In many other cases—particularly cases that revolve around a memory disorder—patients recreate a sense of self unconsciously. One patient, William Thompson, suffers from Korsakov’s Syndrome, meaning that he’s unable to remember anything that happened more than a few seconds ago, and he has only the vaguest sense of who he is. However, Thompson seems to compensate for his self-ignorance unconsciously by improvising elaborate identities and often inventing different contradictory life stories for himself in the course of the same conversation. The fact that Thompson could improvise entire identities for himself, without being consciously aware of his own condition, suggests that the human brain unconsciously “craves” self-understanding. While most people are more or less aware of their own selves—their personalities, their pasts, etc.—people with certain neurological conditions adapt to their situations by rediscovering, or even inventing, a stable “self.”

Another important kind of adaptation that the book discusses is the need to create some kind of connection between the self and the world. It is not enough, Sacks suggests, to feel self-awareness—one must also feel some connection with other people, or, at the very least, some connection with the external world. Many of the patients in the book struggle to make ordinary human connections, but find ways to adapt to their circumstances. Some patients, particularly those with Tourette’s Syndrome, learn to control their symptoms and build fulfilling relationships with other people. Interestingly, though, many other patients in the book turn to art, religion, and ceremony to forge a connection with the world. Jimmie G., a patient who, like William Thompson, lacks almost any memory, finds peace and comfort in Catholicism and the rituals of mass; somewhat similarly, José, a gifted autistic man, is happiest when drawing pictures, particularly pictures of the natural world.

Sacks interprets Jimmie and José’s behavior as two different manifestations of the same instinct: the instinct to connect with something larger and longer-lasting than the self (religion or nature). In so connecting, Jimmie and José find ways of making sense of their own chaotic existences, and find a kind of relief from their disorders. Too often, people think of those with mental illnesses as living in a permanent state of madness or disorientation. However, as The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat shows, many patients find ingenious, triumphant ways of compensating for their disorders—reminding us that people with mental illness, no less than any other human beings, are masters of adaptation, change, and survival.

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Equalization and Adaptation Quotes in The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat

Below you will find the important quotes in The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat related to the theme of Equalization and Adaptation.
Part 1, Introduction Quotes

It is, then, less deficits, in the traditional sense, which have engaged my interest than neurological disorders affecting the self. Such disorders may be of many kinds—and may arise from excesses, no less than impairments, of function—and it seems reasonable to consider these two categories separately. But it must be said from the outset that a disease is never a mere loss or excess—that there is always a reaction, on the part of the affected organism or individual, to restore, to replace, to compensate for and to preserve its identity, however strange the means may be: and to study or influence these means, no less than the primary insult to the nervous system, is an essential part of our role as physicians.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker)
Page Number: 6
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 1 Quotes

‘Well, Dr. Sacks,’ he said to me. ‘You find me an interesting case, I perceive. Can you tell me what you find wrong, make recommendations?’

‘l can't tell you what I find wrong,’ I replied, ‘but I'll say what I find right. You are a wonderful musician, and music is your life. What I would prescribe, in a case such as yours, is a life which consists entirely of music. Music has been the center, now make it the whole, of your life.’

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Dr. P. (speaker)
Page Number: 18
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 2 Quotes

What could we do? What should we do? ‘There are no prescriptions,’ Luria wrote, ‘in a case like this. Do whatever your ingenuity and your heart suggest. There is little or no hope of any recovery in his memory. But a man does not consist of memory alone. He has feeling, will, sensibilities, moral being—matters of which neuropsychology cannot speak. And it is here, beyond the realm of an impersonal psychology, that you may find ways to touch him, and change him.’

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), A. R. Luria (speaker), Jimmie G.
Page Number: 34
Explanation and Analysis:

If Jimmie was briefly ‘held’ by a task or puzzle or game or calculation, held in the purely mental challenge of these, he would fall apart as soon as they were done, into the abyss of his nothingness, his amnesia. But if he was held in emotional and spiritual attention—in the contemplation of nature or art, in listening to music, in taking part in the Mass in chapel—the attention, its ‘mood’, its quietude, would persist for a while, and there would be in him a pensiveness and peace we rarely, if ever, saw during the rest of his life at the Home.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Jimmie G.
Page Number: 38-39
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 3 Quotes

This unquestionability of the body, its certainty, is, for Wittgenstein, the start and basis of all knowledge and certainty. Thus, in his last book (On Certainty), he opens by saying: ‘lf you do know that here is one hand, we'll grant you all the rest.’ But then, in the same breath, on the same opening page: ‘What we can ask is whether it can make sense to doubt it’; and, a little later, ‘Can I doubt its grounds for doubt are lacking!’

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Ludwig Wittgenstein (speaker)
Page Number: 44
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 5 Quotes

What wonderful possibilities of late learning, and learning for the handicapped, this opened up. And who could have dreamed that in this blind, palsied woman, hidden away, inactivated, over-protected all her life, there lay the germ of an astonishing artistic sensibility (unsuspected by her, as by others) that would germinate and blossom into a rare and beautiful reality, after remaining dormant, blighted, for sixty years?

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Madeline J.
Page Number: 63
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 7 Quotes

Mr. MacGregor’s homely symbol applies not just to the labyrinth but also to the complex integration of the three secret senses: the labyrinthine, the proprioceptive, and the visual. It is this synthesis that is impaired in Parkinsonism.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Mr. MacGregor
Page Number: 73
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 10 Quotes

There followed three months of deep and patient exploration, in which (often against much resistance and spite and lack of faith in self and life) all sorts of healthy and human potentials came to light: potentials which had somehow survived twenty years of severe Tourette’s and ‘Touretty’ life, hidden in the deepest and strongest core of the personality. This deep exploration was exciting and encouraging in itself and gave us, at least, a limited hope. What in fact happened exceeded all our expectations and showed itself to be no mere flash in the pan, but an enduring and permanent transformation of reactivity. For when I again tried Ray on Haldol, in the same minute dose as before, he now found himself tic-free, but without significant ill-effects—and he has remained this way for the past nine years.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Ray
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:

As this pattern became clear to him, and after discussing it with me, Ray made a momentous decision: he would take Haldol ‘dutifully’ throughout the working week, but would take himself off it, and ‘let fly’, at weekends. This he has done for the past three years. So now there are two Rays—on and off Haldol. There is the sober citizen, the calm deliberator, from Monday to Friday; and there is ‘witty ticcy Ray’, frivolous, frenetic, inspired, at week- ends.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Ray
Page Number: 101
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 12 Quotes

Such a frenzy may call forth quite brilliant powers of invention and fancy—a veritable confabulatory genius—for such a patient must literally make himself (and his world) up every moment. We have, each of us, a life-story, an inner narrative—whose continuity, whose sense, is our lives. It might be said that each of us constructs and lives, a ‘narrative’, and that this narrative is us, our identities.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), William Thompson
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 13 Quotes

In all these states—‘funny’ and often ingenious as they appear—the world is taken apart, undermined, reduced to anarchy and chaos. There ceases to be any ‘center’ to the mind, though its formal intellectual powers may be perfectly preserved. The end point of such states is an unfathomable ‘silliness’, an abyss of superficiality, in which all is ungrounded and afloat and comes apart. Luria once spoke of the mind as reduced, in such states, to ‘mere Brownian movement’.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), A. R. Luria
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 14 Quotes

The super-Touretter, then, is compelled to fight, as no one else is, simply to survive—to become an individual, and survive as one, in face of constant impulse. He may be faced, from earliest childhood, with extraordinary barriers to individuation, to becoming a real person. The miracle is that, in most cases, he succeeds—for the powers of survival, of the will to survive, and to survive as a unique inalienable individual, are, absolutely, the strongest in our being: stronger than any impulses, stronger than disease. Health, health militant, is usually the victor.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker)
Page Number: 124-125
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 17 Quotes

Another week passed, and now Bhagawhandi no longer responded to external stimuli, but seemed wholly enveloped in a world of her own, and, though her eyes were closed, her face still bore its faint, happy smile. ‘She's on the return journey,’ the staff said. ‘She'll soon be there.’ Three days later she died—or should we say she ‘arrived’, having completed her passage to India?

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Bhagawhandi P.
Page Number: 155
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 19 Quotes

Donald has not forgotten, or re-repressed, anything of the murder—if, indeed, repression was operative in the first place—but he is no longer obsessed by it: a physiological and moral balance has been struck.

But what of the status of the first lost, then recovered, memory? Why the amnesia—and the explosive return? Why the total black-out and then the lurid flashbacks? What actually happened in this strange, half-neurological drama? All these questions remain a mystery to this day.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Donald
Page Number: 164-165
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Introduction Quotes

But of much greater interest, much more human, much more moving, much more ‘real’—yet scarcely even recognized in scientific studies of the simple (though immediately seen by sympathetic parents and teachers)—is the proper use and development of the concrete.

The concrete, equally, may become a vehicle of mystery, beauty and depth, a path into the emotions, the imagination, the spirit.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker)
Page Number: 176
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 21 Quotes

‘I’m like a sort of living carpet. I need a pattern, a design, like you have on that carpet. I come apart, I unravel, unless there's a design.’

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker)
Page Number: 184-185
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 22 Quotes

His innate, hereditary musical gift had clearly survived the ravages of meningitis and brain-damage—or had it? Would he have been a Caruso if undamaged? Or was his musical development, to some extent, a ‘compensation’ for brain-damage and intellectual limitations?

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Martin A.
Page Number: 187
Explanation and Analysis:

One speaks of ‘idiot savants’ as if they had an odd ‘knack’ or talent of a mechanical sort, with no real intelligence or understanding. This, indeed, was what I first thought with Martin—and continued to think until I brought in the Magnificat. Only then did it finally become clear to me that Martin could grasp the full complexity of such a work, and that it was not just a knack, or a remarkable rote memory at work, but a genuine and powerful musical intelligence.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), Martin A., Johann Sebastian Bach
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 23 Quotes

This is the positive side—but there is a negative side too (not mentioned in their charts, because it was never recognized in the first place). Deprived of their numerical ‘communion’ with each other, and of time and opportunity for any ‘contemplation’ or ‘communion’ at all—they are always being hurried and jostled from one job to another—they seem to have lost their strange numerical power, and with this the chief joy and sense of their lives. But this is considered a small price to pay, no doubt, for their having become quasi-independent and ‘socially acceptable’.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), John, Michael
Page Number: 209-210
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 24 Quotes

Could he, with his fine eye, and great love of plants, make illustrations for botanical works or herbals? Be an illustrator for zoology or anatomy texts? (See the drawing overleaf he made for me when I showed him a textbook illustration of the layered tissue called ‘ciliated epithelium’.) Could he accompany scientific expeditions, and make drawings (he paints and makes models with equal facility) of rare species? […] He could do all of these—but, alas, he will do none, unless someone very understanding, and with opportunities and means, can guide and employ him. For, as the stars stand, he will probably do nothing, and spend a useless, fruitless life, as so many other autistic people do, overlooked, unconsidered, in the back ward of a state hospital.

Related Characters: Oliver Sacks (speaker), José
Related Symbols: José’s Drawings
Page Number: 231-232
Explanation and Analysis: