
About “Neurologically Me”
The mission of this site is to secretly comply with the multiple requests for the author’s intellectual capital, and story, to be shared. “Neurologically Me” is made to mold the meaning of impossible, and is not medical advice. The content is authored by one person who hopes to remain anonymous. The anonymity does not come from shame, but from the fact that stigmas are plentiful, and held by the systems in power.
About The Author
Education
She earned her Bachelor of Arts Degree in Psychology years after her brain started degenerating. Despite her brain disease, she has high scores in planning and strategy. Basically, she accidentally makes three backup plans to your one, and she has been called A.I. by multiple people.
Values
She values the courage to catch others when they fall, that no morality is rooted in fact, and eating delicious pie.
Interpersonal Viewpoint
She knows she is deeply loved, but not because those people have chose to stand by her.
Facts
Her favorite people are her children, and if they only ever know one thing in this world, she hopes they know that she is always in their corner.
Visions For The World
Vision 1
An organizational development firm that has a healthy percentage of employees that are physically or neurologically divergent, and paid well. For the firm to be designed as inherently inclusive of neurodivergent optimization practices.


Vision 2
Would love to see a holistic based inpatient movement disorder hospital be built some day, in the name of experience-dependent plasticity. A movement disorder clinic that can cater to the neurological mess that is existence, like comfortable colorful furniture, different musics, and yes, drug interventions.
A Note For Medical Students And Medical Professionals
You guys have difficult jobs, and yes, being a student is a job. You have to digest an insurmountable amount of information, and then apply it to human lives so quickly. More data is probably not the first thing on yalls minds. Some of the blog posts here, however, may give you some insight on how to implement research to practice. Also, I would like my case to be a published case study one day, in multiple disciplines, given the right author, and obviously in The Lancet, but I’m flexible with which journal *insert sweaty laughy face*. I am also up for participating in certain research studies I may be a candidate for, so please feel free to reach out about any. Also, you’re encouraged to ask questions you don’t normally get to ask your patients.
