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Jill Bolte Taylor's stroke of insight

Filmed Feb 2008 • Posted Mar 2008TED2008
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  • 1 day ago: This talk was fantastic. I recently had the privilege to meet 2 local young police officers, one that is recovery from a stroke, and the other that survived a severe brain injury after being shot in the head. Both are truly living miracles. Both had different brain injuries and different paths to their recovery. Not only have they both survived their injuries, one is back to work again and the other will be returning very soon. (Rochester NY must have the best doctors and first responders based on these 2 guys alone! ) The brain injuries were different, but both fellas convey this same Nirvana that Julie talks about having. I noticed this incredible peacefulness the first time I was introduced to each of them. They talk to you from a different place. One that is calm - peaceful - loving. I can't wait to read her book now.
  • 3 days ago: There are many "safer" ways to do experience "being at one with universe." For example, meditate (preferably in a natural setting), paint or study some art, play an instrument or listen to great music, enjoy sports, gardening and many more, these are just some of the ways that one can be at the present moment and enjoy "being."
    • 1 day ago: You make it sound as if she did this on purpose. She made the conscience choice to expirence this the way she did. What should she have done?
  • 3 days ago: amazing talk - amazing experience - and what an amazing message! I almost feel sorry for her to be again who she is today, because of what she told about being right hemisphere only... But then, I thank her for being her, otherwise she would not have been able to analyze and explain her exceptional episode. What a great woman, thank you deeply for inspiring me.
  • 4 days ago: Absolutely beautiful talk! Just in case this book hasn't been mentioned yet (it probably has been), I highly recommend "The Power of Now" by Eckhart Tolle. He explains the value of the present moment and teaches you how become one with it as well as how to use your newfound power to radically increase your quality of life (almost completely eliminate stress and anxiety) as well as making you a more vibrant, compassionate person. I don't mean to shove anything in anyones face, but the book has taught me so much and has helped me to have many of the same experiences Jill speaks of, so I almost feel obligated to make it known to anybody interested in the subject. Mental silence is, in my opinion, the most beautiful thing a human can accomplish and I am so glad to see the concept being spread and accepted!
  • 4 days ago: This is really interesting, but I'm not sure why people find her "experience" inspiring. Being a brain scientist, she of all people should know it was just a DMT trip...
    • 4 days ago: You've got this a bit wrong. DMT's association with near death experiences is different than you're thinking... Your pineal gland likely produces DMT, yes, but it does so when your brain produces enough adrenaline to overcome the inhibitors your brain is constantly producing, which normally block the production of DMT. Adrenaline is itself an inhibitor for those inhibitors.

      Since she didn't realize she was in any danger, and didn't really discuss any sense of panic or any of that, it's highly unlikely her brain would or could have produced DMT. She was simply, as she surmised, experiencing only one half of her brain's output.

      What is inspiring about the talk is that every human brain has this dual nature, and suggests that we all have in us the capacity for experiencing some sense of oneness with the universe if we can simply tap into the dominant aspect of our right brain's consciousness.

      Do you understand now?
  • 4 days ago: WOW What an absolutely Inspirational Talk.
    People must understand that the Universe is one and this is a wonderful message.
  • Aug 17 2012: It's a very moving talk, but the comments are a bit confusing to me. People seem to be assigning a religious or spiritual bent to the talk as though there is some evidence in the talk of a higher power etc. That is just projection imho. She quite clearly explains the brain in laymen's terms, then proceeds to describe exactly how her particular stroke shut down aspects of one hemisphere. And the result is a first hand account of what it is like to have half a brain. I was moved because she describes something we can all relate to, the loss of ego, the loss of "baggage", becoming an infant, dropping our worries, and embracing how we feel, and the now, and the sense of being connected and vast. Yes, many of us crave that. It is also touching because she felt lost, and surrendered to her fate, and that is very moving. And what she is saying quite eloquently, and touchingly, is that under the layers, physically, we have access to two very different means of being. She is suggesting that we find a way, that we allow, that we focus on the fact that we can feel more connected, that we can try to focus on that other voice. That isn't god, that's your brain. It is the perception from a physical manifestation of a healthy human brain, not some insight into the reality of the universe. If she'd had a stroke in the other hemisphere this talk would be about how to get things done, proper planning, and logical order of things...

    In the end up her experience didn't change the reality of the world she lives in. It gave her a chance to see a new way of looking at life, one with more connection and more compassion and as she said so well, that is an idea worth sharing. wonderful talk.
    • 5 days ago: @Eric you should become a school teacher. Well summarised. I try every now and again to live as expansive as I can by viewing everything as being part of the same source. As having pervasive intelligent energy and identity. Life stops to have meaning. The litter stops being litter but intelligent individuation of primal energy seeking expression and being.It blends naturally with the spot its on and looks beautiful. And I no longer want to disrupt that space, that arrangement by picking it up. People just seem dull, no longer alive, lacking in context, without definitions, no judgement from me, they become juxtapositioned bland pieces of canvass, without a story, uninteresting. I loose any urge to do anything. I'm just transfixed in time and all I can do is observe and intuit with awe and wonder. My mind stops analysing and judging and I feel light and at peace. I can go on describing other aspects but I am sure you get the point. Life either looses all meaning or takes on a new meaningless meaning (I will always judge from my norm I guess). When I return to the world of separation, of meaning, of plans and tasks and relationships I heave a sigh of exasperation. I'm still not certain which world I dislike more LOL. Just kidding. I love both worlds. Both great movies just different genres. My ambition is in a manner of speaking, to grow a bigger Corpus Callosum - a bridge - to help me blend both worlds in one reality.
    • 5 days ago: I don't feel that she implies existence of a higher power but rather indicates the immense power of human consciousness to experience a vast terrain of awareness from alternate perspectives. Higher power is a given, everything is powered by some obviously unknowable source. What Higher Power means to the linear experiential self depends on the local conditioning of the individual identity. One could even say that culture itself if a higher power. I didn't hear her mention the word God at any point or make specific reference to religion. She does mention nirvana, which is a basically a Buddhist term for nothingness, or experience empty of all stimulation recognized as such when the experience of stimulation returns. In any case she beautifully relates her experience and knowledge without making claims of absolute truth.
  • Aug 15 2012: I really would love to finish this video. The audio cut off part way through. Very interesting from what I gathered. My dad suffers with an AVM and what little information I got from the video I was able to understand based on my experience with my old man. The AVM affected his left hemisphere and paralyzed his physical right side of the body. Her explanation of her stroke experience helped me understand what my dad went through. He was unable to put in to words his experience.
    • 4 days ago: Rewind the video about 30 seconds and replay it. My audio cut off 3 times during the course of watching this video, but if you backtrack enough times, it will return. I hope you gain additional insight and understanding through the rest of this video.
  • Aug 15 2012: Thank you for your revelation. I'll keep your book close by.
  • Aug 12 2012: Great Lady!
    An inspiration for everyone.
    I truly wish her well.
  • Aug 12 2012: Defines its own amazing experience for you. And you're surprised. And of course I have ever heard such a speech. Sure to visit and learn from the important point. Much more time together.

    از شنیدن تجربه ی این خانم حیرت زده می شوید. قطعا کسی تاکنون به این شکل از سسکته برای شما حرف نزده. جالب اینجاست که اینقدر زیبا و البته راحت درباره ی سکته ی خودش حرف می زنه که فراموش می کنید در چه وضع وخیمی گرفتار شده بوده.
  • Aug 11 2012: I believe that God is using her for His purpose. Praise the Lord!
    • Aug 12 2012: What is wrong with you?

      You believe in a god that creates madness in a human being?
      Perhaps god has a sick sense of humor.

      And don't tell me god has a purpose for this as it is utter nonsense!
  • Aug 11 2012: What an incredible woman!

    By the way, if you enjoyed Jill's talk I highly recommend the videos under the Consciousness section at http://LucidTree.com
  • Aug 11 2012: Thanks Jill! This sense of peace is definitely attainable. Today, I searched for answers for this feeling I felt about a year ago, and someone sent me this link. What Jill described through her experience what exactly what I felt; a sense of peace, compassion, a feeling that I was no different than anyone else and that everyone was perfect and beautiful. I felt so happy, without fear or anything weighing me down. It was a totally euphoric experience, and now I have a better understanding of what could have been the reason. I was able to go to work like this and function just fine (as a cashier). Maybe your left and right hemisphere can work together in balance, without your left brain totally taking over.

    Well, this peaceful experience only lasted for about two days, and for some reason I just set this experience to the side, returning to my "normal" self and how I felt myself living day to day. Now, I'm trying to find out how to get that feeling back with ease. I'm 21, and I can't believe that some people have gone through their whole lives never knowing that sense of peace that I felt.
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    Aug 5 2012: This incredible story should probably inspire us all to wear emergency alert pendants the whole time .. just in case!
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    Aug 3 2012: Excelente!!!! De tempos em tempos volto a assistir. Há muto aí para se pensar, inclusive a respeito da nossa relação com o universo e tudo que há nela. Brilhante!
  • Aug 1 2012: The transcendental element sounds a lot like what I have personally experienced with psilocybin. I am happy to see that others have had a similar experience. It is an absolutely remarkable human ability that simply lays dormant and undiscovered by most of the people of this world, and deserves much, MUCH more insight.
  • Jul 30 2012: Spiritual enlightment has come to us and just as the century goes, it's inevitable.
  • Jul 29 2012: Thank you Jill .
  • Jul 29 2012: All I can say is just...WOW!
  • Jul 29 2012: has anyone thought maybe the Dimethyltriptamine found in all our brains, including jills, was activated in her brain during the traumatic stroke.As a brain scientist i think she should study how the brain uses DMT to ease our mind during traumatic experiences.
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    Jul 27 2012: This is the first talk that has ever rendered me speechless.
  • Jul 27 2012: I would like to have heard about what her experience tells us about what might be going on in the brains of schizophrenics and bipolar patients. I have heard that religious, euphoric experiences or delusions are common with these disorders. I even wonder what her experience says about the "out of body" experience we hear about those brought back from the brink of death. I think her presentation leans on the rational explanation the left side of her brain gives when it remembers the experience -- the notiion of a nirvana or as some would say afterlife.
  • Jul 26 2012: Good news everyone! You too can attain Nirvana, without having a stroke! As Erich Fromm piously puts it, we've bitten from the fruit of knowledge and were expelled from the paradise of innocence (or ignorance?) for doing so. Even more piously he offers love as a way to reach back to it. Which is cool and cute but I've got better results with keyboards and pencils --Betty Edwards' "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain" is a good start to get your chatty side to shut up momentarily-- and specially, meditation.

    Nirvana, La La Land, deep transformation, transverberation, "duuuude I'm flippin'" or however you wanna call it, this is nothing new. Do something creative and yoga every day and soon you'll get a glimpse of your lost self!

    Now, don't expect miracles from it. It won't solve the world's problems, nor most of yours. *But* with some it will, creative, professional or personal, through the advantage of new perspectives, and providing far more inspiration and satisfaction than you'll ever get from watching TED talks --which is to say a lot!
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    Jul 26 2012: I was so inspired by this talk. Our brain is amazing, we know so much about it but still so little. It is an entire universe to explore in our body.

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Jill Bolte Taylor got a research opportunity few brain scientists would wish for: She had a massive stroke, and watched as her brain functions -- motion, speech, self-awareness -- shut down one by one. An astonishing story.

Brain researcher Jill Bolte Taylor studied her own stroke as it happened -- and has become a powerful voice for brain recovery. Full bio »

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