My dog, Bagel, over 60 years ago when I
was a high school student, would occasionally lay on his belly on out
linoleum-floored kitchen, reach his right front leg out, the right corner of
his mouth would pull back with foam, his eyes remained open for seconds and
then his right front leg would beat the floor as I remember it. After a short
moment, this posture ceased, and he appeared listless for some moments and then
returned to his usual state. I recognized this as some sort of seizure as a
teenager, but my mother and I did not seek veterinary attention. Was this an
influence in my becoming a neurologist? I don’t know. On his third violent
confrontation with a car, I got a call from a stranger blocks away that my dog
was hit by a car. My contact information was tagged on his collar. After nine
years he was dead. My aunt loaned me her car. I took him to the Pound in
Buffalo. I placed him in their freezer.
- S. Carrera-Justiz. Clinical Professor of Neurology, Univ. of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine. Brain and Life: Feb/March 2023 p15
Lance Fogan, M.D. is Clinical Professor of Neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. His hard-hitting emotional family medical drama, “DINGS, is told from a mother’s point of view. “DINGS” is his first novel. Aside from acclamation on internet bookstore sites, U.S. Report of Books, and the Hollywood Book Review, DINGS has been advertised in recent New York Times Book Reviews, the Los Angeles Times Calendar section and Publishers Weekly. DINGS teaches epilepsy and is now available in eBook, audiobook, soft and hard cover editions.
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