A Heart And Soul Transplant?
- added April 10, 2008
- 7 responses
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- AndreaKnoll
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Today there are two different stories in the press concerning heart transplant recipients who took on some of the personality traits of their organ donors. Apparently the phenomenon is not uncommon, with about 70 such cases documented by scientists.
In the most recently reported case, a Georgia man named Sonny Graham received the heart of a 33 year old man named Terry Cottle who had committed suicide by putting a gun to his head. Wanting to thank the family of the donor, Sonny got in touch with Terry 's widow Cheryl. When they met, despite a very large age gap (Sonny was thirty years older than Cheryl), the two felt an instant attraction, and subsequently married in 2004. "I felt like I had known her for years," said Sonny. "I couldn't keep my eyes off her. I just stared."
Sadly, last week, in a bizarre turn of events, Sonny was found dead with a single bullet to the throat. With no foul play suspected, it appears that Sonny had used the same suicide method as the first owner of his heart to tragically end his life.
The second similar case, which was reported by The Daily Mail, has a less gruesome ending. Claire Sylvia, a former professional dancer from Massachusetts, had a heart and lung transplant in 1988 at the age of 47. While recovering from surgery she discovered she had developed entirely new cravings for very un-dancer-like consumables such as Snickers bars, green peppers, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and beer. "For some bizarre reason, I was convinced that nothing else in the world could quench my thirst," recalls Claire.
She noticed other physical and emotional changes too. She was much healthier, easily fighting off the colds to which she would have previously succumbed. She found she was becoming more independent, assertive and aggressive, and even began to walk with a more confident, and masculine, swagger. After dreaming of a man called "Tim L." one night, she searched through obituaries in old newspapers on file at a local library, and eventually saw one for a man named Tim Leighton, who matched the vague donor description she'd been given of an 18-year old male who died in a motorcycle accident. Like Sonny, Claire wanted to contact her donor's family to thank them. After tracking them down, a meeting was arranged, during which the family confirmed that Tim had shared Claire's new-found robust constitution and cravings.
Such stories certainly leave us thinking about the nature of our soul and where it resides. Those that would like to read more on the subject might like to read Claire's book A Change of Heart, which was first published in 1997 and is available via Amazon.com.
In the most recently reported case, a Georgia man named Sonny Graham received the heart of a 33 year old man named Terry Cottle who had committed suicide by putting a gun to his head. Wanting to thank the family of the donor, Sonny got in touch with Terry 's widow Cheryl. When they met, despite a very large age gap (Sonny was thirty years older than Cheryl), the two felt an instant attraction, and subsequently married in 2004. "I felt like I had known her for years," said Sonny. "I couldn't keep my eyes off her. I just stared."
Sadly, last week, in a bizarre turn of events, Sonny was found dead with a single bullet to the throat. With no foul play suspected, it appears that Sonny had used the same suicide method as the first owner of his heart to tragically end his life.
The second similar case, which was reported by The Daily Mail, has a less gruesome ending. Claire Sylvia, a former professional dancer from Massachusetts, had a heart and lung transplant in 1988 at the age of 47. While recovering from surgery she discovered she had developed entirely new cravings for very un-dancer-like consumables such as Snickers bars, green peppers, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and beer. "For some bizarre reason, I was convinced that nothing else in the world could quench my thirst," recalls Claire.
She noticed other physical and emotional changes too. She was much healthier, easily fighting off the colds to which she would have previously succumbed. She found she was becoming more independent, assertive and aggressive, and even began to walk with a more confident, and masculine, swagger. After dreaming of a man called "Tim L." one night, she searched through obituaries in old newspapers on file at a local library, and eventually saw one for a man named Tim Leighton, who matched the vague donor description she'd been given of an 18-year old male who died in a motorcycle accident. Like Sonny, Claire wanted to contact her donor's family to thank them. After tracking them down, a meeting was arranged, during which the family confirmed that Tim had shared Claire's new-found robust constitution and cravings.
Such stories certainly leave us thinking about the nature of our soul and where it resides. Those that would like to read more on the subject might like to read Claire's book A Change of Heart, which was first published in 1997 and is available via Amazon.com.
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- AndreaKnoll
- 4 months ago
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I've heard other similar stories about organ transplant recipients taking on some of the traits of their donors. It makes you wonder how our personality is developed and stored.
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I'm at a loss when it comes to these terms. I have never, and maybe never will, undertand what a soul is. Nonetheless, these are odd stories. In the latter case, perhaps a condition related to the cause of her heart failure was in some way linked to both her metabolism/ dietary urges, and immunological responses? It's a mystery. In the former, I do not know why the man was so attracted to ex-Sonny's wife, but maybe situations in the relationship were similar b/c she saw him as another Sonny, and thus the product of their marriage was the same? I truly don't know.
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Also, a lot of people get the hearts and say they feel its previous owner and describe them and are waaaay off. I think its a lot more imagination than mysticness. There's a good section in the book Stiff by mary roach about that.
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- ILiveonaClock
- 4 months ago
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The soul is the planets prescene within the human..this effectively returns to the planet when humans die..also you will hear a strange sentence passed in a courtroom when the judge pronounces the death sentence..May God have mercy on your Soul...not the Spirit..Also it is possible to see the connection of people taking on familiar traits of their donors because whatever the part donated it has a Separate Life to all the other organs..ie.the heart lives at a different frequency to say the Liver..or the stomach..and so these organs having been already used in a human for X amount of years will always carry the trace of the previous owner..and so you can see that if the heart has a frequency a bit like an old record when you put it onto a turntable it will always have its previous sound on it..this can then be transferred to the recipient according to how sensitive they are.It should also be noted that Astrological types bear the same relative traumas sometimes..ie a leo heart in a virgo may give the person more confidence but as for the rest of the system could create havoc..the Human Complex is an extra-ordinary machine..look after it..tj
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mcwally - Wow. I'm not sure how you know all this perplexing information. The terms you use are so painfully abstract, that, in essence, you have said nothing. "The soul is the planet's presence within the human." How? Literally, this means that the soul is the planet (earth?), but within a person. Presence implies that the planet is inside each person. This makes no sense, at least at face value.
Why is said sentence strange?
You describe how each organ has a "seperate life." I do not know what this means. Your explanation says that they all live at a different frequency. What? You mean like the heartbeat? Most organs don't "live" at any "frequency." And what do you mean when you say that the recipiant must be "sensative" in order to acquire the traits of the donor. Do you mean physically? Emotionally? What?
I lost it when you went into astrology. Please explain to me how arbitrary interpretations of star formations effect humanity. Besides the ludicrous nature of astrology, and assuming you just mean different types of personalities, it seems you missused the term trauma. How is confidence traumatic? The human complex (?) is, in fact, very ordinary. Astounding as we may be, we are hardly more complex than pigs.
You have successfully composed one of the most supersticious and unfounded explanations of anything I have ever heard. Kudos. -
mcwally - Please use concrete terms if you hope to offer any actual definition. My head hurts from that jumbled mess.Honestly, did you just pull that whole thing out of your ass? It sounds like a joke.
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