How Do You Mend a Broken Brain?

How Do You Mend a Broken Brain?

In the spring of 1970, I was seventeen years old and a senior in high school.  The Bee Gees released a new song titled “How Do You Mend a Broken Heart?”  That song resonated deeply with me, and I still love the song fifty-six years later.

At age seventeen, I didn’t realize I had been suffering from PTSD for eight years. I did know that my emotions were extremely fragile.  I thought I had a broken heart, but what I really had was a broken brain.

On the baseball diamond, I had a coach who spoke to me abusively.  He humiliated me by putting me alone on the diamond before a game and hitting grounders to me at third base so hard that I would inevitably miss one.  When I did, he screamed at me as the opposing team and spectators looked on.  It angered me so much that after he would hit me a ball, instead of throwing it back to home plate to our catcher who was standing next to him, I threw the ball at the coach as hard as I could, forcing him to jump out of the way.  I completely lost control of myself.  In anger, I quit the team.

When the fall of 1970 came around, I found myself at one of the most prestigious and challenging engineering schools in the nation, Rose Polytechnic Institute (now named Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology).  Rose had the smartest engineering students from around the globe.  I went from being a student near the top of my class in high school to a college student near the bottom of my class.  I was quickly overwhelmed.  When I couldn’t solve a calculus or physics problem, I flew into a rage and pounded my desk with my hand – so hard that the entire bottom of my hand would turn purple with bruising.  I completely lost control of my emotions.

This behavior chased me into my marriage and even with the birth of two beautiful daughters, I was unable to manage my emotions appropriately.  After twenty-eight years of marriage, I went through a divorce and my life, as well as my family’s lives, were in shambles.  A mental health counselor suggested that I might try picking up a camera again. I hadn’t seriously used a camera for forty years, because a camera reminded me of my mother, who was shot to death when I was nine years old – she had taught me how to make photographs as a child.

So, how do you mend a broken brain?  Maybe by picking up a camera?  It sounds like such a ridiculous idea, doesn’t it?  I decided to give it a try, and over the course of the next twenty years, amazing things happened to me.  I began to recover memories of my mother that had been erased since the time of the murder.  My entire being was slowly transformed. I was able to control my emotions.  I became steady, predictable, and it would be safe to say, normal.  It dawned on me that making photographs had a direct connection to how I felt, behaved, and to what I remembered. 

– James Rice, Co-Founder, Fotophase

Black and white photograph of a man walking in front of a building.
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