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He has been called the greatest surgeon of the 20th century. The
son of Lebanese immigrants, Michael DeBakey rose from humble
beginnings in a backwater Louisiana town to dominate the landscape
of modern medicine. His contributions to our understanding and
treatment of cardiovascular disease, in particular, were
innumerable and epoch-making. DeBakey led a life of high drama,
from the streets of Jazz Age New Orleans and the operating theaters
of pre-war Europe, to the battlefields of World War II and the
floodwaters of Hurricane Katrina. An advisor to Presidents, a
health care statesman, and a physician to royalty and commoner
alike, he helped build Houston's Texas Medical Center into a jewel
of the medical world. Yet DeBakey's own family paid a tremendous
cost for his commitment to his fellow man. Buoyed by unique access
to primary resources, A Time for All Things: The Life of Michael E.
DeBakey is the first to tell the remarkable story of a driven
genius who led a scientific and therapeutic revolution in all its
dramatic depth.
At twenty-years-old, Craig Miller attempted suicide. He sat on the
edge of a bed and swallowed two hundred and fifty pills, never
imagining that a note he wrote to himself fourteen years earlier
would save his life. That note simply read, "Don't ever forget how
this feels." From the time he was six-years-old, Craig lived his
life by those words. He believed that if he needed to remember the
feelings behind his life's most significant events, then there must
be a reason why they happened. And for three extraordinary days
following his suicide attempt, as he lay in the Intensive Care Unit
floating in and out of consciousness, he found those reasons. He
relived days from his childhood when his only friend became his
assailant. He relived years of building a troubled relationship
with God. He remembered when the pain of his life's tragedies
finally caught up to him and he became the victim of severe
obsessive compulsive disorder, relentless anxiety, and devastating
irrational fear. After each memory, he awoke to the blurred reality
of his suicide attempt. The struggle to fight his childhood
assailant became a battle with doctors who worked to restrain him.
The pain from a fist to his nose became the sting of a tube as it
was pushed down his throat. And the memory of freezing alone on a
cold winter night became the reality of a dark, lonely hospital
room. But after each memory ended, Craig was left with the feeling
that remained from reliving it. He felt the imprint it left within
him- the deep desire to love, the desperate need to change, and the
fiery will to fight. Craig Miller lay in a hospital bed for three
days while his body fought for life, but his soul stood undecided
on the threshold of existence. He relived the most pivotal moments
of his life and saw himself from an entirely new perspective. He
learned that God does not punish, and that love, no matter how bad
it hurts, is worth it. He learned that compassion is to see the
hurt in the eyes of another, no matter how bad we hurt ourselves.
He learned that living in the darkness of mental illness can be one
of the most powerful paths to self-discovery. And he learned that
life, no matter how hard it gets, is worth living.
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