Creating a Field Guide to the Human Brain with Rick Hanson, for Many Voices

I’ve recently returned from recording a new program with Rick Hanson in Corte Madera, California. I first worked with Rick and his co-author Rick Mendius in 2009, when we recorded Meditations to Change Your Brain and Meditations for Happiness at the late, lamented Ursa Minor Studios in San Rafael, with the always amazing Ben Leinbach as our engineer. One of my fondest memories is watching Ben teach Rick how to get the best sound out of his Tibetan bell. It was at these sessions that Rick told me about a book he was writing. He was thinking of calling it Buddha’s Brain.

My favorite story about working with Rick happened during pre-production for his online teaching program The Enlightened Brain. We were discussing the part where Rick demonstrates the physiology of the brain, and Rick wondered if we could find a better way to illustrate it than a wooden model. We looked online and it was a matter of plastic models or wooden models, none of them much better than the rest. The video guys suggested CGI animation. Then Rick got an idea. “How about a real brain?”

And I said “What?”

And he said, “You know, a real human brain, like they use in med school.”

“Umm, I don’t think . . .”

“Have you ever held a human brain?”

“Ummm . . . no.”

“It’s such a strange feeling. In one way it’s like holding a handful of cottage cheese, and in another it’s like holding the most mysterious thing in the entire universe. I could put on gloves and reach into a white basin and pick up a brain and hold it up to the camera. What do you think?”

“Ummm . . . okay. All right. I’ll check it out. We have a teaching hospital in Denver. I’ll give them a call.”

I had no doubt I would never have to make that call. First I had to get a budget approved. So I sent Tami an email, explaining the situation: We have a choice between having Rick narrate the structure of a human brain using a wooden model, which would cost us virtually nothing, and be pretty effective, I think. I’ve heard him do it on audio without even a wooden model. It’d be fine. Or we could create some animation, which I’m guessing would cost about two days’ work by our computer graphics artist. Another option that Rick wants to consider is using a real human brain. That would mean an expensive location shoot at a Denver teaching hospital for about ninety seconds of film, which would probably be more effective and less distracting if we shot it in the studio with Rick and a wooden brain.

My phone rang almost immediately. “Can you get a real human brain for the video?”

“What?”

“Do you know where you could get a real human brain? I think that would make for powerful video.”

“Well, the University of Colorado teaching hospital in Denver would have one, I imagine. I can make a call. I mean, if you really want me to.”

“Yeah, that’d be great. See if you can get a human brain.”

I hung up the phone and took a deep breath. Now there was no way out. I had to make the call.

Sarah was on duty at the teaching hospital’s library when I called. I explained that I was a producer for a publishing company called Sounds True in Louisville, Colorado. We’re filming an online course with a REAL NEUROSCIENTIST, who’s teaching a course on what modern science has to teach us about the possibilities of positive neuroplasticity and he would like to show them a real human brain on screen for no more than maybe 30 seconds.

We don’t have any money but we can give the school full onscreen credit. What we’d need was no more than one day for the actual shoot: a couple of hours for setting up, and then a couple of hours for filming, and then another couple of hours for packing out. And the art director and a camera guy and I would have to come in for a site review to check things out as soon as possible; lights, outlets, windows, reflections, that sort of thing. Not more than an hour or two, probably. Then on the day of the shoot we’d have a crew of maybe eight, tops. I promise we’ll be very respectful and professional throughout.

“Mr. Roark,” Sarah replied “We . . . do . . . not . . . loan out . . . human brains. Under any circumstances.”

“Um . . . okay, I get it, sure. Do you know anyone who might?”

“Mr. Roark, you will find that nobody loans out human brains. Donors trust us to treat their body parts with respect. Would you like to see your relative’s brains displayed in a video? You should use a model, like everyone else. You can take them apart, each part is color-coded, they’re designed to illustrate the physiology of the brain much better than an actual brain. Have you ever held a human brain? Yuck! It’s like holding a handful of cottage cheese!”

“Okay, okay, Sarah, I get it, sure. Thank you for your time.”

And it was over! I could tell Tami and Rick with a clear conscience that I’d called the medical library and they didn’t lend out human brains under any circumstances, and they told me that unfortunately nobody else would either.

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