| A Physiological Explanation for Bill Clinton’s Angry Outbursts? |
Once again, I rarely comment on politics, but after reading the latest New Yorker article on Bill Clinton’s extended, and often bizarre outbursts of non-reasoning or flawed-reasoning anger, I can think of one possible explanation, and that’s the open-heart surgery that the former president endured a few years back. During the process the heart is stopped and the level of oxygen traveling to the brain is often greatly reduced, which can cause subtle shifts in thinking ability and personality from the resulting damage to the cells. From what I understand the results in this regard are something of a crap shoot, with some patients who have gone through the procedure exhibiting little to no damage, and others clearly showing a change after recovery. Of course, it’s obvious that Bill Clinton has aged since he left the White House, and perhaps some of this inability to manage anger is the simple result of a decreased ability to manage stress (not uncommon among A-Type males as they get older); on the other hand, after watching some of the confrontations on television and on the net, and reading of others, I can’t help but wonder if perhaps the anger first arises from a lesion or series of lesions buried deep within the neurological components of Bill Clinton’s brain, and the reasons for it are consequently arrived at and applied in an increasingly bizarre and haphazard manner by the former President.
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