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woke up gay
#1


as in the video; "after a stroke 30% die, 30% change their life/ disabled, 30% recover"
-For those members that did not come out early in their childhood do you think this is possible? for whatever reason wake up gay?
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#2
Wow, maybe I can get a stroke and be straight! Big Grin

I did hear of this though. I find it very strange. Though some people wake up from strokes and become super-geniuses.
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#3
Hey Pellaz, maybe the stroke affects those parts of the brain that are social inhibitors, or the parts that are into conservatism. once those barriers have fallen, maybe the person finds a comfort in reorienting their sexuality?
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#4
If only I woke up straight , life would be more easier. Cause being gay can be very difficult, even if the world is more accepting.
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#5
Umm, maybe I can get a stroke and wake up as Cher. HA HA HA!
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#6
lol, having a hard time believing all this

nattikk
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#7
An accident, stroke, tumor (change in position or growth), or surgical procedure can change the brain's structure. So, I do believe it's possible for this to happen to this guy. Depending on what the stoke damaged and the resulting reorganization/rewiring/growth of new connections response, his brain structure changed.

Here's a 2008 article about some research in Neurology/Neuroscience from Medical News Today: Gay Brains Are Wired Differently Say Scientists

Quote:Using scanning technology, researchers in Sweden found that the brains of gay men and women were wired differently to the brains of heterosexual people of the same sex, but were similar to the brains of heterosexual people that were of the opposite sex to them. Thus a gay man's brain was in some ways more like the brain of a heterosexual woman than a heterosexual man, and the brain of a gay or lesbian woman was more like that of a heterosexual man than a heterosexual woman.

The study was the work of Drs Ivanka Savic and Per Lindström from the Stockholm Brain Institute at the Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute and is published online in the June 16 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Scientists had already discovered that the brains of heterosexual and gay people of the same sex responded differently to stimuli, such as objects of sexual attraction and smells. The question that still remained was did these differences arise because of inherent brain differences or because of differences in the way gay and heterosexual people had "learned" to perceive these stimuli?

Savic and Lindström chose to investigate this further by examining the structure of the brain of gay and heterosexual men and women using PET and MRI scanners. They focused on volume differences in the two brain hemispheres (hemispheric asymmetry), and also on how the brains were "wired" (functional connectivity) because previous research had shown these to vary between men and women.

The researchers enrolled 90 adult volunteers: 25 heterosexual men (HeM), 25 heterosexual women (HeW), 20 homosexual men (HoM), and 20 homosexual women (HoW). All 90 underwent scans to measure overall and hemispherical brain volume using magnetic resonance technology, and 50 of them also had PET scans to measure blood flow in the brain, which can be analyzed to see the connections to and from the amygdalae in the two halves of the brain.

The amygdalae are clusters of neurons involved in a wide range of brain functions from emotional expression, processing and "storage" of memories to smell interpretation.

The results showed that:
The brains of heterosexual men (HeM) and homosexual women (HoW) were similar in that the volumes of their two brain hemispheres were not symmetrical (rightward cerebral asymmetry).

The brains of homosexual men (HoM) and heterosexual women (HeW) were similar in that the volumes of their two brain hemispheres were symmetrical.

There were also opposite sex similarities between the gay and heterosexual participants in the way their amygdalae connected.

For example, in homosexual men (HoM) and heterosexual women (HeW), there were more connections from the left amygdala.

But in homosexual women (HoW) and heterosexual men (HeM), there were more connections from the right amygdala.

Also, there were significant differences in the main connections from the amygdala to other parts of the brain.

In homosexual men (HoM) and heterosexual women (HeW), these were primarily between the contralateral amygdala and the anterior cingulate, while in heterosexual men (HeM) and homosexual women (HoW), the amygdala connections were mostly with the caudate, putamen, and the prefrontal cortex.

The authors concluded that the brains of homosexual subjects demonstrated "sex-atypical cerebral asymmetry and functional connections". These differences could not be explained simply by "learned effects", and they suggested a "linkage to neurobiological entities".

A cognitive biology expert told BBC News that he believed these brain differences were decided early in the development of the fetus. There was no longer any argument, "if you are gay, you are born gay," he said.

"PET and MRI show differences in cerebral asymmetry and functional connectivity between homo- and heterosexual subjects."
Ivanka Savic and Per Lindström.
PNAS, Published online June 16, 2008.
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0801566105

[Image: 080617151845.jpg] from Symmetry Of Homosexual Brain Resembles That Of Opposite Sex, Swedish Study Finds
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#8
I knew a lady some years ago who had been born and raised in Germany and moved to England in her mid-twenties. She was then in her mid-sixties and spoke perfect English without any kind of accent at all. After the stroke her memory of the English language had completely disappeared and she could only speak German. Very strange thing, the brain.
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#9
I don't mean to brag, but I have woken up gay just over 16000 times Wink
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#10
sounds odd to me if you ask me....
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