The Fiji Times

A decade of Greg’s life lost

When he woke up in 2017, he thought it was 2005

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GREG Harvey woke up one morning in August 2017 thinking it was 2005. “I was in a panic because I thought I was going to be late to uni,” Mr Harvey said.

Mr Harvey could not remember the past 12 years of his life.

“Then I noticed the house all looked different. We’d had the carpets removed and tiles put on the floor, the furniture was different.”

“Then I said, ‘Well, where are the kids?’”

In 2005, Mr Harvey and his wife Gale had kids that were aged six and eight.

When he lost his memory, he also lost the years of his kids growing up and moving out.

A decade lost

“When she told me what year it was I nearly fainted,” Mr Harvey said.

The panic started to set in for Gale when she showed him photos of their kids, now much older than Greg remembered.

“I said, ‘That’s what they look like now’. He said, ‘No they don’t, they’re in primary school’.” Ms Harvey said.

“I’m thinking, ‘what the hell is going on here?’”

To try to jog his memory they went to the preschool he was teaching at, but the experience of not knowing anybody – who all seemed to know him – was overwhelmi­ng.

“While I’m sitting in the foyer talking to the director, the kids in the room that I was teaching were at the window … calling out my name and I just lost it,” Mr Harvey said.

“It brought me to tears because I didn’t know who they were.”

Why did Greg lose his memory?

Mr Harvey went to see doctors in the New South Wales’ Hunter Valley where he lives. They suggested he had experience­d an episode of transient global amnesia.

Transient global amnesia typically takes people by surprise and lasts for 24 hours.

“The person becomes suddenly confused. They don’t know where they are, what they’re doing. They might ask the same question over and over because they can’t remember the answers,” said Professor Henry Brodaty, from the University of New South Wales’ Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing.

“They seem to be thinking normally, but it’s like they’re in a fog.”

While it may sound like a product of lazy writing from a daytime soap, the condition is real – although exceptiona­lly rare.

Prof Brodaty said it affected about five out of every 100,000 people a year, usually middleaged people.

The condition usually resolves itself within 24 hours.

However, this was not the case for 56-year-old Mr Harvey, who has never recovered his memories.

Ms Harvey said when the amnesia occurred, her husband was seeing a psychologi­st for depression and was stressed by his job, to the point where he was considerin­g changing careers. Ms Harvey believed it had all became too much for him.

“The brain just went, ‘Fine, we’re stepping off, we’re done. You can’t take this anymore’,” Ms Harvey said.

A more serious case

When amnesia happens due to a psychologi­cal cause, it is known as psychogeni­c amnesia or dissociati­ve amnesia. Unlike transient global amnesia, the memory loss is typically permanent.

“It’s characteri­sed by a sudden loss of autobiogra­phical memories, and it’s often carried in the context of a stressful life event,” Prof Brodaty said.

“It’s a psychologi­cal mechanism preventing the person rememberin­g things, presumably because they’re too painful.”

Prof Brodaty said while it could affect people at any age, he had never personally seen a case in 50 years of practising psychiatry.

While those affected can lose their memories permanentl­y, occasional­ly the memories can come back.

“Sometimes it comes back when the stress has returned,” Prof Brodaty said.

“Or sometimes when people engage in therapy … they may be able to recover those memories.

“It’s not like they lost memories. It’s like the mind has walled them off from the aware part of the brain.” . . .

 ?? Picture: ABC Upper Hunter/ Bindi Bryce ?? Greg and Gale are more open with their mental health issues. ‘Nobody was expecting it’
Picture: ABC Upper Hunter/ Bindi Bryce Greg and Gale are more open with their mental health issues. ‘Nobody was expecting it’
 ?? ?? is a digital reporter at ABC Radio Sydney. The views expressed in this article are the author’s and not necessaril­y the views of The Fiji Times.
is a digital reporter at ABC Radio Sydney. The views expressed in this article are the author’s and not necessaril­y the views of The Fiji Times.

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