Look at the ridiculous state we're in.
Somehow jocks have been tricked into believing that after decades of mundane physical labor scientists are interested in... their brains. Uh no thanks Zac, I think the smart kids are playing a prank on you. The Bible doesn't say anything about donating your brain to science. How about you impregnate some 17 year olds like your father and his before him to create the next generation of physically perfect waffle waitresses soldiers for Christ. Attaboy, I wanna see you give it 110 out there.
Zac Easter: He left his brain behind to save others from his fate
Zac Easter was always the toughest tackler for his team, just like his NFL heroes.
He was the linebacker who used his head as a battering ram, dominating opponents and setting the aggressive tone in defence. To his mother, he was an "all-American kid"; a grade-A student at school, 'soldier of the year' at his national guard volunteer group, and a huge sports fan.
The symptoms first showed at age 11, when he began experiencing headaches and a sensitivity to light. Doctors attributed it to 'hormones' at the time. Over the following decade, those symptoms would become much worse.
"Memory loss, blurred vision, slurred speech. He would be talking and all of a sudden what was coming out of his mouth made no sense," says Zac's mother, Brenda.
"It's not what a normal 21-year-old does. I remember him coming down for dinner and he just said: 'mom, there's no hope for me. I want my brain donated to science.'
Zac Easter was always the toughest tackler for his team, just like his NFL heroes.
He was the linebacker who used his head as a battering ram, dominating opponents and setting the aggressive tone in defence. To his mother, he was an "all-American kid"; a grade-A student at school, 'soldier of the year' at his national guard volunteer group, and a huge sports fan.
The symptoms first showed at age 11, when he began experiencing headaches and a sensitivity to light. Doctors attributed it to 'hormones' at the time. Over the following decade, those symptoms would become much worse.
"Memory loss, blurred vision, slurred speech. He would be talking and all of a sudden what was coming out of his mouth made no sense," says Zac's mother, Brenda.
"It's not what a normal 21-year-old does. I remember him coming down for dinner and he just said: 'mom, there's no hope for me. I want my brain donated to science.'
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