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Parkinson’s Atlas

by Eric Aquino | March 31, 2026

About Eric Aquino

Eric Aquino is a first-generation American born to parents who emigrated from the Dominican Republic. He grew up in Jersey City in a large, close-knit family. From a young age, Eric was drawn to helping others, often being called upon to assist and translate for family members.

After initially wanting to become a lawyer, Eric earned a bachelor's degree in Information Technology, but he remained committed to helping people. In 2002 he began volunteering as an EMT. This experience ignited Eric's passion, and he knew he wanted to pursue a career in emergency services.

In 2018, at age 40, Eric was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. Determined to help others facing the same challenges, he founded the Stay Strong Foundation that fall. Over the next six years, Eric started three support groups, hosted three symposiums, presented a poster at the World Parkinson's Congress in Barcelona, and participated on panels at various symposiums--all with the mission of helping people with Parkinson's move forward with their lives.

Nobody folds a map anymore.
Nobody traces a finger down the crease
and counts the little squares
D4. B9. Page twelve, cross the state line,
grab the second atlas from the glove box.
Nobody does that anymore.
We are GPS people now.
We go to work. We go to school.
Soccer Tuesdays. PTA on Monday.
Friday night lights, same road, same route,
the voice in the dashboard telling us
turn left, turn left, you have arrived.
We don’t need to know where we are.
We only need to know we got there.
But Parkinsons is an atlas disease.
You must read it by grid.
Find yourself first
not the pin drop, not the blue dot,
the you that is ink on paper,
somewhere in a square
between tremor and stillness,
between the morning pill and the hour it fails.
Then find the destination.
Not cure. But your next task
Just make it to my next dose
Calculate the grid
how many boxes between D4 and where I need to be,
how many state lines I’ll have to cross
before anyone meets me halfway.
And I try to explain this.
I try to give you directions
the way I know how
grid by grid, crease by crease,
the way my mother taught me
in the passenger seat of a car
that didn’t have a screen.
But you are holding your phone.
You are waiting for the satellite.
You keep asking me
why can’t you just tell me the address
and I keep saying
there is no address.
There is only the grid.
There is only learning to read
where you are
before you can go anywhere at all.
We stand at the same intersection,
you and I,
speaking different languages
with the same map of the same country
in our different hands
and neither of us is wrong.
And neither of us can help the other.
And that is the loneliest thing
about this disease.
Not the tremor.
Not the forgetting.
It’s the translation

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