RE-READING ILLNESS
New
Paradigms In Chronic Diseases
by Julian Ungar-Sargon, M.D. PhD.
![]() Dr. Julian Ungar |
How do we "read" illness and our patients... 'reading' them as we would a
text or perhaps as ourselves? What models of interpretation can we use? Can
interpretive strategies used for elucidation of texts help us in deciphering
the biography and inscription of disease?
Disease itself is experienced and inasmuch it is a human experience, it is
described and experienced in linguistic terms that can be analyzed as to
rhetorical strategies, motives, tropes, and allegory, just as any text.
Paul de Man argues that writing reveals a rhetoric
of bereavement in which we enter an area of dispossession in favor of the
arbitrary power play of the signifier and from the point of view of the
subject. This is experienced as a dismemberment which results in a paradox.
Language is used to heal wounds that language never ceases to open up. In Demanian discourse the speaking subject is constantly in
mourning, for the referent, for beauty, for meaning, for home, for stable terms
of orientation since these losses were already there as soon as one uses
language. I would argue for a similar process in illness. The patient is in a
privileged position in that he alone experiences the inscription of pathology
in his or her body. The deciphering of the meaning of the illness requires a
sense of mourning for the loss of health and vitality and the function that
organ once provided.
What is the role of the healer? Surely first and foremost
to listen. Medical training teaches us to listen to certain telltale
signs that signal well-known diagnostic categories. There is a system of signifiers
that reveal a hermetic code of signs. But these merely attempt to place the
patient into a pathological category such as heart disease, brain disease, etc.
The diagnosis by definition obliterates any notion of uniqueness and to the
extent that symptoms are unique, these are ignored in favor of the master
narrative of present history, past history, social history, all designed in the
economy and hierarchy of medical signs and pathology. Yet for true healing to
occur one must listen not only to the history of the disease, but also to the
human experience of that disease. For it is in the unique way that this
particular person experiences his or her disease and incorporates it into his
or her biography, that the possibility for unraveling the true desire of the
disease as metaphor takes place. The currency of the soul is the narrative. It
is there that its true desire is stated. It is here at the metaphoric level
where the fears and hopes reside and the patient lives out his or her
imaginative life, that the healing must occur. The
healer must then learn how to listen once more, this time not only to the facts
of the history of the illness but to the human dimension of the anguish. The
patient presents with a story, the current medical history, the past medical
history, social history, etc., and the way this is presented suggests an
editorial hand as important as the facts of history. Understanding the historiographical coloring of the narrative then provides
the basis for the elucidation of the inner voice of the text, its desire, its
tyranny, its own unconscious narrative where the real inscription of the
disease in this body occurs. Healing occurs through the unraveling of this
process of reading whereby the healer acts as a distorted mirror and the patient
can then see or better hear lost voices inscribed in the wound. By entering the
wound in imaginative terms, the patient is able to liberate voices inscribed in
organs and return repressed trace memories inscribed in the body, through a
working through of mourning.
With the arrival of modern science and the enlightenment, a split occurred
in the mind/body monism, which influenced the medical model our training is
based upon, so that our treatment strategies have since been based on curing
the physical body as if it were an autonomous engine. No attention is paid to
anything other than the local organ, infectious agent or cancerous growth in
the military model used to "fight" disease with all the technology at
our fingertips.
The split between mind and body began with the Greeks, and through the
Hellenists, influenced the
However, I wish to push this a little further and claim that not only those
obviously psychically impregnated symptoms point to this loss, but also
physically documented somatic disorders and chronic disease is an inscription of
a diseased soul and the key to recovery and healing lies at the level of the
soul and its cure, and the human experience of the disease, as much as at the
level of the body.
I wish to recover those lost anthropomorphic tendencies that expressed the
need to worship the divine body as well as soul. Once we can recover these lost
anthropomorphic projections onto the divine we can also reclaim them back as
divine projections onto the flesh and heal the split that occurred between the
soul and the flesh. The way to healing the split is the notion of reconnection.
This can only take place at the metaphorical and imaginative level. Firstly, we
must realize that the fragmentary nature of the modern soul and renounce the
arrogance of attempting any overall meaning. This is a remnant of nineteenth
century positivistic optimism reaching back to the Enlightenment notion of
faith in transcendent progress, the Western tradition's fantasies of plenitude,
purity, centrality, totality, unity and mastery (and ultimately to the
monotheistic notion of single meanings).
Relearning to create a space for the experience of reconnection with the
body first demands an acceptance of alternative rhetorical modes of discourse
and language that includes post modern terms such as shattering, rupture,
mutilation, fragmentation, fissure, wounds, rifts, gaps, and abysses. Only then
will the critique of the central project of modern medicine, the nostalgia and
narcissism for the Enlightenment faith in progress, and the secularized Judeo-Christian
notion of transcendence, open up a space for the work of mourning and healing.
Within the medical model attempts have been made to see the spiritual within
the malady. These have been restricted, however, to psycho-somatic disorders
where the psyche is seen to play a large if not etiological role. Treatment
revolves around the strengthening of the ego to "handle" crisis and
illness, loss and disorder. I am more concerned with actual
"scientifically proven" physical disease in order to test my hypothesis
whether healing will affect the physical dimension in actual documented
physical disease. I am not interested in the western notion of cure since we
rarely see this in conventional medicine, but more the notion of healing which
entails the recovery of the mourning aspect in the illness and the realization
of the 'divine' message behind the symptom. The abandoning of labels and
disease names is central to the project where the symptom is so central and the
meaning behind the presenting symptom is the entry point for this inner work.
Theoretically, we do start out as a unified whole between spirit and flesh
which then becomes split as we are thrust into life and the "specular" image of what we see and what we are differ
(Lacan, Winnicot). As we
are "divorced" from the Garden of Eden, the spirit is
"divorced" from the flesh as we embark on our own personal history.
Throughout life the experiences traumas and threats (as well as the culture
that inscribes us all with all its preconceived notions of life and logocentrism, etc.) all serve to widen the split. However
the soul attempts to bridge the gap through messages and hints which we then
ignore. Finally, screaming, it inscribes its message in the body as the final
expression of its pain and disease. Illness then represents the final pathway
of inscription of a soul in the body of distress.
Inscription is thus the representation of the message in the flesh. Healing
must therefore retrace these steps back to the fault lines in the soul. This
archeological work begins with the wound itself. The wound is the entrance to
the soul (Jung and Hillman). The entrance to the soul is via the wound, which
points the way to retrace the steps. Divine wounds inscribed in the flesh needs
recovery by retracing of the pathway into the soul.
The path to healing begins with imaging work in which painful wounds are
located in the body. The localization of these 'archetypal complexes' is
necessary to allow the voices to emerge from there and not the mind. The mind
only distorts the message since the ego interferes with this imaging work
imposing its own worldview and needs. Through the painful process of visiting
these sites in the body we gain access to the realization that there exists locations inscribed in the body of these archetypal
complexes. Once we visit them we honor them and allow their voices to surface.
Honoring them is a slow process of visitation where they must feel comfortable
and safe to speak without the mind, ego or other punitive voices to criticize.
I therefore like a ritual space and time to do this inner work. The
relationship between the healer/shaman and the patient is a sacred one, which
must be surrounded by ritual to protect the space and time for this work.
The voices later begin to talk to each other as the various subpersonalities gain lives of their own. I am not a strict
adherent to archetypal psychology and see this work as less 'psychosomatic' and
more getting into the body itself and allowing the voices to surface, rather
than the psychic explanations and substitutions of psychological myth for
medical myth. These archetypes have included in Jungian literature the killer,
the trickster, the mother and father, the king and the jester, the slut/whore,
and the goddess. Each must be related to the life of the individual and his or
her mythology. Yet I rather see each person create their own personalized
voices and incarnate them in their own way. Once they have been located and
given due honor, their voices emerge and their messages heard. The cacophony is
intense as for the first time voices suppressed for years emerge. Painful memories long forgotten yet alive in the flesh surface as
the body begins to teach us the secrets of its spirit and yields the soul's
true desire.
Each spirit is different and inscribed in the flesh, each mythology
determined by the life this soul has experienced in the flesh. The flesh
becomes a palimpsest whereby the previous messages can only be deciphered by
the slow archeological work of visitation and honoring. The multiple
personalities submerged, once allowed to speak allow for a greater peace of
mind as each is honored and not suppressed one over the other. This is less
psychological approach where resolution occurs rather an honoring of the
various inscriptions; the addictions and the perversions, the devil and the
angel, the good and the bad and for me the very organicity
of the physical disease. Rather than a cure and a resolution, I see a healing
whereby space is made for the suffering voices and appropriate mourning can
take place.
The human experience of disease is as painful as the disease itself. The
symptom has to somehow be seen as a "gift" whereby we are allowed a
special insight, a private showing of what is to come. A premonition of death,
the Sheol, the darkness and terror... The pain and
terror of the illness and the tyranny of its absoluteness, its physicality, the
lack of any escape route terrorizes us into paralysis. This paralysis is the
gift for its message is to remain still and silent to allow the voices
inscribed in the flesh, these soul voices to teach us what is to come, and
experience it without fear. The disease then comes to teach us about death
without fear, if we can only listen to the voices within.
The unique feature of the sacred text and its universal appeal is that all
that read it read their own biography in it. What makes it different from great
literature is the claim it makes in relation with the divine and the invisible.
Textual healing is the ability of the sacred text to do its work at levels
below the intellectual. They work within the body IF we allow them to be
absorbed and penetrate. The soul within the text relates to the spirit within
us, it speaks to those places within us that have been hitherto inaccessible.
These sacred texts do their inner work by freeing resistant locations within
the body, allowing hitherto imprisoned voices and mythic images to emerge. Once emerged we allow them to identify with the divine feelings and
images created in the text and the narrative, which do their work by
association. The text is thus the space whereby these processes takes
place, a meta linguistic site where the ontology of
the person and the interaction with his own biography as mirrored in narrative
occurs.
Sacred texts have the ability to reach deepest mythical layers on the human
condition where universal strivings and terrors reside. It is here that the
business of the soul is conducted. The resonance takes place in reading the
object, the sacred text, which finds its mirror within and lights up those lost
locations of the soul, inherited from prior trauma and yearnings. The broken
spirit sees itself in the sacred words of healing and finds solace in the
mirroring of its deepest yearnings and fears. The text provides the space for the
mourning process to occur and allows for projection and identification with the
deepest fears and hopes.
The struggle to find meaning is the inner work that takes place both at the
level of textual interpretation as well as at the level of inner space. The
soul finds its reflection in the sacred text and struggles to find expression
in the outer manifestation of its inscription. In pathology we need to free
ourselves from the addition to the body and its inscriptions to be able to then
apprehend the vision from within which is dampened by the symptom. Only by
struggling at this textual level will the power of the sacred text be able to
free one from the inscription of the symptom, only by the meditation on the
meaning of the symptom and its location in the body and in the text will the
expression be sufficient to liberate.
I am asking for a new way of listening to the patient, one that refuses to
liberalize symptoms the way we have been trained (chest pain means either
cardiac disease or neurosis) not to philosophize the symptom away
(psychosomatic) the way the medievalists such as Maimonides
rationalized poetics opting always for the middle ground and taking the story
as such, a patients crafting of a narrative, to be taken always on its own
terms, as narrative and subject to the literary scrutiny one would always give
a text and even reading one's own biography in it, for that is surely the true
purpose of the sacred text... one that all can read something of themselves in.
Yori Yanover
Yori Yanover was born in Israel and began his career at age 17, writing for Israeli counter-culture magazine No'ar-71 and for the IDF's Ba'Machaneh Nachal.
He studied Film & TV at NYU. In the 1980's, he produced shows on WBAI, NYC and was later recruited by Israeli pirate radio Arutz-7.
He wrote columns for the largest American Hebrew weekly Israel Shelanu and was recruited by Yedioth Aharonoth, Israel's largest daily, for their US supplement.
In 1994 he became editor of JCN, the first Jewish Webzine.
His book Dancing and Crying, written with Nadav Ish-Shalom, was published in 1994 in New York.
In 1996, as editor of the Lubavitch News Service, he created an interactive website for some 3000 centers worldwide.
In 1999 he founded USAJewish, the most extensive online Jewish daily news report.
In 2001 he was selected by the Central Conference of American Rabbis to an editorial team developing a completely new prayer book for use in Reform Jewish synagogues nationwide.
In 2004 he founded the Grand Street News, a print and online monthly magazine with a readership of 50,000.
Yanover lives in New York with his wife and daughter.