Maintaining Hope
I know I could not get up in the mornings
if I did not hope that some day this disease will leave me. I cannot face the
horrifying prospect that I will be ill for the rest of my life: it is too unjust
and frightening.
Yet, with my positive belief that I
will‹I must‹recover, I am still sick. Those who would say that a positive attitude
is all that it takes to recover are wrong. As important as it is to mental stability,
and as it may be for its physiological effects, a positive attitude is not a
miracle cure for all ailments. Nor is it an easy thing to achieve when one is
beset by low blood pressure, nausea, dizziness and fatigue. I have been known
to get downright curt in such circumstances, and I defy the 'think positive
and you'll be fine' brigade to do otherwise.
The public is so often presented with
'miracle recovery' stories that I wonder whether their understanding of the
illness experience is increasingly out of touch with reality. Think of the familiar
line, 'Doctors told him he would never walk again!', and the accompanying report
which details our hero's valiant contradiction of his doctors' forecast, supposedly
achieved through sheer willpower alone. One almost imagines doctors are deliberately
telling patients they'll never walk again to spur them on to recovery.
But what of the patients for whom their
doctors' opinions are correct? What of those who passionately love being active
and healthy, but are denied a normal life through illness or injury? These people
are doing their best, but, due to the devastating power of their disability,
cannot reclaim perfect health. Not because they're not trying or aren't positive,
but because some assaults on the body are too great to be overcome by the mind.
Doubtless, these less fortunate
indivduals (who are never destined to be the subject of a good news story) find
ways to enrich their lives despite their misfortune. They probably grow emotionally
and philosophically in a way healthy people never imagine.
Here we uncover another
aspect of the 'think positive' exhortation: it implies the patient is not already
doing their utmost to survive and prosper during this challenge. It is allied
with the insulting assumption that the existence of illness in a person signifies
the absence of a desire to recover.
The fact is, illness strikes without
fear or favour, and not all those who are ill want or deserve to be. We all
try our best to live in spite of illness in whatever way we can.
I think this succinct and
beautiful quote from the writing of Albert Camus typifies my experience of maintaining
hope:
In the depths of
winter I finally learned there was in me an invincible summer.

Lovely green sofa and
orange chair supplied to me by Eric
Henes.
Flashing lights
from Ann-S-Thesia: A Gallery
of Digital Delights, Ann-S-Thetics and Ann-i-mation. Free stuff for your page!