Health is Membership
by Wendell Berry
Delivered as a speech at a conference, “Spirituality and Healing”, at
Louisville, Kentucky, on October 17, 1994
From our constant and increasing concerns about health, you can tell how
seriously diseased we are. Health, as we may remember from at least some of the
days of our youth, is at once wholeness and a kind of unconsciousness. Disease
(dis-ease), on the contrary, makes us conscious not only of the state of our
health but of the division of our bodies and our world into parts.
The word “health,” in fact, comes from the same Indo-European root as
“heal,” “whole,” and “holy” To be healthy is
literally to be whole; to heal is to make whole. I don’t think mortal healers
should be credited with the power to make holy. But I have no doubt that such
healers are properly obliged to acknowledge and respect the holiness embodied
in all creatures, or that our healing involves the preservation in us of the
spirit and the breath of God.
If we were lucky enough as children to be surrounded by grown-ups who loved us,
then our sense of wholeness is not just the sense of completeness in ourselves
but also is the sense of belonging to others and to our place; it is an
unconscious awareness of community, of having in common. It may be that this
double sense of singular integrity and of communal belonging is our personal
standard of health for as long as we live. Anyhow, we seem to know
instinctively that health is not divided.
Of course, growing up and growing older as fallen creatures in a fallen world
can only instruct us painfully in division and disintegration. This is the
stuff of consciousness and experience. But if our culture works in us as it
should, then we do not age merely into disintegration and division, but that
very experience begins our education, leading us into knowledge of wholeness
and of holiness. I am describing here the story of Job, of Lazarus, of the lame
man at the pool of Bethesda, of Milton’s Samson, of King Lear. If our culture
works in us as it should, our experience is balanced by education; we are led
out of our lonely suffering and are made whole.
In the present age of the world, disintegration and division, isolation and suffering
seem to have overwhelmed us. The balance between experience and education has
been overthrown, we are lost in experience, and so-called education is leading
us nowhere. We have diseases aplenty. As if that were not enough, we are
suffering an almost universal hypochondria. Half the energy of the medical
industry, one suspects, may now be devoted to “examinations” or
“tests”-to see if, though apparently well, we may not be latently or
insidiously diseased.
If you are going to deal with the issue of health in the modern world, you are
going to have to deal with much absurdity. It is not clear, for example, why
death should increasingly be looked upon as a curable disease, an abnormality,
by a society that increasingly looks upon life as insupportably painful and/or
meaningless. Even more startling is the realization that the modern medical
industry faithfully imitates disease in the way that it isolates us and parcels
us out. If, for example, intense and persistent pain causes you to pay
attention only to your stomach, then you must leave home, community, and family
and go to a sometimes distant clinic or hospital, where you will be cared for
by a specialist who will pay attention only to your stomach.
Or consider the announcement by the Associated Press on February 9, 1994, that
“the incidence of cancer is up among all ages, and researchers speculated
that environmental exposure to cancer-causing substances other than cigarettes
may be partly to blame.” This bit of news is offered as a surprise, never
mind that the environment (so called) has been known to be polluted and toxic
for many years. The blame obviously falls on that idiotic term “the
environment,” which refers to a world that surrounds us but is presumably
different from us and distant from us. Our laboratories have proved long ago
that cigarette smoke gets inside us, but if “the environment”
surrounds us, how does it wind up inside us? So much for division as a working
principle of health.
This, plainly, is a view of health that is severely reductive. It is, to begin
with, almost fanatically individualistic. The body is seen as a detective or
potentially defective machine, singular, solitary, and displaced, without love,
solace, or pleasure. Its health excludes unhealthy cigarettes but does not
exclude unhealthy food, water, and air. One may presumably be healthy in a
disintegrated family or community or in a destroyed or poisoned ecosystem.
We speak now of “spirituality and healing” as if the only way to
render a proper religious respect to the body is somehow to treat it
“spiritually.” It could be argued just as appropriately (and perhaps
less dangerously) that the way to respect the body fully is to honor fully its
materiality. In saying this, I intend no reduction. I do not doubt the reality
of the experience and knowledge we call “spiritual” any more than I
doubt the reality of so-called physical experience and knowledge; I recognize
the rough utility of these terms. But I strongly doubt the advantage, and even
the possibility, of separating these two realities.
What I’m arguing against here is not complexity or mystery but dualism. I would
like to purge my own mind and language of such terms as “spiritual,”
“physical,” “metaphysical,” and “transcendental”-all
of which imply that the Creation is divided into “levels” that can
readily be peeled apart and judged by human beings. I believe that the Creation
is one continuous fabric comprehending simultaneously what we mean by
“spirit” and what we mean by “matter.”
Our bodies are involved in the world. Their needs and desires and pleasures are
physical. Our bodies hunger and thirst, yearn toward other bodies, grow tired
and seek rest, rise up rested, eager to exert themselves. All these desires may
be satisfied with honor to the body and its maker, but only if much else
besides the individual body is brought into consideration. We have long known
that individual desires must not be made the standard of their own satisfaction.
We must consider the body’s manifold connections to other bodies and to the
world. The body, “fearfully and wonderfully made,” is ultimately
mysterious both in itself and in its dependences. Our bodies live, the Bible
says, by the spirit and the breath of God, but it does not say how this is so.
We are not going to know about this.
The distinction between the physical and the spiritual is, I believe, false. A
much more valid distinction, and one that we need urgently to learn to make, is
that between the organic and the mechanical. To argue this-as I am going to
do-puts me in the minority, I know, but it does not make me unique. In The Idea
Of A Christian Society, T S Eliot wrote, “We may say that religion, as
distinguished from modern paganism, implies a life in conformity with nature.
It may be observed that the natural life and the supernatural life have a
conformity to each other which neither has with the mechanistic life.”
Still, l wonder if our persistent wish to deal spiritulally with physical things
does not come either from the feeling that physical things are “low”
and unworthy or from the fear, especially when speaking of affection, that
“physical” will be taken to mean “sexual.”The New York Review
of Books of February 3, 1994, for example, carried a review of the
correspondence of William and Henry James along with a photograph of the two
brothers standing together with William’s arm around Henry’s shoulders. Apropos
of this picture, the reviewer, John Bayley, wrote that “their closeness of
affection was undoubted and even took on occasion a quasi-physical form.”
It is Mr. Bayley’s qualifier, “quasi-physical,” that sticks in one’s
mind. What can he have meant by it? Is this prurience masquerading as
squeamishness, or vice versa? Does Mr. Bayley feel a need to assure his
psychologically sophisticated readers that even though these brothers touched
one another familiarly, they were not homosexual lovers?
The phrase involves at least some version of the old dualism of spirit and body
or mind and body that has caused us so much suffering and trouble and that
raises such troubling questions for anybody who is interested in health. If you
love your brother and if you and your brother are living creatures, how could
your love for him not be physical? Not spiritual or mental only, not
“quasi-physical,” but physical. How could you not take a simple
pleasure in putting your arm around him?
Out of the same dualism comes our confusion about the body’s proper involvement
in the world. People seriously interested in health will finally have to
question our society’s long-standing goals of convenience and effortlessness.
What is the point of “labor saving” if by making work effortless we
make it poor, and if by doing poor work we weaken our bodies and lose conviviality
and health?
We are now pretty clearly involved in a crisis of health, one of the wonders of
which is its immense profitability both to those who cause it and to those who
propose to cure it. That the illness may prove incurable, except by catastrophe,
is suggested by our economic dependence on it. Think, for example, of how
readily our solutions become problems and our cures pollutants. To cure one
disease, we need another. The causes, of course, are numerous and complicated,
but all of them, I think, can be traced back to the old idea that our bodies
are not very important except when they give us pleasure (usually, now, to
somebody’s profit) or when they hurt (now, almost invariably, to somebody’s
profit).
This dualism inevitably reduces physical reality, and it does so by removing
its mystery from it, by dividing it absolutely from what dualistic thinkers
have understood as spiritual or mental reality.
A reduction that is merely theoretical might be harmless enough, I suppose, but
theories find ways of getting into action. The theory of the relative
unimportance of physical reality has put itself into action by means of a
metaphor by which the body (along with the world itself ) is understood as a
machine. According to this metaphor-which is now in constant general use-the
human heart, for example, is no longer understood as the center of our
emotional life or even as an organ that pumps; it is understood as “a
pump,” having somewhat the same function as a fuel pump in an
automobile.If the body is a machine for living and working, then it must follow
that the mind is a machine for thinking. The “progress” here is the
reduction of mind to brain and then of brain to computer. This reduction
implies and requires the reduction of knowledge to “information.” It
requires, in fact, the reduction of everything to numbers and mathematical
operations.
This metaphor of the machine bears heavily upon the question of what we mean by
health and by healing. The problem is that like any metaphor, it is accurate only
in some respects. A girl is only in some respects like a red rose; a heart is
only in some respects like a pump. This means that a metaphor must be
controlled by a sort of humorous intelligence, always mindful of the exact
limits within which the comparison is meaningful. When a metaphor begins to
control intelligence, as this one of the machine has done for a long time, then
we must look for costly distortions and absurdities. Of course, the body in
most ways is not at all like a machine. Like all living creatures and unlike a
machine, the body is not formally self-contained; its boundaries and out-lines
are not so exactly fixed. The body alone is not, properly speaking, a body.
Divided from its sources of air, food, drink, clothing, shelter, and companionship,
a body is, properly speaking, a cadaver, whereas a machine by itself, shut down
or out of fuel, is still a machine. Merely as an organism (leaving aside issues
of mind and spirit) the body lives and moves and has its being, minute by
minute, by an interinvolvement with other bodies and other creatures, living
and unliving, that is too complex to diagram or describe. It is, moreover,
under the influence of thought and feeling. It does not live by
“fuel” alone.
A mind, probably, is even less like a computer than a body is like a machine.
As far as I am able to understand it, a mind is not even much like a brain.
Insofar as it is usable for thought, for the association of thought with
feeling, for the association of thoughts and feelings with words, for the
connections between words and things, words and acts, thought and memory, a
mind seems to be in constant need of reminding. A mind unreminded would be no
mind at all. This phenomenon of reminding shows the extensiveness of mind-how
intricately it is involved with sensation, emotion, memory, tradition, communal
life, known landscapes, and so on. How you could locate a mind within its full
extent, among all its subjects and necessities, I don’t know, bur obviously it
cannot be located within a brain or a computer.
To see better what a mind is (or is not), we might consider the difference
between what we mean by knowledge and what the computer now requires us to mean
by “information.” Knowledge refers to the ability to do or say the
right thing at the right time; we would not speak of somebody who does the
wrong thing at the wrong time as “knowledgeable.” People who perform
well as musicians, athletes, teachers, or farmers are people of knowledge. And
such examples tell us much about the nature of knowledge. Knowledge is formal,
and it informs speech and action. It is instantaneous; it is present and
available when and where it is needed.
“Information,” which once meant that which forms or fashions from
within, now means merely “data.” However organized this data may be,
it is not shapely or formal or in the true sense in-forming. It is not present
where it is needed; if you have to “access” it, you don’t have it.
Whereas knowledge moves and forms acts, information is inert. You cannot
imagine a debater or a quarterback or a musician performing by “accessing
information.” A computer chock full of such information is no more
admirable than a head or a book chock full of it.
The difference, then, between information and knowledge is something like the
difference between a dictionary and somebody’s language.
Where the art and science of healing are concerned, the machine metaphor works
to enforce a division that falsifies the process of healing because it
falsifies the nature of the creature needing to be healed. If the body is a
machine, then its diseases can be healed by a sort of mechanical tinkering,
without reference to anything outside the body itself. This applies, with
obvious differences, to the mind; people are assumed to be individually sane or
insane. And so we return to the utter anomaly of a creature that is healthy
within itself.
The modem hospital, where most of us receive our strictest lessons in the
nature of industrial medicine, undoubtedly does well at surgery and other
procedures that permit the body and its parts to be treated as separate things.
But when you try to think of it as a place of healing-of reconnecting and
making whole-then the hospital reveals the disarray of the medical industry’s
thinking about health.
In healing, the body is restored to itself. It begins to live again by its own
powers and instincts, to the extent that it can do so. To the extent that it
can do so, it goes free of drugs and mechanical helps. Its appetites return. It
relishes food and rest. The patient is restored to family and friends, home and
community and work.
This process has a certain naturalness and inevitability, like that by which a
child grows up, but industrial medicine seems to grasp it only tentatively and
awkwardly. For example, any ordinary person would assume that a place of
healing would put a premium upon rest, but hospitals are notoriously difficult
to sleep in. They are noisy all night, and the routine interventions go on
relentlessly. The body is treated as a machine that does nor need to rest.
You would think also that a place dedicated to healing and health would make
much of food. But here is where the disconnections of the industrial system and
the displacement of industrial humanity are most radical. Sir Albert Howard saw
accurately that the issue of human health is inseparable from the health of the
soil, and he saw too that we humans much responsibly occupy our place in the
cycle of birth, growth, maturity, death, and decay, which is the health of the
world. Aside from our own mortal involvement, food is our fundamental
connection to that cycle. But probably most of the complaints you hear about
hospitals have to do with the food, which, according to the testimony I have
heard, tends to range from unappetizing to sickening. Food is treated as
another unpleasant substance to inject. And this is a shame. For in addition to
the obvious nutritional link between food and health, food can be a pleasure.
People who are sick are often troubled or depressed, and mealtimes offer three
opportunities a day when patients could easily be offered something to look
forward to. Nothing is more pleasing or heartening than a plate of nourishing,
tasty, beautiful food artfully and lovingly prepared.
Anything less is unhealthy, as well as a desecration.Why should rest and food
and ecological health not be the basic principles of our art and science of
healing? Is it because the basic principles already are technology and drugs?
Are we confronting some fundamental incompatibility between mechanical effciency
and organic health? I don’t know. I only know that sleeping in a hospital is
like sleeping in a factory and that the medical industry makes only the most
tenuous connection between health and food and no connection between health and
the soil. Industrial medicine is as little interested in ecological health as
is industrial agriculture.
A further problem, and an equally serious one, is that illness, in addition to
being a bodily disaster, is now also an economic disaster. This is so whether
or not the patient is insured. It is a disaster for us all, all the time, because
we all know that personally or collectively, we cannot continue to pay for
cures that continue to get more expensive. The economic disturbance that now
inundates the problem of illness may turn out to be the profoundest illness of
all. How can we get well if we are worried sick about money?
I wish it were not the fate of this essay to be filled with questions, but
questions now seem the inescapable end of any line of thought about health and
healing. Here are several more:
1. Can our present medical industry produce an adequate definition of health?
My own guess is that it cannot do so. Like industrial agriculture, industrial
medicine has depended increasingly on specialist methodology, mechanical
technology, and chemicals; thus, its point of reference has become more and
more its own technical prowess and less and less the health of creatures and
habitats. I don’t expect this problem to be solved in the universities, which
have never addressed, much less solved, the problem of health in agriculture. And
I don’t expect it to be solved by the government.
2. How can cheapness be included in the criteria of medical experimentation and
performance? And why has it not been included before now? I believe that the
problem here is again that of the medical industry’s fixation on
specialization, technology, and chemistry. As a result, the modern “health
care system” has become a way of marketing industrial products, exactly
like modern agriculture, impoverishing those who pay and enriching those who
are paid. It is, in other words, an industry such as industries have always
been.
3. Why is it that medical strictures and recommendations so often work in favor
of food processors and against food producers? Why, for example, do we so
strongly favor the pasteurization of milk to health and cleanliness in milk
production? (Gene Logsdon correctly says that the motive here “is
monopoly, not consumer’s health.”)
4. Why do we so strongly prefer a fat-free or gem-free diet to a chemical-free
diet? Why does the medicine industry strenuously oppose the use of tobacco, yet
complacently accept the massive use of antibiotics and other drugs in meat
animals and of poison on food crops? How much longer can it cling to the
superstition of bodily health in a polluted world?
5. How can adequate medical and health care, including disease prevention, be
included in the structure and economy of a community? How, for example can a
community and its doctors be included in the same culture, the same knowledge
and the same fate, so that they will live as fellow citizens, sharers in the
common wealth, members of one another?
II
It is clear by now that this
essay cannot hope to be complete; the problems are too large and my knowledge
too small. What I have to offer is an association of thoughts and questions
wandering somewhat at random and somewhat lost within the experience of modem
diseases and the often bewildering industry that undertakes to cure them. In my
ignorance and bewilderment, I am fairly representative of those who go, or go
with loved ones, to doctors’ offices and hospitals. What I have written so far
comes from my various efforts to make as much sense as I can of that
experience. But now I had better turn to the experience itself.
On January 3,1994, my brother John had a severe heart attack while he was out
by himself on his farm, moving a feed trough. He managed to get to the house
and telephone a friend, who sent the emergency rescue squad.
The rescue squad and the emergency room staff at a local hospital certainly
saved my brother’s life. He was later moved to a hospital in Louisville, where
a surgeon performed a double-bypass operation on his heart. After three weeks
John returned home. He still has a life to live and work to do. He has been
restored to himself and to the world.
He and those who love him have a considerable debt to the medical industry, as
represented by two hospitals, several doctors and nurses, many drugs and many
machines. This is a debt that I cheerfully acknowledge. But I am obliged to say
also that my experience of the hospital during John’s stay was troubled by much
conflict of feeling and a good many unresolved questions, and I know that I am
not alone in this.
In the hospital what I will call the world of love meets the world of
efficiency-the world, that is, of specialization, machinery, and abstract
procedure. Or, rather, I should say that these two worlds come together in the
hospital but do not meet. During those weeks when John was in the hospital, it
seemed to me that he had come from the world of love and that the family
members, neighbors, and friends who at various times were there with him came
there to represent that world and to preserve his connection with it. It seemed
to me that the hospital was another kind of world altogether.
When I said early in this essay that we live in a world that was created and
exists and is redeemable by love, I did not mean to sentimentalize it. For this
is also a fallen world. It involves error and disease, ignorance and
partiality, sin and death. If this world is a place where we may learn of our
involvement in immortal love, as I believe it is, still such learning is only
possible here because that love involves us so inescapably in the limits,
sufferings, and sorrows of mortality.
Like divine love, earthly love seeks plenitude; it longs for the full
membership to be present and to be joined. Unlike divine love, earthly love
does not have the power, the knowledge, or the will to achieve what it longs
for. The story of human love on this earth is a story by which this love
reveals and even validates itself by its failures to be complete and
comprehensive and effective enough. When this love enters a hospital, it brings
with it a terrifying history of defeat, but it comes nevertheless confident of
itself, for its existence and the power of its longing have been proved over
and over again even by its defeat. In the face of illness, the threat of death,
and death itself, it insists unabashedly on its own presence, understanding by
its persistence through defeat that it is superior to whatever happens.
The world of efficiency ignores both loves, earthly and divine, because by
definition it must reduce experience to computation, particularity to abstraction,
and mystery to a small comprehensibility. Efficiency, in our present sense of
the word, allies itself inevitably with machinery, as Neil Postman demonstrates
in his useful book, Technopoly. “Machines,” he says, “eliminate
complexity, doubt, and ambiguity. They work swiftly, they are standardized, and
they provide us with numbers that you can see and calculate with.” To
reason, the advantages are obvious, and probably no reasonable person would
wish to reject them out of hand.
And yet love obstinately answers that no loved one is standardized. A body,
love insists, is neither a spirit nor a machine; it is not a picture, a
diagram, a chart, a graph, an anatomy; it is not an explanation; it is not a
law. It is precisely and uniquely what it is. It belongs to the world of love,
which is a world of living creatures, natural orders and cycles, many small,
fragile lights in the dark.
In dealing with problems of agriculture, I had thought much about the
difference between creatures and machines. But I had never so clearly
understood and felt that difference as when John was in recovery after his
heart surgery, when he was attached to many machines and was dependent for
breath on a respirator. It was impossible then not to see that the breathing of
a machine, like all machine work, is unvarying, an oblivious regularity, whereas
the breathing of a creature is ever changing, exquisitely responsive to events
both inside and outside the body, to thoughts and emotions. A machine makes
breaths as a machine makes buttons, all the same, but every breath of a
creature is itself a creature, like no other, inestimably precious.
Logically, in plenitude some things ought to be expendable. Industrial
economics has always believed this: abundance justifies waste. This is one of
the dominant superstitions of American history-and of the history of
colonialism everywhere. Expendability is also an assumption of the world of
efficiency, which is why that world deals so compulsively in percentages of
efficacy and safety.
But this sort of logic is absolutely alien to the world of love. To the claim
that a certain drug or procedure would save 99 percent of all cancer patients
or that a certain pollutant would be safe for 99 percent of a population, love,
unembarrassed, would respond, “What about the one percent?”
There is nothing rational or perhaps even defensible about this, but it is
nonetheless one of the strongest strands of our religious tradition-it is
probably the most essential strand-according to which a shepherd, owning a
hundred sheep and having lost one, does not say, “I have saved 99 percent
of my sheep,” but rather, “I have lost one,” and he goes and
searches for the one. And if the sheep in that parable may seem to be only a
metaphor, then go on to the Gospel of Luke, where the principle is flatly set
forth again and where the sparrows stand not for human beings but for all
creatures: “Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings, and not one of
them is forgotten before God?” And John Donne had in mind a sort of equation
and not a mere metaphor when he wrote, “If a clod be washed away by the
sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor
of thy friends or of thine own were. Any man’s death diminishes me.”
It is reassuring to see ecology moving toward a similar idea of the order of
things. If an ecosystem loses one of its native species, we now know that we
cannot speak of it as itself minus one species. An ecosystem minus one species
is a different ecosystem. Just so, each of us is made by-or, one might better
say, made as-a set of unique associations with unique persons, places, and
things. The world of love does not admit the principle of the
interchangeability of parts.
When John was in intensive care after his surgery, his wife, Carol, was
standing by his bed, grieving and afraid. Wanting to reassure her, the nurse
said, “Nothing is happening to him that doesn’t happen to everybody.”
And Carol replied, “I’m not everybody’s wife.”
In the world of love, things separated by efficiency and specialization strive
to come back together. And yet love must confront death, and accept it, and
learn from it. Only in confronting death can earthly love learn its true
extent, its immortality. Any definition of health that is not silly must include
death. The world of love includes death, suffers it, and triumphs over it. The
world of efficiency is defeated by death; at death, all its instruments and
procedures stop. The world of love continues, and of this grief is the proof.
In the hospital, love cannot forget death. But like love, death is in the
hospital but not of it. Like love, fear and grief feel out of place in the
hospital. How could they be included in its efficient procedures and
mechanisms? Where a clear, small order is fervently maintained, tear and grief
bring the threat of large disorder.
And so these two incompatible worlds might also be designated by the terms
“amateur” and “professional”-amateur, in the literal sense
of lover, one who participates for love; and professional in the modern sense
of one who performs highly specialized or technical procedures for pay. The
amateur is excluded from the professional “field.”
For the amateur, in the hospital or in almost any other encounter with the
medical industry, the overriding experience is that of being excluded from
knowledge of being unable, in other words, to make or participate in anything
resembling an “informed decision.” Of course, whether doctors make
informed decisions in the hospital is a matter of debate. For in the hospital
even the professionals are involved in experience; experimentation has been
left far behind. Experience, as all amateurs know, is not predictable, and in
experience there are no replications or “controls”; there is nothing
with which to compare the result. Once one decision has been made, we have
destroyed the opportunity to know what would have happened if another decision
had been made. That is to say that medicine is an exact science until applied;
application involves intuition, a sense of probability, “gut feeling,
” guesswork, and error.
In medicine, as in many modern disciplines, the amateur is divided from the
professional by perhaps unbridgeable differences of knowledge and of language.
An “informed decision” is really not even imaginable for most medical
patients and their families, who have no competent understanding of either the
patients illness or the recommended medical or surgical procedure. Moreover,
patients and their families are not likely to know the doctor, the surgeon, or
any of the other people on whom the patient’s life will depend. In the hospital,
amateurs are more than likely to be proceeding entirely upon faith-and this is
a peculiar and scary faith, for it must be placed not in a god but in mere
people, mere procedures, mere chemicals, and mere machines.
It was only after my brother had been taken into surgery, I think, that the
family understood the extremity of this deed of faith. We had decided – or John
had decided and we had concurred on the basis of the best advice available. But
once he was separated from us, we felt the burden of our ignorance. We had not
known what we were doing, and one of our difficulties now was the feeling that
we had utterly given him up to what we did not know. John himself spoke out of
this sense of abandonment and helplessness in the intensive care unit, when he
said, “I don’t know what they’re going to do to me or for me or with
me.”
As we waited and reports came at long intervals from the operating room, other
realizations followed. We realized that under the circumstances, we could not
be told the truth. We would not know, ever, the worries and surprises that came
to the surgeon during his work. We would not know the critical moments or the
fears. lf the surgeon did any part of his work ineptly or made a mistake, we
would not know it. We realized, moreover, that if we were told the truth, we
would have no way of knowing that the truth was what it was.
We realized that when the emissaries from the operating room assured us that
everything was ‘”normal” or “routine,” they were referring
to the procedure and not the patient. Even as amateurs – perhaps because
we were amateurs-we knew that what was happening was not normal or routine for
John or for us.
That these two worlds are so radically divided does not mean that people cannot
cross between them. I do not know how an amateur can cross over into the
professional world; that does not seem very probable. But that professional
people can cross back into the amateur world, I know from much evidence. During
John’s stay in the hospital there were many moments in which doctors and nurses
– especially nurses! – allowed or caused the professional relationship to
become a meeting between two human beings, and these moments were invariably
moving.
The most moving, to me, happened in the waiting room during John’s surgery.
From time to time a nurse from the operating room would come in to tell Carol
what was happening. Carol, from politeness or bravery or both, always stood to
receive the news, which always left us somewhat encouraged and somewhat
doubtful. Carol’s difficulty was that she had to suffer the ordeal not only as
a wife but as one who had been a trained nurse. She knew, from her own
education and experience, in how limited a sense open-heart surgery could be
said to be normal or – routine.
Finally, toward the end of our wait, two nurses came in. The operation, they
said, had been a success. They explained again what had been done. And then
they said that after the completion of the bypasses, the surgeon had found it
necessary to insert a “balloon pump” into the aorta to assist the
heart. This possibility had never been mentioned, nobody was prepared for it,
and Carol was sorely disappointed and upset. The two young women attempted to
reassure her, mainly by repeating things they had already said. And then there
was a long moment when they just looked at her. It was such a look as parents
sometimes give to a sick or suffering child, when they themselves have begun to
need the comfort they are trying to give.
And then one of the nurses said, “Do you need a hug?”
“Yes,” Carol said.
And the nurse gave her a hug.
Which brings us to a starting place.
Wendell Berry is the author of thirty two books of fiction, poetry. and essays,
including Sabbaths; Sex, Economy, Freedom, & Community; and What
Are People For? He has farmed a hillside in his native Henry County,
Kentucky, for thirty years. A former professor of English at the University of
Kentucky, he has received numerous awards for his work, including most recentdy
the T S. Eliot Award, The Aiken Taylor Award for Poetry, the John Hay Award of
the Orion Society, and The Chnstian Century’s Award for Excellence in
Poetry.
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