(14) Dialogue With An Illness: Approaches To Letting An Illness Tell Its Story [1.00 hr CE Credit]

Presenter:
Lewis Mehl-Madrona, MD, PhD

Objectives:
Participants completing this presentation will be able to:

  1. Integrate the conventional European understanding of an illness with an aboriginal approach to illness.
  2. Plan an approach to allowing an illness to tell its story.
  3. Practice an approach to dialogue with an illness appropriate to their own culture.



Description:
In the theoretical portion of this presentation, we will consider European views of illness and disease as invaders derived from a microbial model originated by Louis Pasteur. This model leads to an approach to healing that involves destroying the invader, whether by chemotherapy, antibiotics, or guided imagery that imagines white blood cells zapping foreign invaders as in Star Wars or Pac-Man.

Aboriginal approaches give illnesses higher ontological status with spirits, consciousness, meanings and purposes, and even values. Illnesses are viewed as having their own agendas, which can be helpful or harmful to the person. Within this frame of reference, other techniques arise, including interviewing the illness within an imaginal setting to allow it to present itself as it wishes to appear and to tell its own story.

Within this story lies its reasons for having come to the particular person who hosts it and the conditions under which it would choose to leave. From within the story of the illness from its point of view, new and innovative approaches to healing (including guided imagery) evolve.

The presentation will include demonstrations of how the presenter works and summarizes this information as well as instruction for participants to be able to consider and adopt this work to their own contexts.