Just
What Is It About Being Ill?
By Dr. Mel Glazer
Being ill
is not fun. It takes hard work, it often
leaves a bad taste, and sometimes it
gets worse and not better. There are
some characteristics about being ill
that we all recognize, but they are worth
mentioning.
Illness is isolating. Whether we are
stuck at home or in the hospital, it
is not where we normally spend our time.
Most of us need contact with others,
we do not want to be alone. Although
when I get sick or have minor surgery,
I am perfectly content to be left alone.
Give me a political or medical novel
to read, a little bit of food, some Amaretto
for the fever, and I am one happy sick
patient. But most people are not like
me, most people want and need the loving
care of others. Isolation is not so good
for us when we get sick. Remember that
solitary confinement in prison is considered
to be the worst punishment of all.
Illness is debilitating. When we’re
sick, we usually cannot stand up, which
is why visitors need to sit and not stand
when they visit the sick. We try to let
the sick one stay in control, so that
in the midst of losing control over their
body, at least they retain some control
over their environment. When visitors
stand up while the patient lies in bed,
the clear signal is given—I’m
not really interested in staying here
too long. Which is often interpreted
as meaning—you’re not that
important to me. When that happens, the
sick will not talk seriously, for they
realize you don’t want to, so they
shut down.
Illness is infantilizing. When you’re
sick, you cannot do what you had been
able to do before you got sick, you need
nurses and doctors to do it for you.
Just like when we were infants and had
to be taken care of by our parents. One
remedy is to talk to sick people about
what you would normally talk to them
about, so they won’t feel too infantilized.
After all, they are sick, but alive,
so give them the honor of conversation,
that will help them recover as much as
the medicines. With our humanity intact,
we have dignity; without dignity we have
lost everything.
Illness is boring. Talk to them, give
them a reason to wake up in the morning,
aside from their vitals being taken again
and again. Do not ask them “how
do you feel?” Do ask them “what
did the doctor say?” If the prognosis
is good, ask “how can I help?” If
the prognosis is not good, get them to
talk about family healing and resolution
issues, pain issues, advanced directives
and wills, going home or to hospice to
live out their final days in peace without
pain.
Finally, illness is a rehearsal for death.
Whenever we take care of the sick, we
are practicing for their final care-giving,
the one before they die. Be gentle and
be loving. Someday, and nobody knows
when, others will care for us the same
way. Give care the same way you want
to receive care, and you will be rewarded
when your time comes. And that is a reward,
don’t you think?
Dr.
Mel Glazer • Your Grief Matters
1.877.532-4246 (1.877.LECHAIM)
mel@yourgriefmatters.com •
www.andgodcreatedhope.com
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Copyright
© Dr. Mel Glazer, 2006. All rights
reserved.
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