|
Shop IDA's Marketplace

Buy Books, CD's, Shirts,
Gifts, Bumper Stickers, Mugs, Buttons & More!
Check It Out! |
|
IDA's E-News!

Sign Up
Today! Free! |

|

But You
LOOK
Good!
52 Page Booklet for
Friends and Family. What to Say, What Not to Say and
How to Help!
ONLY $5.25
or Less
Price
Includes US Shipping
~Click
Here~ |
|
|
Being
Sick Well
Written By
Dr. Jeffrey Boyd
Click Here |
|
Disclaimer: The data contained in this web site are
for informational purposes only and are not to be construed as medical
or legal advice. IDA is not endorsing or promoting the
content of other websites, by listing their links and cannot be held
responsible for their contents. Please seek
a medical or legal
professional for advice.
|
|
Copyright
© 2006
The Invisible Disabilities Advocate® All Rights Reserved.
IDA
is a 501(c)(3)
Non-Profit Organization |
|
A Tribute
to An American Heroine
This
Article Appears in the Foreword of
But
You LOOK Good!
A Tribute to
An American Heroine
By Jeffrey H. Boyd, M.D., M.Div.,
M.P.H.
Copyright © 2001 The Invisible
Disabilities Advocate
Sometimes a person's character is not evident until thrown into the furnace
of affliction. Like John Wayne's tough determination wasn't evident in a
movie until he was out-gunned ten to one. That is part of what makes Sherri
Connell's story so compelling. Against all odds she emerges as a determined
woman of real grit, capable of taking on the meanest that life has to throw
at her, and still surfacing with heroic courage after getting hit by a
Tsunami. She has always been a person who, as far as I can tell from reading her story, if
she died on Tuesday, would probably have shown up to work on Wednesday saying,
"I'm not going to let some minor problems like death and a coffin keep me
down."
Yet, despite her cussed determination to cling onto the vestiges of "normal
life" after a tidal wave of devastation to every system of her body, still
her so-called "friends" thought she must be a sissy, giving-in to
feelings of
being tired, and using illness as an excuse to retreat. Some
"friends"!
Sherri has helped me put into words something that has been knocking around
inside my skull as a half-baked idea, namely that some
parts of the popular American culture are intensely
hostile to those who suffer from chronic illnesses, especially invisible
disabilities. That, of course, is not what we Americans think about ourselves.
After all, we have given disabled people preferential parking spaces and passed
the Americans-with-Disabilities-Act. But think about it. If you turn on TV or
open most popular magazines, you are confronted with healthy and beautiful
bodies of models under the age of thirty. That is what life is supposed to be
about, or so we are told. We are all supposed to enjoy our bodies, exercise
aerobically, be sexy, and drive glamorous new cars, and remain under the age of
thirty without showing any effects of age, gravity or disease. Or at least that
is the "hype."
How does someone with an invisible disability fit into that idealized picture
of the good life? She doesn't. Therefore, I suspect that Sherri's so-called
friends were confronted with a choice: either remain loyal to Sherri, or
remain loyal to the false picture we find on TV and in the mass media. Many
people choose to embrace the American ideal of a
sexy-healthy-body-under-the-age-of-thirty, and therefore ditch Sherri. At
least that is what I suspect motivated her so-called friends to hold her in
contempt and abandon her in her hour of need.
We tend to take health, family, food, and other blessings as being our
birthright. The thought does not come easily that these are blessings that we
don't deserve, that God is free to either give or withhold. Fact is, God
gives us funerals and disabled people to help remind us that this life is not
heaven, despite what we see on TV ads. The purpose of someone like Sherri,
vis-ŕ-vis her friends, is as a warning from God that we all live at God's
beck and call, are totally dependent upon Him, and the purpose of our life is
to glorify Him. The blessings of this life are only a brief and dilute taste
of heaven. If Sherri's friends had realized that the purpose of life is to
glorify God rather than to enjoy their "birthright" health, then they
would
have recognized that Sherri was fulfilling that purpose more successfully
than they were. If Sherri's friends had understood these points, they would
have become more humble.
In a classic article in the Journal of the American Medical Association on
November 13, 1996, Catherine Hoffman and Dorothy Rice made an appraisal of the
extent and cost of chronic illness in the United States. About 46% of
Americans suffer with one chronic condition or another, most of them
employed, most of them under the age of 65. The cost is staggering, and is
the leading cause of the ongoing inflation in the cost of healthcare and
prescription drugs. The fundamental issue is that contemporary medicine is
often able to delay death but not restore health, so that the more
"breakthroughs of modern medicine" we have, the more sick people we
have. I
say this without sarcasm and without cynicism. A century ago someone like
Sherri Connell would have died years ago. She does not think it is bad to be
alive, even though she remains crushed by afflictions. God's blessings are
still delicious, even when there are fewer of them available to Sherri today
than when she was a healthy teenager.
Here's another example of how the "miraculous breakthroughs of modern
medicine" increase the number of sick people. In the old days if you had a
severe head injury, you died of brain swelling. Starting a couple of decades
ago, doctors learned how to prevent brain swelling, so that acute brain
damage did not necessarily lead to death. But as a result of that
"breakthrough of medicine" there is a large and rapidly growing number
of
Americans with Traumatic Brain Injury, most of whom are unable to return to
the kind of work and lifestyle they had before, and many of whom are
permanently disabled. Thus the more successful medicine is, the more sick
people we have among us.
I am beginning to suspect that popular American culture is built upon the
pipe-dream that disease has been conquered by physicians, or will soon be
conquered as soon as we figure out what all that DNA says. I've been a physician now for a quarter century, and let me assure you that is not how it
looks from down here in the trenches. If this were a football game the score
would be DISEASE 85 versus DOCTORS 15. Our score of 15 is much higher than it
was a century ago. But we are far from winning the game. We lack the power to
cure someone like Sherri, alas.
My point is that Sherri Connell's heroic effort to alert her "friends"
to the
realities of invisible disabilities is a message that Americans desperately
need to hear. Those who believe the TV "hype" about how the meaning of
life
requires that you must first possess a healthy and sexy young body, will
be
humbled by God as they grow older. The elderly know what it means to live
with illness and disability, which sometimes is less severe, and sometimes
more, but is always apparent even in the loss of elasticity and thickness
from the skin, the growing wrinkles and tendency to droop with the impact of
gravity over many decades.
Copyright © 2001
|
Copyright
Regulations:
PRINTING AND DISTRIBUTING: Please
write for permission from IDA before you distribute this article
in any way to friends, family, support groups,
co-workers, offices, foundations,
etc.
No more than 3 copies for personal use will
be allowed. If you need more than 3, you can order copies from
IDA. For write for permission
CLICK
HERE
HARDCOPY PUBLICATION:
Please email your request for permission to
publish any of our articles or quotes in newspapers, magazines,
newsletters, books, etc.
Publication is
strictly prohibited without permission.
To write for permission,
CLICK
HERE
ELECTRONIC DISTRIBUTION:
Due to internet theft, we do not allow our articles to be distributed or published in
any way by email or posting on the internet. However, you may
post or email a direct link to this article or the website. |

But You LOOK Good!
A Guide to Understanding and Encouraging People Living With Chronic
Illness and Pain
Order
Online at: www.MyIDA.org
To Order by Mail: Please send
$5.25
(for printing, binding, shipping, etc.) for each
booklet (includes postage in the US). Make the check payable
to "IDA" and Send Order To:
IDA,
P.O. Box 4067,
Parker, CO 80134
*Note! IDA reserves the right to make changes, edits in content without
notice. The booklet may differ slightly from the website!
Proceeds go to IDA.
|



CIA is Sponsored by
IDA
Copyright © 2006
The Invisible Disabilities Advocate. All Rights Reserved.
IDA is a 501(c)(3) Non-Profit Organization.
Terms
of Use.
|