THE STORY OF THE GROWING NUMBER OF CHRONIC, CONTROVERSIAL ILLNESSES OF WHICH CHRONIC FATIGUE SYNDROME IS ONLY ONE
Dorothy Wall's personal story
Woeful Federal Response
Patient Advocacy Politics
Medical Debates
Environmental Questions
Your Purchase Funds Research
Description
While news stories tout the successes of molecular science, genemapping, and high-tech interventions to treat disease, there's another, untold story within today's medical landscape. It is the story of the growing number of chronic, controversial illnesses--chronic fatigue syndrome, Gulf War syndrome, fibromyalgia, multiple chemical sensitivity--poorly served by today's biomedical, pathogen-oriented approach to disease.
With a lyric, incisive voice, Dorothy Wall blends the personal story of her struggles with CFS with a graphic sketch of the CFS terrain: the woeful federal response, patient advocacy politics, medical debates, environmental questions.
Eighteen chapters explore a spectrum of issues. "Listening" conveys the impact on a patient when medical practitioners are deaf to her story, and posits listening as a moral act. "That Name" leaps into the minefield of controversy between and among patient advocacy groups, researchers, and the medical establishment over the power to define, name, and legitimize disease. "The Erotics of Illness" pulls readers to the intimate core of illness, with its upheavals, pain, and tenuous pleasure. "Staying Home" explores the meanings of enclosure for women and the struggle to find purpose and meaning in a reduced, homebound life.
Personal drama merges with literary reflection, reportage, and medical history. An important investigation of what many are calling "postmodern" illness, Encounters with the Invisible offers a thought-provoking look at a controversial illness and the challenge to biomedicine it presents.
Praise for Encounters with the Invisible:
"The best personal account of chronic illness in general and CFS in particular I have ever read….Dorothy Wall opens the door to her soul and draws you in. She paints extraordinarily vivid pictures with her words. You sit in her bedroom with her, eyeing the soggy tea bags and used tissues strewn about; you share her frustration as a few days in bed stretches into weeks, months, and finally years; you feel her discouragement as yet one more doctor refuses to acknowledge that CFS is a real, physical illness." - Karen Lee Richards, co-founder of the National Fibromyalgia Association
"Not only a wonderfully readable, beautifully detailed account of Dorothy Wall’s experience of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS), but also an intelligent review of the history, science, and politics of the illness." - Kathryn Montgomery, Director, Medical Humanities and Bioethics Program at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine
Who Should Read Encounters with the Invisible
Every CFS patient – Dorothy Wall gives a voice to the physical weakness, mental anguish, and emotional turmoil you are experiencing but may find difficult to communicate to others.
Patients with other chronic illnesses – Although some of the physical symptoms may vary, if you have fibromyalgia, Gulf War Syndrome, multiple chemical sensitivity, or any of a number of chronic and controversial illnesses you will relate well to Wall's experiences.
Families and friends – If you love someone with a chronic illness, this book will give you insight into what they are going through and help you understand how you can help.
Healthcare professionals – If you really want to understand what your CFS patient is experiencing and what they want and need from you, this book will tell you far more than any medical textbook.
About the Author
Dorothy Wall came of age in the liberating '60s. Even as a young child, she knew she would not be the traditional stay-at-home woman. As she grew up, she prepared to take her place in the professional world - and take her place she did. Wall taught poetry and fiction writing at three colleges, spoke at conferences, and had her own business as a writing consultant. All was going according to plan until the fall of 1995 when she collapsed with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS).
Within days, Wall's world changed drastically. She became too weak to even write a short note and her throat was so sore, she couldn't speak for months at a time. This vocal, prolific writer and teacher suddenly found herself silenced. Wall says of that time, "As someone who prized an active, vocal life, I was struck by the way CFS had made me a shut-in, muted and invisible, mimicking the forced confinement of women in earlier times."
Why She Wrote Encounters with the Invisible
Two years after her collapse, Wall was finally able to sit up in bed and begin to put on paper the thoughts that had been spinning around in her head. She didn't set out to write a book. The first thing she wrote was a short essay called "Staying Home," about what it meant to be confined. When she finished the first essay, she found herself writing another called "On Determination," which dealt with the dichotomy between her nature and her knowledge. By nature, she was a determined person used to pushing, and willing herself to do things; yet she knew that was exactly the opposite of what she needed to do to get better. As other issues came to mind, she wrote more essays. Then one day she realized her collection of essays just might be the beginnings of a book.
Wall says, "At that point, I wanted to tell not only my personal story but to tell the cultural story, the political story, the medical story...I worked on blending my personal story of illness with this larger medical and cultural story."
And in time, "What I became really fascinated with was this idea of invisibility...and the many, many ways a person with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome is invisible. We're invisible because we look perfectly well. It's not always clear by looking at us that we're severely ill. We're often invisible because we're at home. We're not seen; we're not out in the world. But we're also invisible because the medical conversation leaves us out of the picture.
"In recent years things are changing, but back in the '80s and '90s there was virtually no medical language to talk about a chronic, persistent illness like Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. And that renders a kind of invisibility.
"I was interested in all of these strands - all of the ways a person with this illness is not seen. The more I wrote, the more that became a real impetus to try to unravel all these different strands and talk about the impact on the ill person and the impact culturally with now over a million people with this illness."
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