Why Me? The Search for Meaning in Alternative Medicine
Patients often ask "Why me?" At bottom, this is as much a metaphysical
as a medical question. In earlier times disease was often seen as divine
retribution for some past misdemeanour: God was punishing the sinner by
means of the disease. This idea is out of fashion now even among
believers, having gone the way of belief in Hell. At the same time,
there is a persisting feeling in many people's minds that the world
ought to be fair. If you eat all the right things, exercise regularly,
and obey all the fashionable precepts about health you don't deserve to
get ill, and if you do it isn't fair.
Cancer and personality
This is probably why explanations
for cancer in terms of the patient's personality are so compelling
for many people. If you have thought the wrong things or felt the
wrong emotions you have brought on the cancer so you are to blame.
This is the modern secular equivalent of feeling guilty because you
have sinned and God is punishing you. In other words, we find a
metaphysical justification for disease masquerading as a
scientific explanation.
I find this quite unacceptable. The induction of feelings
of guilt in patients is one of the worst failings of alternative
medicine (another is excessive and unwarranted optimism about
alternative treatment). It is bad
science and bad metaphysics. Unfortunately orthodox medicine
can't provide 'meaning' either, but help—of a
kind—does come from another direction: 'Darwinian medicine'.
Darwinian medicine
This is still very new; if you mention it to most conventional doctors,
the chances are that they will look at you with a puzzled expression and
ask you what you mean. They are of course familiar in a general way
with the ideas of Darwin, but they have not usually made much connection
in their minds between those ideas and medicine. It may seem odd to say
that Darwinism is new in medicine, but its relevance has been curiously
understated until very recently. The extraordinary fact is that
although Darwin published The Origin of Species nearly 150
years ago, and in so doing precipitated what many people think is the
greatest intellectual revolution of all time, the application of these
ideas to medicine in any systematic way began a mere ten years or so
ago.
Why has there been this denial? The suggested reasons include
hostility to Darwinism in educational circles, at least in the USA, and
the fact that the evolutionary ideas with greatest relevance to medicine
have been formulated only comparatively recently in biology. And if
orthodox medicine has been slow to recognize the importance of Darwinian
ideas, alternative medicine has not even begun to think about it.
Darwinian medicine views disease in an evolutionary perspective. This
does not of course provide a metaphysical explanation but it does make
sense of the existence of many kinds of disease in scientific terms. It
says, in effect, that you have become ill because you are a being who
has evolved in a certain way, and because you live in a world that has
certain characteristics and works in a certain way. This is not
necessarily a consoling explanation, in fact it may be rather a stark
one. It implies that disease and probably aging will always be part of
our experience.
Darwinian implications not necessarily optimistic
As an analogy, consider the light of the sun. If the sun did not exist,
obviously we shouldn't exist either. The sun is essential for life on
earth; all our energy comes, ultimately from it. Yet the sun is also a
source of danger; its radiation is potentially fatal for us, and we can
survive exposure to it only because the atmosphere, including the famous
ozone layer we are in the process of destroying, filters out most of the
rays that are harmful. We can minimise the dangers of exposure to the
sun by wearing clothes and not going out at midday but we cannot
eliminate them entirely; the harmful effects of solar radiation are
simply the obverse of the beneficial effects.
The same kind of reasoning applies to evolution. We have come into
existence thanks to natural selection. (So too have bacteria and
viruses.) Certain consequences follow from this quite inevitably, and
one of these is liability to disease. In many instances, it turns out,
disease is merely the reverse side of a mechanism that exists in order
to preserve us from disease. For instance, allergies and autoimmune
diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis result from excessive or
misdirected activity of the immune system; but we can't live without the
immune system.
We don't have to give up
The implication we should take
from this is not one of fatalism. Even though disease, aging, and
death will always be our lot, it doesn't follow that nothing can be
done about them. Indeed, a great deal has already been achieved, not
just by medicine but by public health—improved sanitation and
water supplies, for example, which historically have contributed
more to preventing disease than has medicine. I have little doubt
that provided our civilization doesn't destroy itself—quite a
large proviso, clearly—we can expect to see a remarkable increase
in the availability of truly effective treatments for many diseases:
viral infections, arthritis, many forms of cancer, perhaps even the
diseases of old age such as Alzheimer's disease. But the fact
remains that our vulnerability to disease is, in the deepest
sense, natural.
The naive optimism of alternative medicine
Contrary to what some enthusiasts for alternative medicine would have
you believe, we're all subject to illness by the mere fact that we have
been born. It's quite true that diet, exercise, not smoking, and
avoiding excessive alcohol intake will make it more likely that you'll
be healthy, but there are no guarantees; you may do everything that you
ought to do, eat the 'right' foods, and all the rest of it, and still
suffer any of the myriad illnesses to which we are all subject. And if
you don't die in middle life you will age, and you may then suffer from
senile dementia or any of the other degenerative diseases that lie in
wait for us.
The idea that these things can be avoided by diet, yoga,
and similar things is a sentimentalist's delusion. Keep your wits about
you and remember Dr Johnson's lines: "But hope not life from grief or
danger free, / Nor think the doom of man reversed for thee."
Why not you?
The reason for this is nothing to do with Original Sin or any other
religious or metaphysical notion. It's a consequence of the fact that we
are biological organisms, subject to the process of Darwinian selection.
Conventional medicine has made amazing advances in diagnosis and
treatment but it hasn't abolished disease and aging and no doubt it
never will. Alternative medicine enthusiasts often imply that they can
prevent cancer and other degenerative diseases by alterations in
lifestyle and in other ways, but this simply isn't true. Don't be taken
in by the merchants of permanent health and happiness. Remember, there's
no free lunch.
Unless we die suddenly in the prime of life, most of us will sooner or
later experience the truth of the rather bleak view of life that I've
just sketched. If you don't believe me, read a few biographies or, if
you are old enough, look around you at the lives of your friends. How
many people have you heard of or do you know personally who have lived a
long life without major illnesses of any kind and who have finally died
at an advanced age with only a few days of preliminary illness? Not
many, I'll bet. "Count no man happy until he's dead," the classical
aphorism runs.
I often remember a remark in a novel by Vladimir Nabokov: "When we're
young, we think these things only happen to other people; as we get
older, we realize we are those other people." Quentin Crisp has compared
life to a race across open country under fire; an image that appeals to
me.
Susan Sontag has written:
Illness is the night-side of life, a more onerous citizenship. Everyone
who is born holds dual citizenship, in the kingdom of the well and in
the kingdom of the sick. Although we all prefer to use only the good
passport, sooner or later each of us is obliged, at least for a spell,
to identify ourselves as citizens of that other place.
To the question "Why me?" there can, ultimately, be only one answer:
"Why not you?"