1st Edition

Meaning-Full Disease How Personal Experience and Meanings Cause and Maintain Physical Illness

By Brian Broom Copyright 2007
    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    The book is grounded upon the author's extensive professional involvement with physical diseases that are a powerful expression of the patients' emotional themes and life-stories. They are meaning-full diseases. They occur commonly, and are the most compelling argument for an urgent acknowledgment of the role of meanings in the healing process. Following the pattern of his first book, Somatic Illness and the Patient's Other Story, the author shows in case after case that listening and responding to the "story" of patients suffering from persistent physical diseases frequently leads to major reversal of the disease processes. This present book takes a crucial second step. There must be an understandable basis for meaning-full diseases. Resistance to them relates in part to the inability of current Western scientific and biomedical theories to explain them. The author sets out to construct conceptual frameworks, within which clinicians and patients can see that a close relationship between life experience and the appearance of physical disease really does make sense.

    Contents1 The phenomena 2 Colliding mind-sets 3 Somatic metaphors 4 Language-making and disease 5 Meaning-full disease explorers 6 Disease as communication 7 Who 'sees' meaning-full disease? 8 Meaning-full disease and the lebenswelt 9 Meaning-full disease and the 'visible' 10 Shifting awareness and different kinds of body 11 The scheming body 12 Experience as a 'fundamental' 13 Meaning-full disease and spirit BIBLIOGRAPHY

    Biography

    Brian Broom