Posts Tagged ‘medicine’

Owning Creation: Giving Birth for A Living

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

A while back, a conversation Lissa and I had about being a mom and an entrepreneur struck a chord in both of us and produced her wonderful post on birthing what wants to be born. That post produced a moving discussion about the choices we make about where our amazing, female creative energy goes – into babies, projects, passions and work. As I sat with this and let the words of Pinkie wisdom seep into me, a wondrous thing happened I want to share with you. I felt some of the tangle of my personal confusion on this subject begin to unravel. When I told Lissa and Joy they encouraged me to untangle and reweave in public in the hopes that it might be useful to others. And so here I share some of my tapestry-in-progress with you. Blessings to you in your personal struggles and choices as you release your own amazing creative powers. ~Dana

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The need to create

We women are just bursting with the ability, talent and NEED to create. Not just procreate – though that’s obviously a biggie hormonally and otherwise – I mean: CREATE. I wasn’t completely aware of this myself until recently, which is ironic because in addition to co-creating two children, I’ve spent my whole professional career trying to create stuff. This has been frustrating because I wasn’t an artist or a welder or a software developer, I was a marketer. (Marketers don’t make stuff, sadly; we make stuff up.) So, unconscious of the fact I really wanted to create things, I aligned myself with people who did and made a career out of launching new products into the market and advising organizations on how to take advantage of new technology to create new businesses. Somewhere along the line I stopped owning the failure of not being happy in all my jobs and started owning success by realizing I was a creative spirit and that creating stuff fuels me and brings me joy. Seeing it come to fruition in one form or another makes me ecstatic! I loved making kids! I love parenting kids – now teenagers whom I adore. I have – count them – four businesses! And I love them all! It’s all just the creative energy in me visioning something wonderful in the world and then setting my energy to bring it into being.

Lissa and I laughed because of course, she has given birth to one beautiful child and many businesses too – a medical practice, an artist’s body of gorgeous work, two books, and a blossoming creation in Owning Pink she’s inviting us all to co-create with her. But of course, we’ve both created children and sometimes the demands and desires of motherhood and entrepreneurship get a little tangled up and confused.

Confusion

For myself, this tangle is definitely confusing; and I’m not just talking about the energy management of it here (though that is often beyond confusing!). I mean something deeper. Something so deep that it’s tangled up with roots that go so far down into my spirit and my being I can’t even see where they end. This bonked me on the head when Lissa and I were chatting on IM about this. We were talking about how fun it is to start up a business (and how exhausting) and about the parallels with having a kid. At first we were focused on the similarities:

  • neither a baby nor a startup business can exist without you;
  • both cry a lot and need constant care and feeding, sucking at your very being; and
  • you LOVE them both to the point that it can make you wonder where you start and they stop.

After a bit we were all confused. Birthing anything new is an act of creation and so in many ways they feel so much alike, is there really no difference? Could you just start a business and never have a kid (or visa versa) and have the same experience? Well, no… there are significant differences too:

  • a child is an independent soul with its own intrinsic purpose on this earth, while a business’s purpose is to further the growth and development of all the independent souls it touches (employees, owners, customers, investors etc.);
  • a child should be nurtured until it can function completely independently, while an organization always needs leadership; and
  • your love for a child should be a personal connection, while your love for a business (which is also “owned” by others, either financially or otherwise) should be a little more distant for your own health and well-being.

They’re one in the same

And then it hit me. In addition to being a mom, I’m also an entrepreneur, a professional risk taker. A serial Pleaper (i.e., Pink Leap of Faither). And in this conversation I’m just now realizing why those two aspects of my identity are SO important and SO related. What I realized today is: My JOB is giving birth and it’s also my LIFE. There’s no separating them out!

So now I realize I’m on the same adventure many of us find ourselves exploring, how to blend my creative energies in my professional, creative and family lives. When I think of it this way, I feel like a success as a creator; and by viewing all these adventures as creative efforts I find I’m having a lot more fun. Because the act of creation assumes a little mystery about what the end result will be and when I think of them as creative efforts I have less attachment to exactly how they come out in the end. I also realize they are creative collaborations with the people in my life – my husband, my kids, my partners, my clients – and where we share creative visions so much more is possible.

So what about you, Pinkies? Where are your lives rich with creative energy? What are your strategies for blending them? How do you infuse creative excitement into facets of your life? How do you manage the creative tensions that inevitably arise?

Love, light, and creation,
Dana

The Difference Between Curing and Healing

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

lissabuddhasmall

The Origins of Pain

I saw a patient today who inspired me- let’s call her Sally.  She suffers from a host of medical conditions that threaten to rob you of your mojo- fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and chronic pelvic pain.  When this young woman walked into my office, she looked like crap. Before looking at her chart, I thought she had cancer.  Gaunt and pale, her skin hung on her skeleton like she was in the last grip of life.  During the first half hour, she didn’t smile once. I felt the anxious tug we doctors feel when we see people like this, the one that says “I’m not going to be able to help this person,” which triggers insecurities and, often, judgments, in our own minds. It becomes about us, rather than being about them. We have a tendency to turn off because we don’t want to fail. But I vowed not to do this.  Sitting in her presence, I was determined to be present for Sally and sit with whatever is true, rather than letting my own stuff get in the way.

What is true for Sally is that she has spent the last decade plagued by pain, fatigue, and a body that is betraying her.  She has been to universities, fancy alternative medical clinics, and specialists. Someone told her that her condition is “incurable,” and somewhere, a while back, she decided to believe them. But she never gave up trying to be well.

When she came to see me for a gynecologic complaint, I heard her words, but what I saw in front of me told me that her condition was deeper than what her words betrayed. This was not about a pain in her pelvis, this was about a core wound.  I listened while she talked about her pelvis, but I focused more energy on watching her, feeling her, being with her in the moment. What rang out loud and clear was this message: “I am not well.” And yet, I could see this glowing, radiant energy beneath the surface, a vision of a vibrant, vital being, leaping in the air and spinning with glee.

Unbidden, she began to tell me about her favorite place, a remote town near Santa Fe, where she owns a vacation house. She fantasizes about quitting her job, living there full time, and spending time with animals in some way. Currently, she owns her own business, selling software to help people maintain their gardens.  She works until 2am many nights, finishing projects and meeting deadlines. A team of people bow to her leadership. Years ago, she gave birth to her company from a place of passion, but lately, she dreads everything about it. It has become her ball and chain, and she suspects it is related to her illness.

The Power to Heal

Last year, fed up with being sick, she considered quitting her job. She went as far as selling her primary residence, with the intention that she would live full time near Santa Fe. With money in the bank to help support her, she settled into a new life. And miraculously, her symptoms disappeared. For two whole months, she felt like a vibrant twenty year old, brimming with energy and vitality.  She hiked every day, ate wholesome food, wrote in her journal, and meditated. “I did everything right,” she said. And her body rewarded her with new life.

Then her mother had a heart attack, and she left Santa Fe to return to California, where she is now caretaking her family. Because she is back in the area, she has resurrected her business. Within days of returning to her old life, her symptoms reappeared. She has been coming to our integrative medicine center almost weekly ever since. Her thick chart belies a series of supplements, laboratory tests, and referral letters that conclude, “There is nothing we can do.”

Yet, to me, seeing Sally for the first time, the answer is obvious. Her body has already told her what it needs to be healed. She needs to release the expectation she has placed on herself to care for her family.  She needs to let go of her business. And she needs to move back to that small village near Santa Fe, where her body knows how to heal itself.  Only I can’t say this to her. It is not my place to give advice.  Advice implies that someone is broken- and nobody is broken.

Instead, I ask her, “What does your body need in order to get better?”

She says, “I need to find care for my mother, let go of my business, and move back to Santa Fe.”

Bingo.

When she says this, I see, for the first time of our visit, a faint smile. I ask her what she will do when she is there. She says, “Hike, ski, paint, play with my dog. Maybe start a new business, something related to animals.” Her smile widens. She begins to talk about the steps she would need to take in order to put this plan in place. Some steps she has already begun, as she has known intuitively what she needs to do. Within moments, she is grinning. I ask her how her pain feels in this present moment- right here, right now, and she says, “It’s gone.”

Then something shifts. A dark cloud wafts across her. She curls her shoulders inward.  Her smile disappears. Her brow furrows. Sally says, “I can’t do this. And what’s the point? My doctor said there was no cure for my condition.”

Healed Versus Cured

I can’t help telling her the story of my father. Dad was diagnosed with a gigantic goomba of a brain tumor when I was 7 months pregnant. A body scan revealed that there was cancer everywhere. A biopsy confirmed metastatic melanoma, which comes with a near certain death sentence. My father, a physician who did his senior thesis on melanoma, knew the facts about his prognosis. So when he called me one morning at 4am to say that he had a vision and that God had come to him to tell him he had been healed, I groaned. “Oh no,” I thought. “The brain tumor is growing. He’s delusional. And he’s in denial.”  I nodded and told Dad I was thrilled that he was healed, but I dreaded the repeat body scan that would tell him the truth. When the body scan showed that the tumors were growing, Dad got quiet. He didn’t speak of his vision again. My heart ached.

A month later, Dad failed to experience any of the expected symptoms of a gigantic brain tumor. He had no headaches, no seizures, no vomiting, no dementia. He was plain old Dad, only with a bald head from the whole brain radiation they gave him.  So when Siena was born and Dad said, “Can I go now?” I wasn’t prepared. What did he mean, “go?” What exactly did he plan to do?  Dad said he was going to quit eating and die a peaceful death. He wanted our permission. Reluctantly, we gave it.

Dad kissed us goodbye, and when I asked whether he was scared, Dad said, “I’m not scared. I’m joyful.” He kissed away our tears, closed his eyes, and died peacefully 48 hours later.

Only in retrospect did I learn a very important lesson- one that has fundamentally changed the way I practice medicine. I realized that, in spite of my skepticism, Dad had been healed- that there is difference between healing and curing. I always thought they were the same.  Now, I realize that you can healed without being cured, and you can be cured without being healed.  I spent 12 years of medical education learning how to cure people, but no one once spoke to me about healing. In fact, we don’t even use the term “Healing” in reference to patients. We might talk about a healing wound, but a healing patient? Nah. Too woo-woo.

The Whole Picture

So when that doctor told Sally that she would never be cured, he failed to look at the whole picture. Yes, there may not be a drug she can take to rid herself of symptoms permanently. But I absolutely believe that she can be healed. Her body has already proven it to her.  The power to heal lies within us all, if only we tap into it.

What about you Pinkies?  What needs to be healed in your body, your soul, your heart, your life?  What would it take to feel better? What steps might you take to put a healing plan into place? How can we support you?

Committed to helping you (and me) heal,

Lissa

How Secrets Make Us Sick

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

secretsA Pinkie just posted a comment in response to Mojo Mentor Fred Kraziese’s post God, Angels, Life and Moving On, and it inspired me to write a few words about the secrets that we keep. We learn to keep secrets from the time we’re very young. Your 6-year old best friend says, “I’ll tell you something, but you have to promise you won’t tell.”  Next thing you know, you’ve entered into an agreement to hold a confidence that may weigh on your soul.  We’ve all been there.  And most of us have secrets that we keep from others, even those of us who may seem like an open book.

A Secret Too Painful To Keep

A friend who I’ll call Alexis once told me a secret about how her father molested her, year after year.  She shared graphic stories about what he had done to her, how he had hurt her, what he made her do.  I was the only person she had ever told.  Her mother, her sister, her best friend from high school- none of them knew.  We were in college at the time, and I was still very young and naïve.  Alexis and I hadn’t known each other long, but we took a class that we jokingly called “Group Therapy,” because this small group seminar brought us to tears regularly and bonded us deeply.  Her story left me with nightmares and great fear for her well-being over Thanksgiving break, when she was going home, where her father still lived.  I didn’t know how to handle her secret, and I told someone else. I needed someone else to help me shoulder the burden. It eventually came between us.  I think Alexis expected me to offer her something I wasn’t mature enough to provide, and when I told a therapist about her secret, she felt betrayed.  Her secret weighs on me still.  I hope she is okay.

The Effect of Harboring Secrets on Your Health

Harboring secrets gnaws at our souls and robs us of our mojo.  Sure, some secrets can be fun, like the surprise party you’re planning for your mother or the diamond ring you’re about to spring on your sweetie. But you know the secrets I’m talking about, the ones that eat your cells like flesh-eating bacteria and can literally make your physical body shut down. I see this all the time in my private practice in an integrative medicine center.  The woman who has never told anyone about how she was raped manifests her trauma as chronic pelvic pain and sexual dysfunction.  The one who didn’t find out she was adopted until she was thirty and now feels so betrayed by her family that she cannot open her heart to love.  The lesbian who has been too frightened of rejection to come of the closet and has a plan for how to kill herself.  The woman who never told her husband about her abortions and is now infertile and blaming herself.  The woman who, until she met me, never told anyone how she abused her children and now suffers from depression, chronic fatigue syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, and chronic back pain.  Secrets make us sick. They’re like a cancer that metastasizes through our bloodstream and seeks to destroy every normal cell in our body.  I see it every day. The simple act of telling the truth begins the process of helping us release our pain.

How Fred’s Secret Confession Set Him Free

Do you have a secret?  When Fred told us about how he talks to angels, he trusted us with the task of holding the space for him as he processed his truth.  We showed up and validated him. We told him we believe him, that we love him, that his secret is safe with us.  What he did took tremendous courage, and it has transformed him by opening a door to truth, and with the truth, comes freedom.

About his experience, Fred wrote this:

“Writing this was a liberating moment for me on so many different levels. I know am free to acknowledge the existence of angels in my life every day, and as I said, they are everywhere — around us all the time.  It took me a very long time to get to this point (50 years to be exact). But, now that my own secret is out, I am free to live and connect to the beautiful joyful life that is all around me.  My encouragement to anyone holding deep wounds and secrets is to take baby steps. Allow yourself to breathe and feel. At some point, it does take an act of faith. But, the good news is that in a forum such as Owning Pink, taking that step to come out from behind your secret becomes easier, because this is a place where you are loved, where there is no judgment — only acceptance.”

What’s Your Secret, Pinkies?

We invite you to let your secret go.  Tell a trusted friend, a family member, a therapist, a shamanic healer, a life coach, a doctor, an energy healer, a massage therapist- whoever makes you feel safe, loved, and nurtured.   Here in this safe space, we invite you to tell us your secrets if that feels more authentic to who you are right now.  You may post comments here under a pseudonym if you wish. You may join our Pink Posse community and write for the Posse blog.  Your secret will be safe with us. We will hear your voice, honor you, and accept you, no matter where you are.

It’s Okay If You’re Not Ready

If you’re not ready to tell your secret, we honor that too. Take your time. As Fred said, take baby steps. Start by confessing your secret to yourself.  Accept the truth about yourself. Forgive yourself. Love yourself. It’s the first step towards healing, and we are here to support you, no matter where you are on the path to awakening.  Not every secret needs to be broadcast to the world.  We need not shout it from the rooftops to heal. Healing lies within. Check in with yourself, and go at your own pace. We are here to support you in your process…

With a deep breath and a big PINK hug to you all,

Lissa