Posts Tagged ‘nancy aronie’

How To Hold Space & Honor Loss

Friday, January 29th, 2010
Dan Aronie, our newest angel

Dan Aronie, our newest angel

Introducing Our Newest Angel
I’m wiping tears right now, Pinkies.
Pink Sage & Writing Genius Nancy Aronie’s dear son Dan died today. He was way too young, but after a long journey with multiple sclerosis, he has left this life for the next. When I heard the news, the floodgates opened, not just for Nancy’s loss, but for my own. Hearing her news brought me back two years, to the writing workshop I took with Nancy at Esalen Institute, where I met Pink Editor-in-Chief Joy, nearly a lifetime ago.

Holding Space For Loss
At the workshop, Nancy invited us to watch a documentary that was made about her son- his struggles, his path, how he overcame anger, resentment, and disability to find laughter, joy, and peace. I was hesitant to watch it. My own father had multiple sclerosis from a young age, and the wounds of losing him were still raw and bleeding. I wasn’t sure I could cope with what might come up if I witnessed Dan’s journey. But the amazing people in my workshop promised to hold me while we watched it together. One even went out and bought bottles of red wine so we could numb ourselves if necessary.

As Nancy prepared the DVD for viewing, the lovely beings in my class surrounded me with boxes of tissues and then guided me to the center of the room, where they huddled around me, touching me from all sides- a knee brushing mine, a head resting on my shoulder, an arm over my shoulder, a hand holding mine. Before Nancy pushed play, I started to cry, and the Posse of people gathered in closer. More hands touched me. I felt held.

As I watched Dan’s story, a story of loss, of disappointment, of dreams dashed, then of hope, triumph, healing, and the resilience of the human spirit, I cried. I felt deeply. I wept for the loss of my father, for Dan’s loss of physical strength, for Nancy’s loss of a healthy child. But I also cried with joy for the tenderness of the hands holding me, the feeling of safety that allowed me to sit among a group of people I had known for a mere three days, the beauty of true feelings expressed fully.

You Are Never Alone
By the time the movie was over, I felt fully embraced in the arms of those in that room- and I don’t think I was alone in feeling that way. Others cried. Other felt embraced. Dan invited all of us to experience loss with him, knowing we were safe in the arms of people we could trust. He guided us, showing us how much you can lose and still retain your spirit. He planted the seeds for what has become Owning Pink. He taught me what it means to be held, to be nurtured, to be cherished, to feel safe. Watching his movie that night taught me the value of community, the healing power of being held by those you can trust, the communal cleansing that happens when we live in love and feel the truth. Owning Pink began to gestate. Nancy and the people in her workshop taught how it’s possible to love people you don’t even know, when you open your heart fully. That group was the first Pink Posse.

(((((((((((((((Being Held))))))))))))))))))))))
A few months later, green shoots began to sprout from the fertile earth of that night. And almost exactly a year to the date later, Owning Pink was born. Very quickly, Pinkies flocked to the site like moths to flame. When Joy and I started Owning Pink, our mission statement was simple- “We want Owning Pink to invite people to go to that place of pain, knowing they are loved, safe, and nurtured.” Just like that night at Dan’s movie, I wanted people to feel empowered to face what hurts, while being held by many hands. The Pinkies quickly figured this out and started hugging each other with this symbol (((((((((((Pinkies)))))))))))))). Only today, Pink Goddess Dana pointed out that maybe this isn’t a hug, per se, as I had been thinking. Maybe it’s all those arms, just like the night of Dan’s movie, holding each Pinkie. I think she’s right. It’s about being held- fully, deeply, wholly.

Seeing Loss With Fresh Eyes
Just last night, I was at UCSF Medical School, taking Dr. Rachel Naomi Remen’s class “The Healer’s Art.” The subject of this week’s session was LOSS. Rachel reminded us that we are trained from early on to think that loss is bad, that LOSS=LOSER. But she says our losses do not diminish us. Loss is neutral. It’s the stories we tell ourselves- about life, love, other people, ourselves- that lead to suffering. Those stories expand or contract the quality of the lives we lead. She says that people rarely meet with loss in a genuine way- usually it’s “Let’s put this behind us and move on.” But loss is part of life. It’s a moment of truth, where we are invited to have a deeper knowledge of ourselves and others. She says the most common response to the loss of another person is to try to “fix” it, but fixing isn’t large enough for loss or for life. Rachel says, “Many things happen that are not fixable. But many things that can’t be fixed can still be healed. The goal in life is not to prevent loss but to meet loss in ways that are healing.”

I say, “Amen, sister.”

Reaching Out Without Trying to FIX Anything
And so, here I sit, grieving the loss of Dan, longing to ease Nancy’s pain, not quite sure what to say. And so I wrote her an email that read:

My heart is with you.
I hold you and sit silently with your loss.
Please know I am here for you- for anything.
Heaven just got really friggin’ lucky, love. Angels smiling everywhere.

What else can you say? But it turns out this is enough. It’s not our job to “fix” loss. Loss doesn’t need to be fixed. It just needs to be honored, to be held, to be witnessed with love, to be held with 16 hands in a circle and a box of Kleenex in between.

THIS IS WHAT WE DO
Do you see what I’m getting at, Pinkies? This is what we do. Joy just waxed poetic about this a few days ago, when a light bulb went off in her head and she suddenly realized that THIS IS WHAT WE DO. We just hold the space. We sit silently with each other’s stories. We hold each other.

What about you, Pinkies? How do you deal with loss? When you’ve suffered a loss, whether it’s the loss of a relationship, a dream, an object, your health, or a loved one, what have others done that helps you? What doesn’t help? How can we be more present for each other, to make this space even more healing? How can we be with loss, without trying to fix it?

Celebrating with the angels for Dan’s new life, and holding you (((((((((((((((((((((((Pinkies)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
And especially you, ((((((((((((((((Nancy)))))))))))))))))))
Lissa

PS. To see Dan’s film, A Certain Kind of Beauty, the one I saw at Nancy’s workshop, click here.

For those who wish to honor Dan Aronie, the family asks that you donate to a foundation on Martha’s Vineyard that helped Dan.
If you’d like, send your donation to:
You’ve got a Friend Foundation
PO box 1317
West Tisbury MA 02575
l 508 693 7733

Thank you Pinkies!
Dan, as a young stud:

Dan, as an angel-in-training in 2007

Live, Love, Heal

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

Who’d have thunk that I’d have to study more, after twelve years of medical education? Don’t get me wrong. I knew I’d have to put in my CME hours (continuing medical education). I’d like to say I read all of my journals, but truth be told, I only read some of them, cherry picked for the articles that tickle my fancy of the day. (We do get LOTS of journals). I know it’s important to stay abreast of medical research, so I study all the annual articles the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology sends me every year, not just the ones you have to read to keep up your board certification. This scheduled maintenance of professional development is key. After all, you don’t want us doctors to get all slack on you.

But I’ve discovered that this is not enough to keep me growing as a physician. Whether or not calcium supplementation helps to prevent severe preeclampsia (it appears not to) fails to delve deeper into my ultimate goal- becoming a better physician. I’m not just talking about improving my doctor book-learning. Well, I guess that’s not entirely true, since I’m reading a lot of books, but they’re not the kind of books you might imagine. The books I’m reading are gently and lovingly encouraging me to be a different kind of doctor, maybe even a healer.

I started by reading Anne Lamott, who I now affectionately term Annie, as if she’s my oldest friend from high school and we regularly have tea on Tuesdays. I wish. But Annie’s books allow you so deeply into her inner world that you feel like you know her. I hadn’t read any of Anne Lamott’s books until I was writing the last two chapters of I Don’t Do Men: Confessions of an OB/GYN. So when Barbara summed up my book as “Elizabeth Gilbert and Anne Lamott, but with lots of vaginas,” I couldn’t have been more delighted if someone had given me the Pulitzer Prize. It’s as if I had channeled Annie without ever knowing her work. I just read the first of her books in March, and since then, I’ve steadily plowed my way through most of them- Operating Instructions, Bird By Bird, Traveling Mercies, Plan B, and now, Grace (Eventually). It’s impossible to pick favorites- it would be like Sophie’s choice- but if a Nazi forced me to, I might have to choose Operating Instructions, if for no other reason than I am a new mother and an obstetrician, and the book is a memoir about her son’s first year. Touching, honest, revelatory, and funny as hell, Operating Instructions was the second book I read and the first of her books I started giving away regularly to women about to have a baby. It’s hard enough to be home with an infant, peering all to frequently inside your own spazzy brain, without feeling like you’re the only woman who ever wondered what possessed her to think becoming a mother was a good idea. Annie makes me feel less alone, in questioning faith, in hating the Mommy fanny pack that has taken up residence where my waist used to be, in seeking joy and beauty in strange and mysterious places. If I can learn some of this skill from her, the ability to make a complete stranger feel less alone, more inspired, imagine what I might be able to do with my patients!

And then there’s Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love. This book is such a runaway bestseller that to say I love this book makes me a cliché. But I’ll say it anyway. I love this book. Talk about making you not feel alone. I recommend this book to everyone who has ever been through a divorce, a career change, a life transition, a loss, or a time of painful self-reflection. Isn’t that all of us? I devoured the first half of this book in about 24 hours and then I took the rest of the month to finish it because I didn’t want it to end. I would glance at it on my nightstand, tempted to pick it up, to catch up with my old friend Liz, but I didn’t want to say goodbye to her, so as long as she lay on my nightstand, I felt a connection, as if someone else understood me. So there it is again, that beautiful sense of being gotten, that somebody sees your quirks and insecurities and not only understands but loves you all the more for what makes you uniquely human. If I can impart this to my patients, if I can make them feel just a wee bit the way Liz Gilbert makes me feel, won’t they be in a better place to heal, to be well?

You might be wondering why I’m reading Anne Lamott and Elizabeth Gilbert as part of my medical education, but you have to understand- they didn’t teach us any of this stuff in twelve years of book-learning. We learned organic chemistry and psychopharmacology and Mendelian genetics and journal club statistics, but nobody taught us how to help people from the inside out. I always assumed they would teach us the art of medicine when I went to medical school. How to intuit illness, how to touch someone’s spirit, how to heal. I never realized I had been trained to be merely a technician of the human body, like a good mechanic. Instead, I bought into the indoctrination, not questioning it, not demanding more. I graduated second in my class, won awards and membership in honor societies, and got accepted to a fabulous OB/GYN residency program at Northwestern University, where the black-and-white thinking prospered, while I stayed in my box.

Thoughts of enlightenment, spiritual awakening, and holistic healing never even occurred to me then. The closest I came was the yoga class I took at my gym. For the first ten minutes of the hour-long class, we breathed, big breath in through your head, big breath out from your heart. Breathe in, breathe out. I’m good at following instructions, so I breathed in and out, but after a few minutes, my brain started racing, yelling, screaming at me. “When are we gonna get some exercise! We only have one friggin’ hour this whole week to exercise, and you gonna sit here and breathe?” My flexible ballet dancer’s body caught on to the poses easily, but the breathing part? I sucked. After that one class, I swore off yoga and switched back to step aerobics.

When it comes to being a physician with an open mind towards holistic healing, I grew up with one giant strike against me- my Dad. A physician trained in the classic Western medicine style (which means lots of academics, very little intuition, and loads of scorn for anything you don’t understand), Dad made fun of any medical modality that didn’t fit neatly into his black leather medical bag. On the flip side, I had Aunt Trudy, the only hippie I knew before I moved back to California when I was thirty years old. Trudy wore muumuus, talked about “making space” for people, traveled to Santa Fe often, and believed there were crystals in our feet that needed to get broken up. Trained as a psychologist, Trudy practiced sand play therapy, with an office decked out with a sand box and lots of toys and figurines you could arrange in a particular order, which could help Trudy analyze your psyche. She cut out articles from magazines for me and bought me books about art and medicine when she found out I was passionate about painting. When her young son, my concert cellist cousin Corry, committed suicide, Trudy sought solace from a Christian psychic, who helped her communicate with her beloved son and helped her learn to stop blaming herself.

While Dad loved his brother’s funky, nutty wife, he harassed her constantly, for believing in “all that crap.” Trudy must have believed Dad needed healing most of all, since he returned from most visits to her house with various forms of holistic remedies. For months, the top of our refrigerator sported some stinky mushroom tea that Trudy swore would help Dad with his multiple sclerosis, and she tried really hard to let her work on the crystals in his feet. When Dad was diagnosed with a brain tumor, Aunt Trudy called me, conspiratorially, about launching a full-out intervention to get Dad on a macrobiotic diet, in addition to a host of other holistic health remedies that might help him. She knew it would be a tough sell, and it was. The minute I mentioned a macrobiotic diet, Dad ordered spicy chicken wings and an ice cream sundae.

When I was young, all the healing mumbo-jumbo struck me as a bit odd. I wasn’t sure about the stinky mushroom tea, and while I liked foot rubs, I wasn’t sure they could cure Dad’s neurological condition. But I adored my wacky aunt and her special yarn-braided art creations and her soul-driven musings and her exploring spirit. While the other members of the Rankin clan droned on about world politics or the best new SUV or what was happening in the Florida Conference (Trudy’s husband- my Uncle Larry- was a Methodist minister, of all things), Trudy would ask me about my feelings. After living in Costa Rica, where she and Larry were involved in missionary work, Trudy grew to love ethnic art and music, and when I became an artist, we had even more to talk about. The more I aged, the more curious I became about the things she believed- the mushroom tea and the psychic and the crystals. But my Dad never created an environment that left me feeling supported in my growing curiosity. I didn’t feel safe confessing my feelings to Dad, since he might have made fun of me the way he did when I tried to learn Spanish and he mocked my bad accent. Plus, I got wrapped up in my own self-centered life and never took the time to explore the inner-workings of Aunt Trudy.

Other than Aunt Trudy, no one ever exposed me to anything mystical, transformative, or healing outside the box of academic medicine. If it couldn’t be tested with a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial, it didn’t exist, as far as I was concerned. The only exception was God, who I couldn’t prove but believed, nontheless. But even God was housed in a boxy church, with enrobed preachers and a dutiful congregation. My religious upbringing didn’t allow much room for a God who inhabits strange guises. While I knew there were psychics, who wrapped their heads in turbans and surrounded themselves with crystals, I didn’t know about medical intuitives or energy medicine or shamanic journeys. I had heard of acupuncture, envisioning it as some sort of Chinese torture device, but I had never heard of naturopathy or feng shui or reiki therapy.

But I think we missed something in our medical training by ignoring these modalities of healing. I only recently began thinking outside my doctor box, the one that told me that these things were, if not a bunch of bunk, not practitioners I wished to include in my treatment plans. Now, that has changed. I took a five-day writing workshop at Esalen Institute in Big Sur with a fabulous teacher, Nancy Aronie. I live near Esalen, and for years, I had been feeling its draw, but aside from touring the grounds and spending my wedding night in their hot springs at 1am, when the public is allowed to visit, I had never experienced Esalen I finally indulged the magnetic allure and took the writing workshop because, of all the fabulous workshops available, that one sounded the least scary. I wasn’t quite ready for Tantric Sexuality or Vision Seekers (although now, that sounds kind of fun!) When I arrived, a whole slew of wonderful, mysterious things happened (they’re described in I Don’t Do Men) that inspired me to veer off the traditional path and learn more about how to become a healer. If only I could combine what I learned from Anne Lamott and Elizabeth Gilbert and mix it in with what others have learned about healing outside of the box, maybe I could do something really beautiful with my life.

At Esalen, I met many holistic health providers. And not only were they happier than any of the doctors I know these days, it seems that maybe they are even healing people, more than we are. I’m not talking about curing your urinary tract infections. We doctors do just fine with that. But so many chronic conditions plague my patients- endometriosis, infertility, chronic pelvic pain, irritable bowel syndrome. And we have so little in our doctor box that can truly help these women. Yet, these holistic practitioners seem to have accepted something critical-the mind-body connection. Plus, they’re listening and touching and honoring people, in a way we doctors find it hard to do in 7 1/2 minutes of a busy managed care practice. I found myself wishing I had studied acupuncture. Don’t get me wrong- I’ve got a lot of good tricks in my doctor box. But I think that’s only a piece of the puzzle. It shouldn’t have to be either/or. Why can’t Western trained doctors work in concert with holistic healers, as partners, rather than as competitors. It’s thrilling, really. And what if I saw fewer patients, made less money, and spent more time listening, inspiring, and holding space for these women who come to me, wanting to be whole?

So now I’m reading everything I can find that’s written by an MD who has climbed out of the traditional doctor box and explored another path. Judith Orloff’s Intuitive Healing, Christiane Northrup’s Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom, and Rachel Naomi Remen’s Kitchen Table Wisdom and My Grandfather’s Blessings are the first books I raced through. I’m also exploring How Doctor’s Think, by Jerome Groopman, and Atul Gawande’s Complications: A Surgeon’s Notes on an Imperfect Science and Better: A Surgeon’s Notes on Performance. And I just read Kris Carr’s fabulous Crazy Sexy Cancer Tips. But more on all of those later…

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