This week's post is written by Judith Edwards, the psychoanalytic psychotherapist who started the free website cansurviving.com in order to help people recover from the trauma of a cancer diagnosis. She discusses the importance of Narrative in the cancer healing process.
Summary
Five years ago I
started a free site www.cansurviving.com
which is currently accessed in 46 countries. It sells nothing except self-
empowerment, helping people to explore alternative and complementary treatments
to standard chemotherapy/radiotherapy
treatment, and to aid the healing process. This site and its success has
caused me as a psychoanalytic psychotherapist of over thirty years to think
about ways in which these professional links have helped the site in its onward
journey. I previously wrote a paper entitled ‘Cancer Healing and Containment’.
I go on here to think about how this very process of containment then enables a
new narrative to be created over time. I also explore how the group is a
powerful tool in helping people manage ‘life after cancer’.
Keywords: cancer healing;
narrative and narrative research; brain research and neuro-plasticity;
containment
Introduction:
Narrative research
emerged as a discipline within the broader field of qualitative research in the
early 20th century. A narrative is normally recognised as being ‘a
series of connected events’ - which then form a coherent story in the mind. The
great psychoanalyst Wilfred Bion worked with psychotic people who for one
reason or another had experienced a break in connective linkages: they lived in an unconnected world and Bion
coined the term ‘bizarre objects’ for what he experienced as happening in the consulting room, as these bizarre ‘bits’ were projected not only
into him but into the concrete objects in the room.(Bion, 1962:24-27) In a
sense these people had become fragmented, terrified and alone. Some internal or
external trauma had rendered them unable to think and make ordinary connections
in their minds. He says elsewhere in the same book: ‘before an emotional
experience can be used for a model its sense data has to be transformed into alpha elements... {thinkable
thoughts} The narrative form is associated with the theory of causation...’ (p.74)
Any cancer diagnosis is
a trauma, both for the person who hears the words ‘you have cancer’ and the
family and friends surrounding the afflicted patient. The capacity to ‘get what
is said’ - which is called introjection in psychoanalytic language - may freeze
up. There may be an active avoidance of the message, or an initial passive
unresponsiveness before the full import of the words are taken in. This
‘playing possum’ (Broucek, 1979 ) is one reaction which may come into play when
there is a feeling of inefficacy - why has this happened? Why me? What have I
done? For some people these three words
spell the beginning of a new state of mind, designated as PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder). In
this state of mind it is often hard to sleep, often the traumatic diagnosis is
relived through nightmares and flashbacks, and people may experience feelings
of isolation, irritability and guilt as I have already described in a previous
article, Cancer Healing and Containment (see Edwards, 2017) These
symptoms, as I pointed out, can range from mild to severe, and can have a
significant impact on a person’s daily life. The site www.cansurviving.com was set up by me, a
psychoanalytic psychotherapist, in order to help myself and others back to some
sense of coherent narrative after the trauma of hearing those three words ‘you
have cancer’. Antonio Damasio (2000:134) under a sub-heading ‘The Need For Stability’ talks about ‘the processing of the self from the simple
core self to the elaborate autobiographical self’...Continuity of reference is
in effect what the self needs to offer’. His book demonstrates the importance
of the neurophysiology of emotions. Our consciousness, our sense of being,
arises out of the development of emotion: the ‘very thought’ of oneself, the
experiencing self. As I and countless others know, the experiencing of the self
receives a huge and traumatic blow when the cancer diagnosis is
pronounced. The sense of continuity
tends to be disrupted and the ‘self’ tends to become a series of fragmented
pieces which one might (without using the term psychotic) link with Bion’s idea
of ‘bizarre objects’. One is in a broad sense catapulted into ‘a state of
disunity’ in the self. This 'sense of
disunity’ in his/her patient is perhaps something which the medical ‘expert’
knows about but defends against, in a natural way to protect her/his own sense
of self.
The story that started
it all
This is just one story-
from the person who gave me the impetus to start this site in fact: this has
not been aired before and I will not mention the person's name...”no, they
could operate on me, in fact wanted to excise my neck of all lymph nodes...they
initially took a lump low on my neck as they couldn't get anything from several
needle biopsies... they'd been going to remove one higher up, but by the time
they came to do it, it had disappeared....that was around Octoberish I
think....then at Christmas they wanted to excise the neck.... the lump that was
evident there had now shrunk also, and I agreed to let them take further
biopsies from nose throat tonsils etc, but not to strip the neck right out,
because the lump that had been there was now almost gone...they were still
trying to locate the primary source. The diagnosis originally given was that it
was secondaries that were evident in the lymph nodes, but despite all the
proddings, pokings, insertion of things where they shouldn't ever go and scans,
the finest oncological minds of the region could not find the primary site....
but they still wanted to carry on with their traumatic investigative
practices.... when it became clear that even if they did find the site of the
primary, and deal with it in some way, it wouldn't make that much difference
because the secondaries would get me.... these are their words....So I had CUP.... cancer with an unknown
primary.... this relates to about 10% of all cancers, but it's not very well
known...so yes... I was glad that they'd decided I was beyond help... it gave
me a clear field to do as I wished (which he then did in terms of research
which was then passed on to me).... It has bee n a very interesting
experience.... most life changing.... if you want to survive it that is..... if
you just want a white coat to give you a magic bullet, so you can get back to
your normal life, or if you believe in the doctor's curse, then I’d say these
efforts aren't a good investment.....but if you're prepared to rise to the
occasion.....It was Einstein who said something along the lines of.... you
can't solve any problem from within the same consciousness that created
it....there's nothing quite as worthwhile as raising your consciousness, don't
you think?”
The cansurviving site had this mail from a
journalist site member who had recently been diagnosed.’I wanted to thank you
very very much for being so kind to me.{the power of containment} Initial diagnosis and those damn scans were
shocking...I have to admit I'm no longer in a permanent state of panic, that
subsided thanks to you but it's still far from ideal. Meanwhile I'm following a
fairly rigid diet and having acupuncture. And have just about recovered from my
shock about how revolting vegan and sugar free chocolate is!’ Slowly does it:
baby steps which are indeed what the contained baby learns to take. But the
battle between emotion and reason wages strongly inside the individual’s mind.
Sophisticated moral and rational thinking is abandoned and the internal world
feels as the quotation above indicates in ‘a permanent state of panic’. But
people are not statistics: we all need to be treated as human beings with our
own lives, feelings and wishes. Can a sense of narrative be restored, which
incorporates but is not overwhelmed by the new information about the diagnosis? In an article about a
traumatised adolescent portrayed in a film Morvern Callar, (Edwards,
2017,:119-130) I examined how trauma can be denied and un-registered in the
emotional life of an overwhelmed person. Others then may feel what the
dissociated person perhaps cannot feel. Many people report feeling numbed and
dissociated after receiving a cancer diagnosis: how can feeling be returned and
a new narrative be resumed?
The new narrative
The three first items
on the Stress Index are death, divorce and moving. All three of these can also
refer to what happens when a person receives a cancer diagnosis: there is a
death of the old self, which will never return, a divorce from previous ‘ways
of being’, and a moving slowly over time
to a new way of being which encompasses what has taken place, and also moves
the individual into a new ‘way of being with the self and others’ with all the
changes that have taken place. In The Good Life (Music 2014; 97) the
author quotes Affonso and his cohort of researchers who found that the capacity
to make decisions and be attuned to one’s own and others’ distress depends on
this experience of having been well attuned to. The cansurviving site
which has grown so well was started by someone who had felt very much listened
to by the person whose story is recounted above, who now, eight years on, is
healthy and happy having been told to go home and make his will and prepare to
die. His secondary tumours (the primary tumours as indicated were never
identified) have disappeared. This was for me the beginning of a new narrative:
one where some hope and indeed some experience could help with the inevitable
depression and hopelessness which can often beset those faced with those stark
three words, ‘you have cancer’.
The success of the
cansurviving group lies I suggest in this very notion of providing a new
narrative for the suffering person, and a narrative which does not emanate from
just one person, but from a group. On the site, which grows as we have grown,
there is a Forum called ‘How do I Start? This has the strapline ‘do you feel
dazed and confused?’ as so many people do, wading around in the sea of
information available on the internet We
offer the idea of sitting down , not falling into the urgency trap, listening
to some music and a radio show, and thinking about causes, symptoms and effects
in a simple way. If this cancer has taken a long time to develop in the body,
the body can then start to render itself inhabitable to further cancers, and
the person may think about living with the cancers if they are already in the body, rather than die of them.
This new narrative ‘story stem’ can then take root in the mind, affecting the
old neural pathways so that they begin to die off, and creating new ones, as science has shown
(Cunningham, 1982). Cunningham’s work
describes the naturally occurring neuron death and its regulation by the
development of new neural pathways. This offers us the idea which has now been
well-researched about neuro-plasticity. Unlike a computer, the brain is
constantly adapting itself. Norman Doidge in his exciting book The Brain
that Changes Itself talks of the brain ‘not being an inanimate vessel that we
fill: rather it is more like a living creature with an appetite, one that can
grow and change itself with proper nourishment and exercise. (Doidge,
2007:47) Removal of targets for certain
populations of neurons accentuates the normal attrition of neurons during
development. So what is the old narrative or target idea here? The ‘target’
idea after receiving cancer diagnosis is often that this is a non-survivable
event, or one at least that will not be able to be survived without
considerable (and very difficult) medical intervention, with surgery,
chemotherapy and radiation. The target idea here is that the self has given up
being in the driving seat, which is a seat taken over by orthodox medicine.
While orthodox medicine may be indeed a treatment of choice, it is not the only
choice, and when people emerge from being treated they often feel lost and
alone without the solace of the medical team around them – a team which of
course inevitably moves on and is not particularly invested in the individual's
survival, nor can they be.
The group narrative
The idea of working in
a group was one which appealed to me following beneficial and creative
experiences of so doing in my work context at the Tavistock Clinic. Group work
is a form of voluntary association of members who all benefit from a form of
cooperative learning that enhances the total output of the activity more than
when done individually. It aims to cater for individual differences, develop
skills such as collaboration and critical thinking, towards the creation of
what one might call ‘a group mind’. You change the way I unfold, I change the
way you unfold- we become co-workers in this new enterprise. The aforementioned
psychoanalyst Wilfred Bion pioneered work in groups, analysing the underlying
unconscious processes which might affect the running of the ‘work group’. His influential book Experiences in Groups and other papers (1961) was less a guide for
the therapy of individuals within or by the group, than an exploration of the
processes set off by the complex experience of being in a group. The book
quickly became a touchstone work for applications of group theory in a wide
variety of settings. The group work which takes place under the umbrella of www.cansurviving.com is not however a
project designed to analyse participants (or the Site Founder!) but to offer a
way forward in which all members can feel they are a part. It is an awakening
in which all members of the group can experience themselves as co-workers as I
have said. Each member writes her or himself into the group narrative. As one
member said ‘I couldn't do this by myself’.
There have been the odd posts about such things as Burberry handbags,
and the usual crop of robots at the beginning, but now the group seems to work
for the good of all participants and is creating a vast resource which one of
our members called ‘brilliant’.
We have a Newsletter
which also helps our members feel that they are part of a project, an ongoing
narrative which they can influence,
rather than being external to it.
One member wrote this message after our last Newsletter, which includes
news of all the central team members (of which there are five including the
site founder) . ‘Thank you so much for including us in your newsletter. It is great to find out more about your
helpers, and it tends to make them people we feel we can know rather than just
a name. Barbara and I admire the efforts all make to ease concerns and assist
so many people get through the dreaded C. We also believe a website focussed on
building personal stamina in the so many ways members suggest can assist far
more than many of the product suggestions offered. We are not against any product or suggestion
that can be offered to anyone, in some way they can all help somewhat we
guess? It is the mind set to get
through the problem that we find helps so many people with any issue they may
be facing and your website could quite often be the "Key starter" for
this.” The idea of the site being a ‘Key Starter’ is an excellent one- and it
IS the start of something new...there is no going back and most people really
appreciate that, and enjoy new lives in the company of others. Being part of this site and helping it grow
is one of the activities that make up the whole that is ‘the designated
patient’, no longer an isolate but part of a vibrant group and able to
contribute on all the Forums on the site, including Diet, (with sub-sections on
naturopathy, homeopathy and acupuncture)
Mind and Spirit, Depression, a Library, and Vegan-friendly restaurants.
And of course the elephant often unmentioned in the room, Death, under a title
‘Will you or Won’t you’. Atul Gawande’s Reith Lecture and his book ‘Being
Mortal’ are mentioned here. As he says ‘if talking were a drug it would cost
millions of pounds’ as we change our narrative through this group communication
we not only change ourselves but give back to others. These changes are hard
work for most of us, make no mistake about it, and one can benefit from returning
to the narrative when one is discouraged. Athletes practise this kind of daily
discipline, and cansurvivors too can begin to cultivate this new mindset in
order to effect change and to maintain it.
A sense of ease with the new life pattern does emerge over time.
Gradually adding in raw, organic foods, super-herbs, clean water, exercise,
deep sleep and meditation etc. into our daily lives will cause an undeniable
shift in metabolism and in the ability to go out in the world and carry on
living . As people begin to feel the
results from the shifts being made, they regain happier states of mind and feel
compelled to share what they know in the growing narrative- as was I. It
spreads from there. This type of personal experience is what cascades into more
and more people making changes and transforming from the inside out (Edwards,
Cancer Healing and Containment, 2017).
One has to be one’s own
advocate, but in the company of others, make one's own decisions, in a world
post-cancer diagnosis where there are no magic bullets and no cast-iron
guarantees whichever route you choose to take.
When I first was
diagnosed with cancer I dreamed of driving in my car into a huge black cloud. I
could see nothing. But I could see that further along - but how much further
along- the cloud turned into thin fog,
then who knew what came next? Yes, a storm was brewing. I can now look back,
and I really resonated with something Haruki Murakami said in his novel Kafka on the Shore.
"Once the storm is over you won't remember how you made it through, how you managed to survive. You won't even be sure, in fact, whether the storm is really over. But one thing is certain. When you come out of the storm you won't be the same person who walked in. That's what this storm's all about."
The way of narrative
and a new story is how we discover who we are; all of us on this site have
discovered something more about ourselves through being part of this group
venture. Creativity after diagnosis is something which unites us all, and is
also the name of a Forum on the site, where ‘famous’ people and also just
‘ordinary’ people find out that creative wellsprings become stronger in the
face of adversity . This is not about creating a revenue stream, but a new
stream of conscious awareness which affects how we live our lives
post-diagnosis. Eve Ensler, creator of the Vagina Monologues, was diagnosed
with Stage 3-4 cancer several years ago –‘Cancer was just like a smash into the
wall. When I sat there and they said the
cancer might be in your liver too, it was like a new world. Wake the fuck up,
sister! And I bless it…Was I glad to get cancer? Are you kidding? Of course I
am. I wasn’t in the beginning. But then I really got it. I’d always been out to
prove myself: was I going to prove myself to death? Now? I’m missing seven
organs and 70 nodes, and I’m functioning. How would I not love this body? Once
you live in your body, you can just be’.
Conclusion
What I hope to have
demonstrated here is that the importance of the new narrative cannot be underestimated
in the overall picture of healing from cancer. This allied to working in a
group, creating a new narrative in which each individual is part of the whole,
is a vivifying and helpful process, as many people writing to us have
testified, and as the rising numbers on the site also bear witness to. The
third point in this triangle for me has been the experience amassed over thirty
years from my professional work, and these three aspects together have produced
something which has been called by an Australian member who was recommended the
site by US colleagues as ‘the best site on the web for healing cancer’. Since
there are over nine million of them that is indeed an accolade.
References
Bion, Wilfred R.(1962) Learning
from Experience, London, Karnac
Broucek, F.J. (1979)
‘Efficacy in Infancy’ International Journal of Psychoanalysis 60:311-16
Cunningam, T.J. (9182)
‘Naturally Occurring Neuron Death and its regulation by the development of new
Neural Pathways’ International Review of Cytology, 74:163-186
Damasio, Antonio (2000)
The Feeling of What Happens: Body, emotion and the making of consciousness
London, Vintage Books
Doidge, Norman (2007) The
Brain that Changes Itself London and
New York, Penguin Books
Edwards, Judith (2107) Love
the Wild Swan: Selected Works in the world library of Mental Health, London
and New York, Routledge
Music, Graham ((2014) The
Good Life: Wellbeing and the new science of altruism, selfishness and
immorality, London and New York, Routledge
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