Becoming A True Human podcast.3 Holding Our Own

This next podcast is one from the archives – a conversation with my friend Jonathan McFarland (president of the Doctor as a Humanist) from July 29, 2023.

Jonathan and I have been comparing our KU (Kopacz Units) & MU (McFarland Units) as both of us have worked our way through phases of health and illness. I can tell that I was not feeling very well during this interchange, it was about a month after I started going back to work, after 2.5 months off for illness, and I was still quite fatigued.

We discuss wide-ranging array of topics, as usual, including:

  • holding our own
  • flourishing and thriving (or the lack thereof)
  • is health is more than the absence of disease?
  • the work of Doctor as a Humanist
  • shaking and quaking
  • the counter-curriculum
  • listening to the body
  • lost in the wilderness of the body
  • lost in the sterile corridors of contemporary medicine
  • Ivan Illich, Sir William Osler, Arthur Kleinman, CLOSLER, Siddhartha Mukherjee, Karl Marlantes
  • micro-invalidations in medicine
  • the project of science and the silencing of the human element
  • what it feels like to be on the receiving end of reductionistic medicine
  • doctors as information managers and technicans vs. healers

We close with the summary:

“Medical schools and medical education – and continuing medical education as well – are very good at
taking a human being and turning them into a technician, but they’re not very good at helping that technician connect to the human being of themselves, or the patient.” (Kopacz)

Becoming A True Human podcast.2: Health & Unhealth

Join Chris Smith & Dave Kopacz for the second episode – Health & Unhealth – of the Becoming a True Human podcast (the first where the video recording worked!). We discuss themes of the wounded healer, transforming suffering, caring moment meditation, Sustainable Compassion Training and the work of John Makransky and Paul Condon, the poetry of Rumi, and how hope can open doors. (1 hour)

From “Childhood Friends”

Trust your wound to a teacher’s surgery.
Flies collect on a wound. They cover it,
those flies of your self-protecting feelings,
your love for what you think is yours.

Let a teacher wave away the flies
and put a plaster on the wound. Don’t turn your head. Keep looking
at the bandaged place. That’s where
the light enters you.
     And don’t believe for a moment
that you’re healing yourself.

Rumi, Jalal Al-Din; Barks, Coleman.

The Essential Rumi – reissue: New Expanded Edition (p. 142).

Becoming A True Human.2: Health & Unhealth