December 2, 2012

Dr. Gabor Maté: “When the Body Says No: Understanding the Stress-Disease Connection”

The Vancouver-based Dr. Gabor Maté argues that too many doctors seem to have forgotten what was once a commonplace assumption—that emotions are deeply implicated in both the development of illness and in the restoration of health. Based on medical studies and his own experience with chronically ill patients at the Palliative Care Unit at Vancouver Hospital, where he was the medical coordinator for seven years, Dr. Gabor Maté makes the case that there are important links between the mind and the immune system. He found that stress and individual emotional makeup play critical roles in an array of diseases.

It’s also typical for people that develop ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. I talk about the example of Lou Gehrig, if I may tell you about that. Lou Gehrig was this great baseball player, a teammate of Babe Ruth’s on the New York Yankees. And he set a record for consecutive games played that stood for nearly sixty years. Now, Gehrig wasn’t just a great athlete. He was also dutiful. He—it’s not that he was never hurt. At one point, his hands were x-rayed. It turns out his fingers had been fractured seventeen separate times. And his teammates described him as grimacing like a mad monkey in agony when he fielded the ball. But he never took himself out of a game, because he was too dutiful to his own self-image and also to the fans and to the owners. Now, that sense of responsibility, and not looking after yourself, is totally typical of everybody who develops ALS. And it goes back to their childhoods, because, just like with the woman with rheumatoid arthritis, she was a failure the moment she was born, because her mother conceived her to keep the marriage together with the father. The marriage broke up, and she never had the feeling that she was accepted and liked for who she was, therefore she had to become this dutiful caregiver. Lou Gehrig’s father was an alcoholic, and Gehrig learned very early in life that he had to take care of others, as the children of alcoholics often do. And that then became his pattern until he could no longer drag himself around the baseball diamond because of the ALS, which in North America, of course, is known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.
Democracy Now Feb. 15, 2010

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi, I came across this page after writing a tribute to my Father, who died of ALS / MND two years ago today.
I'd particularly like anyone who is in early stage ALS to read this. It may be painful, but i hope that it may also offer some hope...
With love,
Ben Ralston

http://benralston.blogspot.com/2010/05/tribute-to-my-father.html

Anonymous said...

I think this article is skewed and holds an agenda. It is only slightly covering the fact it is judgmental and uses broad terms "too dutiful to his own self-image and also to the fans and to the owners. Now, that sense of responsibility, and not looking after yourself, is totally typical of everybody who develops ALS.
And it goes back to their childhoods," A wise person knows it is easy to paint co-relation where there may or ay not be any. Very typical psychological view to pin illness on unresolved child hood issues. You gave yourself away when you posted it is typical of "everybody". broad terms like typical and everybody are mindless and reveal lack of spiritual awareness or at least reveal a level not very elevated.
I am qualified to comment as a person with ALS and your observation is short sighted and may appear to be insightful however, I suggest not everybody fits your small mined thinking on the subject of ALS cause. You have walked to one side of a pyramid and think you "know". You do not. I do not expect a challenge will be posted as this response does not meet the "little" view of ALS cause and associations. Sad