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What makes a life worth living?
Many of us would be offended at the suggestion that we believe a
good life to be an able-bodied life. And yet we must come to
terms with the extent to which this is an implicitly shared
assumption, says LATA MANI.
"IT is probably just as well that she died, even though it was so
unexpected," says the woman who is trimming my hair. "She was
pretty miserable, you know, couldn't leave her bed, became
incontinent ... What kind of a life is that?" Her voice trails,
leaving her question hanging in the air between us. My head is in
her hands, so I feel it all the more necessary to exercise
prudence in not delivering the sermon that is forming itself in
my consciousness. I use the word sermon advisedly, because I have
found it increasingly difficult to bide my tongue when I hear
such sentiments as those just expressed. "It was a mercy he died.
This was no way to live. He used to be so independent! By the end
he needed help with the smallest of tasks. It was sad, so
pathetic to see that happen."
The reader could wonder if the speakers were not, after all,
extending compassion to fellow beings in the throes of suffering.
This may be so, but their statements equally well reflect a deep
rooted bias in contemporary society against those whose bodies
refuse, on account of illness, aging or disability, to submit to
decorum and respectability as currently defined. What is it that
these physically challenged bodies represent? Why this fear and
loathing of suffering? Why the desire to tidy away someone whose
life does not conform to the ideal of independence, health, self-
regulation? What view of life is contained in the amalgam of
concern, fear and pity that is expressed when one encounters a
life organised (or reorganised) by disability or dependence?
When bodies do not confirm to the so-called perfection of the
able bodied, when they careen, lose balance, sway into objects,
trip over themselves, insist on moving in directions and at
speeds unexpected, some notion of order is disrupted. The loss of
control flowing from the perceived chaos of unpredictable bodies
gives rise to fear and anxiety. Certainly, genuine concern may
well be present, but the shadow side of this compassion is
equally a reality.
It is odd that humans should cling to some conception of a fit
body, one that can be disciplined at will. For it is precisely in
relation to the body that we most intimately experience the
centrality of change and impermanence. Bodies age, change shape,
develop skills and even lose them. Why then are we surprised when
a life takes residence in the territory of disability or illness?
Are we afraid of what the future might hold for us? When we claim
that the release of such a life into the eternal is a blessed
event, are we projecting what we imagine to be a relief in such
circumstances?
Many of us would be offended at the suggestion that we believe a
good life to be an able-bodied life. And yet we must come to
terms with the extent to which this is an implicitly shared
assumption. It is this that makes it perfectly legitimate for a
person to reject a potential spouse if the latter were to be
found to suffer from some ailment, even one that is treatable and
non-communicable. It is also this view that makes it seem as
though it were an act of charity when a person marries another
despite knowledge of their medical condition. But bodies do not
obey the dictates of society, even though humans will try to re-
shape, starve or punish themselves, and in other ways accommodate
prevailing social norms. And in their waywardness, bodies offer
us the opportunity to stop and reflect upon our assumptions about
a good life or worthy existence.
Many ideas are interwoven in this celebration of a fit and
healthy body or one which, though challenged, is able to be
independent. The desirability of the well body is linked to the
idealisation of independence. Even though all of us are
absolutely interdependent on a daily basis, on a range of people
near and far, known and unknown, independence is seen to define
adulthood. Dependence is not merely expected, but treasured, in a
baby or child. Adults revel in being able to provide for the
smallest need or wish of a child. Dependency in adulthood,
however, provokes quite a different response: a seeming
regression in the eyes of the beholder. That which was touching
at one end of one's life is seen to be a regrettable development,
even a shameful one, at the other end of our days.
Certainly, loss of independence can be disempowering. One lives
with a great deal less flexibility, since one is compelled to
meld one's routines and hopes with those of the persons upon whom
one relies. But the shame felt at such disempowerment is entirely
a consequence of the social attribution of embarrassment to
dependence manifested by adults, especially those in their prime.
It is small wonder, then, that disability and illness can also
lead the person so challenged to feeling a sense of
worthlessness, something that a child rarely feels on account of
her or his dependence on adults.
This sense of worthlessness is not simply an effect of the
inability to approximate the ideal of independence, but is also a
consequence of the enormous importance given to "doing" in our
society, that is to say, to a particular conception of activity.
The kinds of doing or activity that we undertake are seen to have
some bearing on the quality of life that we are leading. Those
whose lives cannot exhibit the signs of action so defined
consequently feel confusion as to the purpose of their existence.
Take for instance, persons who are bedridden, house bound or
limited in the kinds of physical activity they are able to engage
in because of infirmity or disability. The challenge of their
situation often demands more of them cognitively and physically
than people around them, but their efforts fall beyond the bounds
of a narrow definition of action or doing. Their work to process,
confront and live creatively with their situation remains
invisible, unclassifiable. It is in this context that one can
simply say about oneself or another, "What is the point of
carrying on like this?"
This presupposition is also at play in the statement, "I keep
myself busy", sometimes uttered by the ill or the aged or persons
whose daily life does not exhibit the expected signs of activity
given their age, gender or location in the life cycle. Such an
utterance indicates that despite outer appearances such a life
has substance. The person is not, as it were, simply marking
time. Yet the phrase, "I keep myself busy", itself implies that a
full life is synonymous with plenitude of action and that, in the
absence of sufficient signs of socially recognised and expected
activity, life may justifiably be thought to be empty. But empty
of what? Empty of certain kinds of activity perhaps, but empty of
meaning? Is someone who is paralysed by a stroke or slowed down
by age merely existing, but not actively living? Do we discern
aliveness primarily by means of the capacity for physical
activity undertaken either on one's own or another's behalf? Why
is our sense of purpose tied to what we do, to the roles we
perform: mother, doctor, businessman, activist, teacher? Who are
we, stripped of these?
We have walked quite a distance from our initial encounter with
the hairdresser, but the journey has been necessary, for
prejudices against the ill or disabled or aged have equally to do
with our ideas about the well and able-bodied, and the one cannot
be challenged without the other. The issues posed by illness,
disability or aging are finally inseparable from those
encountered by individuals whose lives presently seem to be
disconnected from these concerns on account of health,
ablebodiedness and youth.
If, as we have seen, some of this prejudice relates to the kinds
of doing we value or devalue, each of us may do well to
contemplate how we currently assess and value our life and our
labour. What is included and what excluded in our estimation of
what we consider to be significant about our lives? Such an
exercise may serve to liberate us in the present, even as it
prepares us to meet our futures and those of others with greater
wisdom and genuine compassion.
Lata Mani is the author of Interleaves: Ruminations on Illness
and Spiritual Life, distributed by goodbuks@vsnl.com
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