Cape Times

Quest to end chronic pain

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HEAL ME: IN SEARCH OF A CURE Julia Buckley Loot.co.za (R303) Weidenfeld & Nicolson

READ any of the epigraphs that head up each of the chapters in Julia Buckley’s truly fascinatin­g memoir, Heal Me, and it’s a reminder that there’s a rich tradition of autobiogra­phical accounts of illness and suffering.

Buckley is only the latest in a long line of women who’ve put pen to paper to write about their pain.

That she identifies with these women who’ve come before her is important, for one of the struggles Buckley is up against is her gender.

More than a century has passed since the protagonis­t of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper spirals into actual psychosis after her physician husband diagnoses her with “hysteria”, but Buckley’s treatment at the hands of multiple male doctors who dismiss and belittle her pain has her invoking the 1892 novella in both desperatio­n and anger.

Buckley is one of the unlucky third of the population who suffers from debilitati­ng chronic pain. RSI is the GP’s diagnosis when she tells him it feels like her right arm is “on fire from the inside” and a carving knife is “lodged in her armpit”, and that her neck feels like it’s been “flattened underneath a lorry”. Oh that it were this straightfo­rward.

Her medical history is a complicate­d one, “girthy” in that her hospital file is bulging with consultati­ons with different specialist­s. To list them here, along with the various diagnoses she’s received over the years, would take up too much space, but you get the picture. The first million-dollar question is whether her chronic pain is “a disorder in itself or merely a symptom of something else”.

The second: can it be cured?

Having had to give up her job, leave London (and her independen­ce) and move back to Cornwall to live with her mother, it’s unsurprisi­ng that, as a travel journalist, she embarked on something of a roundthe-world pilgrimage in search of a miracle.

In a “merry-go-round of taking chances”, she goes to Colorado for medical marijuana, experiment­s with terrifying voodoo rituals in Haiti, seeks out a famous herbalist in a tiny mountain village in China, allows herself to be “serenaded by a celestial choir” in Joshua Tree, is immersed in the healing waters of Lourdes, and bathes in a mixture of chicken blood and her own vomit in Soweto.

Heal Me isa searingly honest first-hand account of Buckley’s journey, both spiritual and physical, and an insightful, deeply researched story of pain from the multiple perspectiv­es of medical science, psychology and faith.

An absolute must-read on the subject, what’s laid bare here about our understand­ing of and attitudes to chronic pain is alternativ­ely sobering and inflammato­ry.

– The Independen­t

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