• Home
  • About Corpus
  • University of Otago, Medical Humanities

conversations about medicine and life

Poetry: “a long document about the species”

August 5, 2019 2 Comments

Yoram Barak

Yoram Barak is a judge for the poetry competition Changing Minds: Memories Lost and Found, organised by the Dunedin Public Libraries and the Neurological Foundation of NZ.  Find details on how to enter here. 

I became aware of the importance of poetry through American poet Sharon Old’s poem, “Back Rub”. Originally published in her 1992 collection, The Father, the poem was reprinted in a special edition of The Lancet focused on Literature and Ageing. The poem chronicles the poet’s father’s dying, as well as her own process of acceptance and healing as she moves with him to his death and beyond.

In my work as a psychogeriatrician I often witness patients, caregivers, families and communities struggling through the journey of dementia as they are faced with the daunting loss of memory. Can poetry help us along that journey?

The loss of memories is experienced as the loss of “I”, of the core element of “self.” We grasp our sense of individual self and, in most Western cultures, push away the true meaning of impermanence. As dementia takes its toll we experience the impermanence of our memories and for most of us this is a horrifying insight. Poetry as a truly heroic attempt to capture the human condition is a major art form that can help transform the horrifying into the empathic.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Aging, Alzheimer's Disease, Care, Dementia, Medical Humanities, Poetry

Time-jumping: facing dementia and death

July 1, 2019 4 Comments

Samantha Montgomerie

We like to think of time as linear. Seconds building on seconds, forming the minutes, hours and days that track the path of our lives. Dementia and death fracture this line.

Time jumps.

My terminally ill father slipped into dementia in his final months. He suffered a recurring delusion that he could travel back in time.

“A jumper.”

His wide eyes would shine with his conviction. He would arrive at some train station back in time –  naked, cold, and anxious about finding his way home. He would struggle through the night, trying to track back, wandering the corridors to find the right path home. We felt helpless in our inability to calm him.  At times it was easier to bring the jersey he asked for, to warm him as he faced snow flurries in 1930s France.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Aging, Alzheimer's Disease, Bereavement, Death, Poetry

Euthanasia and the common good

July 2, 2018 10 Comments

Charlotte Paul

When I started thinking hard about euthanasia, I visited my friend who has a progressive illness affecting his body and mind, and who is in hospital-level care. His partner has moved into the same residence to help look after him. She responds to his suffering with love, and you can sometimes see in his eyes that he recognises this. I honour them both: his endurance and gratitude; her generosity.

But, with euthanasia in mind, I think about them both in a different way. Is his suffering unbearable? Although he wouldn’t be competent to make a request for euthanasia, should it become legal in New Zealand, their situation calls into question the value of his endurance and her generosity.

In what follows I explore my intuition that actively ending suffering by causing death undercuts the meaning of suffering.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Aging, Alzheimer's Disease, Cancer, Care, Death, Dementia, Nursing, Public health

Song for Rosaleen: “the heartbreak that is dementia”

June 25, 2018 3 Comments

Sue Wootton

song for rosaleenA memoir, by definition, is composed of memories. It is almost unbearably poignant, then, that Song for Rosaleen is a memoir that exists only because of memory loss. Written by Wellington oral historian and editor Pip Desmond, it documents her mother’s slide into vascular dementia and the effects of this on the entire family.

Perhaps this sounds grim – and of course in many ways it is. But Song for Rosaleen is gripping. It is at one level a personal account, at another a meditation on memory itself, and at yet another an erudite critique of how our society treats the frail, dependent and voiceless. For this latter reason alone it should be essential reading for everyone who works in health: management, non-clinical and clinical staff alike.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Aging, Alzheimer's Disease, Dementia, General Practice, Memoir, Public health, Review

Living in the A zone

May 7, 2018 2 Comments

McMullan family Sunflower Judging Day
McMullan family Sunflower Judging Day

Kaitrin McMullan

When my mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, I had the good fortune, as a storyteller and dabbler in the arts, to be able to give up poorly-paid work and move into a kind of early retirement … albeit with an elderly dependent. Swapping poverty for poverty, not too hard! The rational was that we (my partner and I) would move in and care for Mum while her brain still lived at the same address as her body, in order to make the most of these precious years, much as some people decide to devote time to their children’s  early years, only in reverse. Luckily Mum’s disease has progressed very slowly and in a benign way, and we now find ourselves in a four-generation “compound” with family living next door and a rainbow gate connecting the two houses.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Aging, Alzheimer's Disease, Fiction, Memoir, Poetry, Writing

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next Page »

Subscribe to Corpus via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to Corpus and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 531 other subscribers

Latest articles

  • “Will I walk again?” December 2, 2019
  • Circles December 2, 2019
  • Dreaming with my body December 2, 2019
  • Menstruation, myth, and medicine December 2, 2019
  • Let there be light: macular degeneration and me November 4, 2019
  • The Big Red Ride: a community bike programme November 4, 2019
  • Expressive Arts Therapy: Arts-based research and new motherhood November 4, 2019
  • Sir Cedric Stanton Hicks November 4, 2019
  • No Friend But The Mountains: seeking the human in asylum October 7, 2019
  • Crossing to surgery’s side October 7, 2019
  • “The Track”: word-walking through pain October 7, 2019
  • Emergency Accommodation October 7, 2019

Categories

Adolescent health After hours Aging Alzheimer's Disease Anatomy Art Bereavement Biography Cancer Care Concussion Death Education Essay Festivals Fiction General Practice History Humour Infectious disease literacy Maori Medical Humanities Memoir Men's health Mental health Music Natural disaster Nursing Nutrition Paediatrics Physiotherapy Poetry Polio Psychiatry Psychology Public health Reading Research Review Science Surgery Technology Women's Health Writing

Corpus reads

  • 131,179 since May 2016
Corpus: conversations about medicine and life
Image of Hippocrates - Samuelis Chouet 1657. Monro Collection, University of Otago

Copyright © 2019 University of Otago, Medical Humanities · Website by Arts Net