9 October

“How’s Your Health?” Empathy And Identity. “How’s Your Life?”

by Jon Katz
Compassion And Identity

A visitor came into my house recently and somehow managed to look inside my refrigerator, she saw my insulin pens and needles. She went immediately to Maria and confided sympathetically that her husband has health issues also and she knew how difficult it was to cook and prepare food for him.

Maria, bless her, said I did the shopping and the cooking and didn’t seem to have any problems with it.

A few minutes later this same person came up to me, also looking sorrowful and in a low voice with sad eyes said she knew what I was going through.

She looked very sad, as if she had encountered a leper in the streets of Kolkata, or a dying cousin in the hospital.

Why did I wish to slug her rather than thank her? I told her that I was fine, thanks, and didn’t discuss my health with people I don’t know, or even with people I do know.

And I walked away.

Health is just not the most interesting or important or relevant  thing about me, why not bring up something of meaning? I am not dying or close to it, and sharing is a creative task, not an invitation to feel sorry for me.

I have two chronic diseases,  I am treating them well and thoughtfully, my doctors tell me I am strong and healthy and vital, and that’s the way I feel about myself. The doctors always tell me I have a great “life force,” and will be around a good while.

I am more active, alert and engaged than every before in my life, and I do not ever think of myself as a chronically ill or unhealthy person to be pitied and comforted like a sick child or withering old man.

I make love, work like a fiend, am actively involved in a number of things that bring me great joy and meaning. I have never been happier or healthier.

I twitch at the suggestion that I am a sick person worthy of pity. There are so many people in the world that need empathy and support more than I do, just watch the news. I am bored by the subject of my health, it is of no interest to me. As I get older, I learn to speak of it less and less, or better yet, not at all. It is not who I am.

As I get older, and share my life openly, I find more and more people come up to me, usually looking stricken and pitying, and ask “how is your health?” Quite often they touch my arm or shoulder and tell me they understand what I am going through and hope I make it. Or they tell me a sad story about their own lives.

This is one of the consequences of aging, health is often the currency, language and dialogue of the elderly.

It is not the currency, language and dialogue of me. If I need help and pity, I will surely ask for it, and in the right places. I share my life for different reasons, I am writing a memoir here on the blog, and a memoir is dishonest if it doesn’t tell the whole truth. I can’t pick and choose being authentic and expect people to trust me or read what I write.

Illness is often life itself for people who get older, the body declines and decays. That is not drama for me, that is life. We are all going there, one way or another.

The story of a life is about things both good and bad. Sometimes you get the good Katz, sometimes the bad. That’s the deal. But I won’t lie to you or hide important things.

I see that I have this odd habit of asking for it and not liking what it yields. This, I tell my friends, and dear readers, is the price of being around somebody like me, there are a lot of contradictions.

I’ve had two health issues to deal with this past week, they bracketed the Open House. And they did concern me. I had some nightmarish visions of being rushed to the hospital on the eve of the Open House, and I kept telling the doctors I was going to New Mexico with Maria next week even if I have to go in an ambulance.

One was the discovery of a heart murmur, common in America but potentially dangerous to people with diabetes and heart disease. The other is what may be the onset of a retinal eye disease that may be related to both the diabetes and the heart disease. I underwent testing for the first on Friday, and will go to see a retinal specialist this morning for the second.

I am committed to being open and sharing my life – asking for it as some of you keep telling me – and yet troubled and uncomfortable by the ways in which this information causes people to react and challenges my own fragile sense of identity.

I have a wonderful friend who is dying of cancer, and she tells me the worst thing about it for her is not the pain or fear but the fact that almost everyone around her defines her in that way. That’s all they see in her. For someone who is ill, that is not comforting or helpful.

Her new identity is to have cancer, and much more than me, she experiences a constant stream of pity and compassion. You could say people are simply being thoughtful and compassionate. You could also say they are giving her a new identity, one she doesn’t want.

Empathy is different from sympathy and sympathy is different from pity. I have worked hard all of my life to discover my identity and keep it whole. Pity and sympathy are corrosive, they undermine identity and reinforce the idea of weakness and dependence. Empathy is sensitivity, and the truly empathic don’t treat anyone with pity.

I love it when people ask me about my work or my life. I don’t want people to ask me about my health. It is personal and in most ways, inconsequential, and like my friend with cancer, my health issues do not define who I am.

We will all die of something, and if I’m lucky, it will be my broken but wonderful heart. That, I am assured, and believe, will not be for a good while.

If people want to ask me how I am, perhaps they will ask me about my life and not my health.

And then, rather than flinch,  I can say, great, my life is wonderful, and what a great conversation that would be.

6 Comments

  1. I love your blog and books, but I have to point out that you do in fact share your health and health problems with all of us, which is why she probably felt okay mentioning it. I know about your retina issue and I know about your heart issues, because you post about them in great detail. And health is important and interesting, because it can kill you and make the blog and you go away. When you criticize readers for taking reasonable actions (admittedly she shouldn’t have been in your refrigerator), I always feel compelled to defend them because it seems like sometimes you don’t remember what you’ve told us and why we react the way we do. It’s the price of sharing your life online, which you’ve chosen to do voluntarily. And of course, that makes us care about you or we wouldn’t be here.

    1. Thanks Lisa, I appreciate your message but if you read my post (or re-read it) you will see I made the very same point. Life is full of contradictions, I sure am, but my point is that sharing my life is not the same thing as inviting people to enter it in a personal way. People love to tell me I am asking for it, but I am not asking for it, not any more than someone is asking to be sexually harassed because they dress well. This assumption of intimacy is very new in our culture, and it is spawned and promoted by social media, and of course, by people like me who presume to be open and are thus presumed to have no boundaries. It is not a resolvable issue, and I do see the contradiction it, I am just being honest about it. I don’t like it when somebody presumes to look into my refrigerator and then also presumes I want to discuss my health issues with them. It does not feel right to me, and if it doesn’t feel right, I say so.

  2. I agree with you on every point, Jon. When I have to take a medication while dining with another and they ask me what it’s for, I so want to say, “None of your business!” Even when I know it’s coming from a place of caring, it just feels so invasive, and just plain nosy. I hope your writing will save someone from asking next time. Thanks, Jon.

  3. While reading this post, all that kept coming to mind is ,how dare anyone Snoop.
    States of health are so private and personal, most don’t even know how to have a realistic discussion with their Dr. No one knows how we feel….no one. Thank you for your contradictions. Your humanist sharing reminds me of the goodness in our world, even when mistakes happen.
    Enjoy New Mexico.

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