Life of Illness, The: One Woman's JourneyThe Life of Illness tells the story of one woman s courageous struggle with kidney failure, illness, and death. It is, however, a book about life, hope, faith, and the transformative power of caring for one another. Carol Olson writes from the heart of experience, having shared a life of illness with two brothers and three sisters, whom she now survives. Her own life has been precariously maintained by kidney dialysis for more than twenty years. Inspired by the works of philosophers, literary authors, and poets, Olson turns to hermeneutical phenomenology to explore the meaning of the experience of illness. In response to the question, How can we live with illness? the author engages in reflective conversations. As patient, she dialogues with literary works of art dealing with illness, developing relationships between texts and others who experience illness from various points of view: the chaplain, the doctor, the nurse, and the parent. Olson makes us aware of the significance of others in their various caring relations with the person of illness. The clarity and deeply compelling nature of her writing makes this book accessible to all whose lives have been touched by these experiences. The experience of illness and death we all face impels us to wonder with her about the nature of wholeness and health. Ultimately we ask: What is life? |
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Cuprins
Epigraph for Joy | 7 |
Heartbeat Wrapped With Plastic | 23 |
The Question of Technology | 59 |
The Question of Theorizing | 73 |
A Pathway for Theorizing | 83 |
One against the Other | 93 |
One with the Other | 111 |
One for the Other | 129 |
One by the Other | 143 |
One without the Other | 153 |
The Homecoming | 167 |
Notes | 179 |
Bibliography | 193 |
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Termeni și expresii frecvente
Abraham Arthur artificial kidney machine asked became become blood transfusions body bone biopsy bone doctor Caius Carol child death deionized water dialogue dialysis disease Doctor Rieux dying Emmanuel Levinas example experience of illness expression face faith find first Florence Nightingale friends Gabriel Marcel Gadamer give God’s grief healing heart of pity Heidegger hemodialysis hemoglobin Heraclitus hope hospital human Ivan Ilyitch Ivan’s journey Joy’s kidney patients kidney unit Kierkegaard language Levinas light live logos Marcel Martin Heidegger meaning Merleau-Ponty Norman Cousins nurse Olson one’s pain Pauline person Phenomenology plague poem possibility Press reflection research question response Ring says the chaplain self-pity shared significant silence skeletal survey smile speak suffering surgery thematic themes theorist Theorizing things trans transplant treatment truth understand University of Alberta Victor Frankl vitamin D voice W. H. Auden words York