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The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness by Meghan O'Rourke
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“And so it is a truth universally acknowledged that a young woman in possession of vague symptoms like fatigue and pain will be in search of a doctor who believes she is actually sick.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“There is a loneliness to illness, a child's desire to be pitied and seen. But it is precisely this recognition that is elusive. How can you explain and identify your condition if not one has any grasp of what it is you suffer from and the symptoms wax and wane? How do you describe a disease that's not always there?”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“I know many people who are suspicious of diagnoses—they think of them as labels that reduce or stigmatize. I knew, already, that a diagnosis was not going to answer all my questions. But I craved a diagnosis because it is a form of understanding.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“This seems like one of the hardest things about being sick in the way you’re sick: being sick makes you stressed. But being stressed makes you sicker.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“But the fatigue of physical dysfunction, I came to recognize, is as different from normal sleep deprivation as COVID-19 is from the common cold. It was not caused by needing sleep, I thought, but by my body’s cellular conviction that it needed to conserve energy in order to fix whatever was wrong. The feeling erased my will, the sense of identity that drives most of us. The worst part of my fatigue was the loss of an intact sense of self.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“The tendency in many parts of medicine is, if we can’t measure it, it doesn’t exist, or the patient is cuckoo.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“There is a razor-thin line between trying to find something usefully redemptive in illness and lying to ourselves about the nature of suffering. Until we mourn what is lost in illness—and until we have a medical community that takes seriously the suffering of patients—we should not celebrate what is gained in it.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“Knowledge brings the hope of treatment or cure. And even if there is no cure, a diagnosis is a form of knowing (the word “diagnosis” derives from the Greek gignōskein, “to know”) that allows others to recognize our experience and enables us to tell its story”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“The medical uncertainty compounds patients' own uncertainty. Because my unwellness did not take the form of a disease I understood, with a clear-cut list of symptoms and a course of treatment, even I at times interpreted it as a series of signs about my very existence. Initially, the illness seemed to be a condition that signified something deeply wrong with me⁠—illness as a kind of semaphore. Without answers, at my most desperate, I came to feel (in some unarticulated way) that if I could just tell the right story about what was happening, I could make myself better. If only I could figure out what the story was, like the child in a fantasy novel who must discover her secret name, I could become myself again.

It took years before I realized that the illness was not just my own; the silence around suffering was our society's pathology.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“Only a few friends realized at the time how much physical suffering I was undergoing. We are bad at recognizing the suffering of others unless we are given clear-cut clues and evidence. And so invisible illnesses often go unacknowledged, while less serious conditions get attention.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“Ethical loneliness is what happens when wrongs are compounded by going cruelly unacknowledged.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“To have pain is to have certainty; to hear about pain is to have doubt.” The same was true of all my symptoms, none of which could be seen. In those months I was lonely in a way I never had been before. I could taste the solitude of the human body like brine in my mouth, a taste that never left me. •”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“Autoimmunity is internalized by patients as an opportunity for the ultimate self-management project. But in fact it is a manifestation of a flawed collective project. If it is an indictment of anything, it is an indictment not of our personhood but of our impulse to see social problems as being about our personhood, instead of a consequence of our collective shortcomings as co-citizens of this place and time.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“This is something that has been going on forever,” Craig Spencer, the director of global health in emergency medicine at Columbia University, says about the variability of human response to infection. “I wouldn’t be surprised if people are walking about with long Epstein-Barr virus, or long influenza. We all know someone who is low energy, who’s told to work harder. We have all heard about chronic Lyme sufferers, and those with ME/CFS. But they get written off.” Spencer understands something about how infections can do long-term damage, because he contracted Ebola while working in Guinea, fell ill upon his return to New York City, and then struggled with the virus’s ongoing effects. (Studies have suggested that the Ebola virus may linger in the body for years.) The difference between long COVID and other infection-associated illnesses is that it is happening “on such a huge scale—unlike anything we’ve seen before. It is harder for the medical community to write off,” Spencer told me. Indeed, many researchers I spoke with for this book hope that the race to understand long COVID will advance our understanding of other chronic conditions that follow infection, transforming medicine in the process.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“The emotional journey has been as hard as the physical one. The fear I feel, in combination with busy doctors who don’t have time to listen, has really affected me.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“The actual encounter was always confusing, eleven minutes of liminal contact in which I tried to conduct myself in a way that would make the doctor like me, in the hope they would take some true interest in my plight. But their day was full of tests to order, bureaucracy to cut through, an education that taught them not to say, "I don't know what's wrong with you." And so we stood together in a tiny antiseptic room, the doctor and patient, a world apart.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“Everyone who is born holds dual citizenship, in the kingdom of the well and in the kingdom of the sick. Although we all prefer to use the good passport, sooner or later each of us is obliged, at least for a spell, to identify ourselves as citizens of that other place.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“To have a poorly understood disease is to be brought up against every flaw in the U.S. health care system; to collide with the structural problems of a late-capitalist society that values productivity more than health; and to confront the philosophical problem of conveying an experience that lacks an accepted framework. Even”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“Without answers, at my most desperate, I came to feel (in some unarticulated way) that if I could just tell the right story about what was happening, I could make myself better. If only I could figure out what the story was, like the child in a fantasy novel who must discover her secret name, I could become myself again.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“The word “wisdom” comes from the Old English words wis (knowledge, learning) and doom (judgment). Perhaps ill people do, in a sense, become wise through encountering doom, and as a result they become new versions of themselves, having made it through some of the hazards of the course, experiencing what the poet John Ashbery calls “the charity of the hard moments.” Those encounters perhaps allow us to see ourselves—and our mortal condition—more clearly. But it would be false not to observe that this knowledge is born of loss, of resignation to a condition that forces us to give up on aspects of ourselves we had hoped we might develop. Wisdom, in this understanding, is knowledge coupled with the wound that comes from encountering doom.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“Being heard by your doctor isn’t just an emotional need but a physical one: patients benefit clinically from feeling cared for. The emotional and the physical, science is learning, are more intertwined than we once understood. Many studies have suggested that emotional care—interpersonal warmth—has a measurable effect on patients’ outcomes. For example, the incidence of severe diabetes complications in patients of doctors who rate high on a standard empathy scale is a remarkable 40 percent lower than in patients whose doctors do poorly on the empathy scale, Danielle Ofri, an internist at New York’s Bellevue Hospital, reports in What Doctors Feel. “This is comparable,” she points out, “to the benefits seen with the most intensive medical therapy for diabetes.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“Like many in their baby boomer generation, they saw doctors as unquestionable experts. You didn’t go to them unless you had a high fever or a bad fall or a wound that needed stitching. In that case, you got a diagnosis, you took medicine or had surgery, and you got better, more or less in that order. But if the doctor told you nothing was wrong, nothing was wrong. My parents believed in the power of Western medicine, and therefore so did I.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“To have a poorly understood disease is to be brought up against every flaw in the U.S. health care system; to collide with the structural problems of a late-capitalist society that values productivity more than health; and to confront the philosophical problem of conveying an experience that lacks an accepted framework.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“It is unbearable—and yet I bear it.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“As the surgeon Atul Gawande wrote of the medical profession, “Nothing is more threatening to who you think you are than a patient with a problem you cannot solve.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“The word “inflammation” comes from the Latin verb “inflammare,” or “to set on fire,”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“one scholar puts it, “if a physician cannot identify the cause of a disease, it means that it is procured by the Devil.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“don’t believe I will get better,” Daudet wrote, “. . . yet I always behave as if my damned pains were going to disappear by tomorrow morning.”)”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“On my message boards a recurrent theme was having a partner who didn’t help, who didn’t get it, who even judged and blamed. Even partners who did help often couldn’t feel the wave of need engulfing the ill person. And my god, the need. It felt shameful to need other people so much.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness
“In 2019, a study of patients at a clinic in Iran found that “laughter yoga”—gentle yoga that includes laughing—was more effective than anti-anxiety medication in controlling symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome, which are worsened by stress.”
Meghan O'Rourke, The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness

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