I think it’s
time for me to watch Last of the Mohicans
again. I remember seeing this in the theater when it first came out. Big
screen, surround sound, Daniel Day Lewis in a loin-cloth in the Midwestern
frontier of O-HI-O. I saw it several times, actually. I was mesmerized not by
Daniel Day-Lewis, interestingly enough, but by the stories of the women
awakening to freedom, each woman her own
freedom. Cora, a dark-haired British woman, to a life on the frontier
without her British fiancée (whom she loved but with whom she could not enter
into the confines of 18th-century marriage); her fair-haired sister,
to a choice of freedom in the here-after, alongside her gentle-souled love just
murdered by a Huron warrior.
I can already
hear my husband with his knowing and accepting smile: No projections there…none. Which, of course, is true. I was so
enamored by the movie that I checked the Fenimore Cooper classic book out of my
local library, so to enjoy the story in more ‘slow-motion’ and appreciation.
I’ll save you the trouble here: Cooper’s literature classic does not tell the story of these women coming
into their own freedom. Not even close.
Driving to the
gym this morning, however, I heard the voice of one of the women in the film in
my head. Cora’s voice: “I would rather make the gravest of mistakes than
surrender my own judgment.” Even writing it out, I sit straighter, feel taller,
and sense a groundedness in my body I’ve come to cherish in these recent days.
Soon I will be
walking off the plane in Portland, Oregon, to visit my parents in their new
life there, their new apartment home. I am curious about how they will react
when they see me. I suppose I should simply prepare myself with detachment and
as few expectations as I can muster. That’s the best practice with me and my
folks these days. I do best with them when I don’t need anything from them,
emotionally or spiritually. I’ve long not needed anything from them in most
other categories—economic, intellectual, etc.—determined as I have been for my
own independence, right out of college. But this
time, I admit I am curious for internal and external reasons.
Internal reasons: I am the happiest I have ever been in
my body. Ever. I finally feel like I
have a healthy relationship with food for the first time in my life. I have
learned how to nourish myself, and to discern—really discern—what my body
prefers in increasingly subtle-body sensate ways. I’ve landed in a CrossFit
community that circles up each day, several times a day, to invite movement and
health, challenge and safety. Adult recess, I often call it. I get to play on
the jungle gym and we sometimes play games. I hear encouragement to ‘just get
better,’ and the freedom to define what that means for me, that day. My life
has a rhythm to it that I love, and I can be present in my body in ways I’ve
never known how.
If I were to
guess, based upon past experiences: My father’s eyes will widen and he will be
emphatic in a breathy-body-voice sort of way about how I look when he gives me a hug hello. He will be surprised and
affirming in a loud sort of way, both touching my previous needs for his
approval and my felt-sensibility that
who and how I was before was somehow lacking. He clearly prefers the skinny,
the trim, the … whatever.
My mother will
give me a hug and murmur her own version of whatever he does. We’ll have the
familiar love-hate dance we’ve shared forever about our body-type. I inherited
my mother’s body-type and shape, which is both a beautiful way to feel
connected with her AND a difficult challenge. She’s hated her body for as long
as I can remember, naming deficiencies often. As a young girl growing up, I
never could deflect those judgments, ingesting and internalizing them instead.
Now I’m the happiest I’ve ever been, in a body shape that perhaps at one time
would have been like her own…but is, no longer…but still is, in type or shape.
External reasons: The curiosity
arises because so much of what I knew, what we
know about nutrition and medical care of human beings, is evolving and changing
within those populations that are allowing the change. What we were ‘sold and
told’ in the 1950’s-1970’s is simply wrong, which has led to the rise (some
say epidemic) of obesity, heart disease, cancer, and more. The medical care in the United States is some
of the most challenging in the world, largely because of the bed-fellow
relationship of medical-research science, government-funding, capitalism and
its consumerist markets, global
corporations, and ‘managed-care’ or insurance-impacting practices of care,
diagnosis, and compensations. It is overwhelmingly difficult to get
uncomplicated information and to make health-care decisions that you feel you
can trust, as an ordinary human being living life and love at the grass-roots
level of ‘what I know.’
All of this
undergirds and instigates curiosity about a now-familiar contemporary dynamic
that touches me and my life at multiple levels—with my family of origin, in my
marriage, in my work-world. Much of what my father, the internist and
‘must be right’ man knew and stewarded was wrong. The father figure was
simply wrong, even if good intentioned and working with what medical and
governmental science-institutions said at the time. He was wrong, through no
fault of his own. I can count on my fingers the number of times in my 50 years
of life I’ve heard my father say, without resistance or humor, “Yep, I was
really wrong about that.” He doesn’t know who he is unless he is explaining
something to someone (man-splaining, we call it now) or offering medical
expertise in family, school, or doctor’s office settings.
Living some
“nutrition-re-education” practices and choices in these last 14 months or so, I
now have a lived-trajectory of what I
know about my body, what nourishes
my body, what makes my body feel good and most active, strong, and healthy. I
had my annual physical yesterday, celebrating within myself this new place I’ve
found within me and within a supportive community. Except we spent a good chunk
of time discussing how my cholesterol levels had jumped about 25 points, within
range but on the higher end of ‘the latest standards.’ My doctor, whom I do appreciate for many reasons,
encouraged me to consider two different kinds of diets—Mediterranean or
South-Beach. She wasn’t listening to me and what
I know about my body now. The food-freedom I have. What I am finding in my
own experience. As a matter of fact, she didn't even ask much about it.
So…I have two
books to read this weekend—one, a more science-heavy expression of
‘medical-science-research’ on how Fat and
Cholesterol Don’t Cause Heart Attacks: And Statins Are Not the Solution.
(Columbus Publishers Ltd 2016) and the
other, a more-popularist expression text, The
Cholesterol Myth: Why Lowering Your Cholesterol Won’t Prevent Heart Disease—and
the Statin-Free Plan that Will (Fair Winds Press, 2012).
The challenges
here are multi-faceted for me. I no longer trust my father’s medical expertise
in areas of nutrition, women’s health, and overall health-wholeness. That is
such a huge statement, I can hardly withstand the dissonance inside for how I used
to live in my family’s sense of identity and giftedness. Not only are ‘the
brothers’ a focal point of authority and significance, my father is the
recognized medical authority about most everything. Except in the instances of what I know now, he was simply wrong. Secondly, I can see more
how my own doctor works within basic tropes of ‘established medical knowledge’
that, at least for nutrition and health-wholeness, no longer suffice. I know
something else or differently in my own
body. She did not know how to ask about what I clearly knew and we spent most of our time in a supposition of 'what she knew,' which was not relevant to me or what I know now. Finally, reading these books then offers me invitation to learn more
in my cognitive and intellectual awareness things that I don’t know how to
articulate yet. I do not and will not presume to challenge my father’s (or my
husband’s) clear convictions rooted in (what I would call out-dated) medical
science…AND…I want to ingest deeply what this strand of argument/discourse has
to offer what I know in my own body.
The trick, of course, will be not to ‘bite the hook’ of intellectual debate with either of them.
This reading is for me, for me and my body alone.
So it's time to watch the movie again: “I would
rather make the gravest of mistakes than surrender my own judgment.” ~ Cora
Munro, Last of the Mohicans.
[For those who
desire critical-assessment in the larger literature/science world of
‘information-curation,’ assessing the validity/legitimation of information:
Columbus Publishing, Ltd is an independent publisher, in the UK, with motto
“because the world is not flat; specializes in ‘books that challenge’… Fair
Winds Press is also an independent press located in Beverly, Massachusetts,
originally part of the Rockport Publishing Group, now owned by Quarto, which
has a global market in health and fitness publishing. Most medical-establishment, university-research-discourse authors and leaders would hold these publishing sources with high suspicion and skepticism. "Independent publishing" tends to be disregarded as not-peer-reviewed, so not rigorous in contributing to objective human knowledge.]
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