(Yep blue hair, fabulous frock, bright red compression stockings and sparkly red heels for a pacemaker and cardiology check, I may be a fan of #Hospitalglam)
I've been stewing over the reaction to #hospitalglam for about a week now. Comments have ranged from supportive to outright rude. And it is the later that have really gotten to me. Both the unwell and the well have slammed the concept. And whilst I must say I am not surprised by the comments of the healthy, I am disappointed by many of the comments from fellow patients condemning her for making their lives harder, or doubting the veracity of her health issues.
For the uninitiated
#hospitalglam is the creation of Karolyn Gehrig and can be found on
Tumblr, Instagram and
Twitter. Gehrig was diagnosed with a form of Ehlers Danlos Syndrome
(EDS) and like many of us with chronic illness, is a frequent flyer
in the medical system. She wears funky clothes (I have serious dress
envy over her pill dress) and poses for the camera in an array of
hospital and clinic settings. Many have followed her example, posting
various selfies of their own glammed up medical experiences, adding
them to the hashtag. The concept came to light recently in mainstream
media and the discussions around it have been interesting, and at
times infuriating, to follow (why I read comment sections I'll never know. It's a bit like picking a scab until it bleeds. Or watching QandA.) The issues surrounding the accuracy of
the information relating to EDS is an issue for another post, but I
will say, journalists pick up your game. It's not that hard to find
accurate information about this collection of disorders.
When you become a patient autonomy takes a hit. The very nature of disease and injury mean you are reliant on another, a doctor, to direct certain aspects of your life. You are reliant on the expert knowledge of treating teams to direct aspects of treatment and allow access to certain medications. Part of being on top of your disorders necessitates regular reviews and things like blood tests. You must, to a certain extent, suck it up, (asmy your control freak nature screams in protest.)
When you become a patient autonomy takes a hit. The very nature of disease and injury mean you are reliant on another, a doctor, to direct certain aspects of your life. You are reliant on the expert knowledge of treating teams to direct aspects of treatment and allow access to certain medications. Part of being on top of your disorders necessitates regular reviews and things like blood tests. You must, to a certain extent, suck it up, (as
You must accede control
to a medical system which trundles on oblivious to your personal needs
and desires. The hospital PA doesn't care that you want treatment
yesterday rather than waiting for six months. Hospitals feel more production line, than houses of healing as time poor staff are forced to minister to an ever growing multitude. You must tell your story a
bazillion times to every medical or allied health professional. You must play the game to a large extent, to have access to care.
The clinical nature of
medicine both in the hospital or regular clinic is frequently cold
and impersonal. You have to wear backless gowns and bear your body to
strangers. You have to lie there while you are pushed and pulled,
spoken about rather than too. As much as you pride yourself on being able
to self-advocate, and some like myself are lucky to have a husband who is a strong
advocate for my care, there are times where you are blocked. A doctor
can turn around and say no to a treatment and given the rarity of my presentation, I know I am limited to where else I can go. Choice is a lovely
word, but when it is spoken about in the context of health, it
negates the realities of issues like geography, finances, availability, and rare illness.
Control is an illusion
and when you are thrust into the medical system, particularly as a
chronic or long term patient you are slapped in the face with this
reality. It's easy to despair. It's easy to feel beaten down and
hopeless. It's easy to lose yourself to illness and the world that
surrounds it. How we find our way out is complex. The paths we take
and modes we employ differ greatly. And we arrive at that place at different times. But if we are to not simply exist
but thrive, we must find a way to reclaim control, and our sense of
self, however that may look.
#Hospitalglam is one method of taking back control. And one I relate to strongly (Anyone who followed my Clicking My Heels for Dysautonomia fundraising last year, or follow on FB, will understand why I am a fan of the #hospitalglam concept.) But it is not the only one. Gehrig is not telling people what they should do. She is not telling people they must take her path. She is sharing what works for her and the large following she has garnered suggests that there are many people who can relate to her, and her mode of rebellion/control.
I have seen headlines talking about #Hospitalglam, taking the “ugly” out of illness, or removing the “shame.” Neither word deserve a place in the illness narrative, and their use misses the point of the hashtag. There is no shame in illness. It is simply something that occurs as part of life. It doesn't matter how good a person you are or how well you eat or exercise, illness can still come calling. No one wants illness, we don't actively seek it. Nor do we do things to prolong it. “Shame” is closely linked with blame, and if you have been ill for any length of time there will be someone who tells you how you are to blame for you continuing malady, be it your diet, lack of appropriate religiosity, lack of kitten cuddling or refusal to see their favourite swami or eat 85kgs of [insert super food of choice] each day.
#Hospitalglam is one method of taking back control. And one I relate to strongly (Anyone who followed my Clicking My Heels for Dysautonomia fundraising last year, or follow on FB, will understand why I am a fan of the #hospitalglam concept.) But it is not the only one. Gehrig is not telling people what they should do. She is not telling people they must take her path. She is sharing what works for her and the large following she has garnered suggests that there are many people who can relate to her, and her mode of rebellion/control.
I have seen headlines talking about #Hospitalglam, taking the “ugly” out of illness, or removing the “shame.” Neither word deserve a place in the illness narrative, and their use misses the point of the hashtag. There is no shame in illness. It is simply something that occurs as part of life. It doesn't matter how good a person you are or how well you eat or exercise, illness can still come calling. No one wants illness, we don't actively seek it. Nor do we do things to prolong it. “Shame” is closely linked with blame, and if you have been ill for any length of time there will be someone who tells you how you are to blame for you continuing malady, be it your diet, lack of appropriate religiosity, lack of kitten cuddling or refusal to see their favourite swami or eat 85kgs of [insert super food of choice] each day.
We are continuously fed
a lie both in the community and through the media that illness is shameful and ugly. Just to clarify NO ITS NOT.
“Shame” and “Ugly” are judgement statements. Why should we be
judged or internalise such a view, for something that is out of our
control? So not only do I have to deal with a debilitating illness but now I must also feel ugly and ashamed in the process? I say F**k that!. Yes there is pain. Yes there is vomiting. Yes we fall over.
Yes we require medical aides. We are cut and sampled. Swathed in
bandages and stitches. We may need feeding tubes or colostomy bags.
Gain excessive amounts of weight due to hormones or treatments, or
end up little more than bones in a skin bag due to malabsorption and paralysed stomachs. Our mobility,
speech, thinking etc may be impaired. We may be depressed, anxious,
dealing with bipolar disorder or schizophrenia. But none of that is shameful
or ugly. They are merely the cards we are dealt. To equate illness in
any context with shame or ugliness is insulting. And perpetuates damaging stigmas. Again, I say to the media, pick up your game.
In #hospitalglam many see an alternative to the paralysing and disempowering pity narratives of illness. They see an “up yours” to illness and a system both medical and societal that says to be ill you must conform to a certain paradigm. You are either pity worthy or inspirational. But in neither case can you win. There will always be someone to tell you, you are doing it wrong. The classic “you don't look sick” in all it's forms is thrown at those who wish to frock up or pop on some lippy (if only putting on my heels cured my broken genetics). Alternatively, if you stay in your pjs and trackie dacks you are becoming your illness and need to pull yourself up by your bootstraps. Damned if you do and damned if you don't. And these are the themes peppering the comment sections of articles about the hashtag.
Gehrig is not telling anyone what they should or shouldn't do. She is expressing herself in a way that works for her. The media interpretation of #hospitalglam has missed so much of it's intrinsic value. Her behaviour is not unique (though it can't be framed as an inspiration narrative by the media unless it is seen as an abnormality), many frock up in hospital and at medical appointments, but hers has been a more public and organised expression. Given her background in performance art it is not surprising that this is what works for her. But the way she and others have chosen to express their experience is so anathema to the wider societal views on illness that it has been held up as more of the inspiration porn of which the media is so fond. Just like those dealing with disability, the expectations of those with chronic illness are so low, any achievement is seen as miraculous. We are taught that such life events are the end of the world, so many are unable to conceive of a life filled with joy or fabulous frocks and illness. It is this framework which is so angering to many patients who feel like #hospitalglam represents yet another burden to add to their experience, rather than a moment of choice with a bit of tongue-in-cheek sparkle. Thanks media.
Patients are people first. And people are inherently diverse. The way we react to illness varies greatly, but that doesn't mean we can't appreciate or support the way others choose to seize the day. Even if we don't understand or like their particular choice. While #hospitalglam celebrates fashion for it's power to give illness and the medical system the finger, others use art or music. Some form book groups or join support organisations. Some garden. Some engage in cosplay. Some are Trekkies and yet others, shudder, Beliebers. The idea that illness is some sort of end of the world scenario is far from the truth for many. When you are living with an illness or disorder that may never go away you find ways to deal with it, and that will look differently for different people.
In #hospitalglam many see an alternative to the paralysing and disempowering pity narratives of illness. They see an “up yours” to illness and a system both medical and societal that says to be ill you must conform to a certain paradigm. You are either pity worthy or inspirational. But in neither case can you win. There will always be someone to tell you, you are doing it wrong. The classic “you don't look sick” in all it's forms is thrown at those who wish to frock up or pop on some lippy (if only putting on my heels cured my broken genetics). Alternatively, if you stay in your pjs and trackie dacks you are becoming your illness and need to pull yourself up by your bootstraps. Damned if you do and damned if you don't. And these are the themes peppering the comment sections of articles about the hashtag.
Gehrig is not telling anyone what they should or shouldn't do. She is expressing herself in a way that works for her. The media interpretation of #hospitalglam has missed so much of it's intrinsic value. Her behaviour is not unique (though it can't be framed as an inspiration narrative by the media unless it is seen as an abnormality), many frock up in hospital and at medical appointments, but hers has been a more public and organised expression. Given her background in performance art it is not surprising that this is what works for her. But the way she and others have chosen to express their experience is so anathema to the wider societal views on illness that it has been held up as more of the inspiration porn of which the media is so fond. Just like those dealing with disability, the expectations of those with chronic illness are so low, any achievement is seen as miraculous. We are taught that such life events are the end of the world, so many are unable to conceive of a life filled with joy or fabulous frocks and illness. It is this framework which is so angering to many patients who feel like #hospitalglam represents yet another burden to add to their experience, rather than a moment of choice with a bit of tongue-in-cheek sparkle. Thanks media.
Patients are people first. And people are inherently diverse. The way we react to illness varies greatly, but that doesn't mean we can't appreciate or support the way others choose to seize the day. Even if we don't understand or like their particular choice. While #hospitalglam celebrates fashion for it's power to give illness and the medical system the finger, others use art or music. Some form book groups or join support organisations. Some garden. Some engage in cosplay. Some are Trekkies and yet others, shudder, Beliebers. The idea that illness is some sort of end of the world scenario is far from the truth for many. When you are living with an illness or disorder that may never go away you find ways to deal with it, and that will look differently for different people.
Whether other's do or
don't like #hospitalglam is beside the point. This is her experience
and her expressive outlet. She is entitled to do whatever works for
her. Just as every patient is entitled to do what works for them. As someone who wore sky high red sparkly heels to their MRI and
bright red compression stockings during their pacemaker implantation, I celebrate her chutzpah and raise my bright red lippy in salute.
Michelle
Bravo! Everyone grieves differently and everyone reacts to their medical issues differently. When our medical issues are the cause of our grief, back the f*ck off and let us deal with them in whatever healthy outlet we choose.
ReplyDeleteTotally.
DeleteI've been needing more distractions lately, I've been split between creating an all too casual twitter account... asking important questions like:
"If you were in a snail race, what kind of snail would you be?"
so I could answer:
"I'd be the slick back at the starting line because I had too much salt in my diet"
It'll be my contribution to spreading dysautonomia awareness, while venting about my stupid sh!t in the most corny of ways.
or starting a rock band
"All The Salt, No Tequila"
But are there many rock ballads for the triangle?
--
it's the game with most people, tho.
I was venting on another site about some health issues, and it's frustrating those are the posts I get the most upvotes but also often the least comments... and when people do comment -- it seems like they've read everything, but it doesn't register.. they can't honor me in what I'm feeling, what I'm feeling in that moment. I get (understand) their sympathies, but feel like they don't have any real empathy with me or the situation. They can't hack it. they only want "happy" - I'm not a shiny happy person in general, so they're asking for a lot, I think. Unless there's a zombie apocalypse, I'm probably not going to be anyone's gimp parade, even on a good day.
you know, i was thinking we really need an dysautonomia joke site or something; from cheesy dad & mum type jokes to the WTF IS WRONG WITH YOU variety
but I digress, so https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LV9Vf0a7YtM
"it seems like they've read everything, but it doesn't register.. they can't honor me in what I'm feeling, what I'm feeling in that moment. I get (understand) their sympathies, but feel like they don't have any real empathy with me or the situation. They can't hack it. they only want "happy""
DeleteSo true - they don't get it and can't hack it. They will decide they need to watch a bunch of happy movies and eat lots of chocolate to recover from reading something so depressing. We live in an entirely different reality and sometimes I think it would be better if we had our own colony to live in. I'd be happy to not bother them if I could live independently among my own kind.
Also a note to Michelle - you need an awesome button we can click for your posts. xD
-Jan
I have no problem with her choosing to glam up to go to hospital. I don't even have a problem with her choice to post selfies of it, beyond my normal level of confusion over the need to document every aspect of our lives these days! I think my problem, as Michelle says, is with the way the media has covered it - although whether that inevitability should be factored into the decision to do it is a complex question. But the fact remains that the end result is that I am one of those people who fear that the entirety of this situation (be mindful that not all, and quite possibly none, of the responsibility for this lies with any of those behind #hospitalglam) is just another source of pressure. I shared link about this in a private dysautonomia group, and posted a few times as the coversation about it evolved - this is the final message I posted, as I tried to unpack why I felt this way. It comes from the perspective of someone who is lucky enough to still be able to work - but with that all to aware of the need to "pass", and the requirement that although I don't necesssarily have to look glam, every day I do have to look "normal" and hide any signs of my illness.
ReplyDeleteI have realised it just seems like another way to 'do sick wrong'. Just like there are stereotypes of people with disabilities there is a related narrative of how to be sick.
You must do anything anyone anywhere has suggested might possibly make anyone better - quit sugar, do yoga, stop taking that nasty western medicine - even if it will do nothing for you and you have probably tried it anyway.
If by some freak chance that doesn't work, your illness shouldn't make anyone uncomfortable. You must be optimistic you will get well, but in the interim be stoic - sadness, anger and fear are not allowed. You must be there for all their important events - but don't have too much fun or that means all is fine.
And now I have to do all that while looking glam and taking selfies?!?!? She does it, why can't I?
What a fascinating discussion - reading both your post and the comments has been so interesting and I gotta say you do look fabulous Michelle!
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic concept!
ReplyDelete