2021/10/21

B Ehrenreich NATURAL CAUSES Ch 7 The War Between Conflict and Harmony

  


Barbara Ehrenreich 



CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION Ix

Chapter One: Midlife Revolt 1

Chapter Two: Rituals of Humiliation 14

Chapter Three: The Veneer of Science 32

Chapter Four: Crushing the Body 51

Chapter Five: The Madness of Mindfulness 71

Chapter Six: Death in Social Context 91

Chapter Seven: The War Between Conflict and Harmony 112

Chapter Eight: Cellular Treason 137

Chapter Nine: Tiny Minds 151

Chapter Ten: "Successful Aging" 162

Chapter Eleven: The Invention of the Self 181

Chapter Twelve: Killing the Self, Rejoicing in a Living World 197

NOTES 213

ABOUT THE AUTHOR 235

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CHAPTER SEVEN The War Between Conflict and Harmony

If the body—or the "mindbody" or whatever we are in­dividually comprised of—somehow "wants" to act as a unified whole, then it should be easy enough to bring it un­der our conscious control. All we have to do is use the mind to encourage this natural urge toward wholeness, and in­evitably, with the help of meditation, yoga poses, and a mindfully abstemious diet, wellness will follow. It was that simple.

The concepts of wellness and wholeness first wafted into American culture in the 1970s along with the scent of patchouli—hence the later derogation of some nonstan­dard practices as "hippie bullshit." In matters related to health, the old paradigm had been scientific reductionism: To understand something, you first have to take it apart and, using techniques like dissection, microscopy, and the fractionation of tissue into subcellular fragments, study its constituent parts. But in the new paradigm, promoted by the counterculture of the 1960s but also traceable to Emer­son and any number of Eastern and European mystics, the focus was on the interconnections between the parts, and hence on the whole, which was increasingly assumed to be "more than the sum of its parts." In some versions, the en­tire cosmos was depicted as a single entity containing each one of us, or at least our souls or spirits—a perspective that seems more consistent with Eastern mysticism and the emerging psychedelic drug culture than dreary old math-ridden, reductionist science. According to counterculture chronicler Theodore Roszak, the hippies and flower chil­dren aimed for nothing less than "the subversion of the scientific world view itself"'

We may think of the counterculture as a laid-back philo­sophical stance opposed to the very concept of control, but holism opened a new avenue of control—exercised by the mind over the body. Mind and body were disconnected in the reductionist scheme of things; it was not even clear that they belonged in the same sentence. From a holistic viewpoint, though, they were continuous, forming almost a single substance, the "mindbody," which could be accessed through conscious effort. How exactly the mind-body con­nection works can be comically difficult to explain, as in a passage from a book called Integrative Holistic Health, Healing, and Transformation:

When the mind is filled with negative imaginings, anxiety and depression producing neuropeptides are created. Ad­ditionally, the limbic system [of the brain] gets caught in a continuous negative feedback loop resulting in the amyg-dala affecting the sympathetic response from the auto­nomic nervous system affecting bodily changes reminding

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the individual of past trauma thus producing more anxiety and imaginings which affect the amygdala, etc.2

If you didn't understand that, don't worry. Aside from the syntactical disarray illustrated by this quote, it should be pointed out that there is no solid evidence that, aside from the effects of extreme stress, negative thoughts affect physical health, or that optimists live longer than pessimists.* Nevertheless, the author reassures us that "par­ticipating in a holistic health program or going to a practi­tioner often brings back a sense of control and hope, which, in and of itself can strengthen the body's capacity to fight disease and stay healthy."' An amulet would probably work just as well.

No new discoveries or scientific insights accompanied the new holistic paradigm. It was not based on a theory but on a sensibility that, by the late twentieth century, was gain­ing a measure of legitimacy from something that could not have been more temperamentally different from the coun­terculture. This was "systems analysis," a fad that first took hold in the world of corporate management. I would never have encountered it if I hadn't spent a few months work­ing as a "program policy analyst" at the New York City budget bureau. What that title meant exactly was never explained to me, nor was "systems analysis," which was be­ing installed in the city government by the Rand Corpo­ration and seemed to involve making decisions based on

* See my book Bright-Sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking

Has Undermined America.

quantitative data and doing it as "systematically" as possi­ble. (Although at any moment some new political priority could arise from the mayor's office to override the planners' logical and numerically sound recommendations.) The key insight was that human organizations such as armies, gov­ernments, and corporations, are "systems" or "complex sys­tems," like the human body itself, in which all the parts need to be considered together.

Oddly enough, given the assumed countercultural lin­eage of all things holistic, the chief promoter of systems analysis was a man surely innocent of psychedelic or mys­tical experience—Robert McNamara, the secretary of de­fense under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. When he was plucked from the Ford Motor Company for the de­fense job, McNamara was initially shocked by the unsys-temlike nature of the Pentagon, where the different services—army, navy, and so forth—competed for re­sources with little or no centralized control. His solution had been to introduce a "program policy budget system," the template for the one I later encountered in the New York City Budget Bureau. In the military, as in the budget bureau, it seems to have been largely interpreted as an em­phasis on quantitative goals and metrics—most famously, "body counts." So, piling one irony on top of another, the effort to rationalize military planning found itself enlisted into the service of America's fundamentally irrational war in Vietnam, and that effort was vaguely in synch with coun-tercultural yearning for wholeness.

Perhaps the most spectacular, and most spectacularly wrong, application of systems analysis was the Gaia hypoth‑

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esis, advanced by chemist and atmospheric scientist James Lovelock in 1974. Influenced by the increasingly popular science of ecology and made intuitively plausible by the first photos of our planet from space, the hypothesis pro­posed that Earth and all that live on it comprise a single "system," in fact, a self-regulating, living system in which the parts (humans, for example, or algae) interact to make Earth habitable for living creatures. That majestic image of a blue planet in space came to symbolize all that was good and desirable—wholeness, unity, ecology, interconnected­ness, peace, harmony. It also decorated the cover of the Whole Earth Catalog, which featured subsistence farming techniques, outdoor gear, and DIY technologies for hippies and geeks seeking self-sufficiency. Humans were subunits of that greater whole represented by the planet Earth, al­though unfortunately the smooth-running system that was Gaia has never figured out how to correct for the profligate human consumption of fossil fuels.

If systems analysis could not provide scientific backup for the new paradigm of wholeness, it at least helped rein­force its cultural legitimacy. As Encyclopedia.com tells us, in three sentences that are notable for containing the words "system" or "systems" nine times, the idea of systems was ev­erywhere, and seemed to embrace wholeness in any form:

During the second half of the twentieth century amalgams of the terms system and systems became ubiquitous. Com­puter and operating systems were joined by biological, business, and political systems. Systems science and systems engineering were complemented by systems management,

systems medicine, and the practice of looking at the earth as a system. 4

At times the notion of a "system" and a "whole" were al­most indistinguishable. For example, something called the "mindful economics movement" sought "to engage a holis­tic and systems analysis of economic problems associated with

capitalism 75 "Holistic"was good; anything i

ess  was a capitulation to the Enlightenment, science, capitalism, or whatever other evil force was believed to have smashed the human world into antagonistic fragments. To be holistic was to be kind, peaceable, and inclusive, which of course is how every vendor of services seeks to be seen. You can even find "holistic dentists," although a focus on any particular part of the body seems like a violation of holism.

It can be hard to discern any possible common ground between the two paradigms. At the extreme of scientific re­ductionism we have the fabled doctor who is so lost in the "parts" that he or she can no longer see the whole human, and refers to a patient as "the gall bladder in room 302." As we have seen in earlier chapters, medical education—beginning with the first corpse dissection—seems intent on removing any emotional connection between the patient and the physician. The patient is objectified, her conscious participation being required only in the form of "compli­ance." At the other extreme of congeniality would be the massage therapist I went to for lymphedema following surgery. She was a chatty, empathetic young woman, who in a dimly lit room gently fingered my chest and arms to the accompaniment of recorded trance music. (Not surpris‑

118 NATURAL CAUSES THE WAR BETWEEN CONFLICT AND HARMONY 119

ingly, several sessions of this did nothing for the incipient swelling, which I insisted on measuring before and after.) To its critics, the scientific approach is cold, rationalist even, in the view of feminist theorist Vandana Shiva, "imperial­istic," while alternative approaches are soothing, nurturing, and somehow aligned with the cosmos. The philosophi­cal gap here is at least as great as the one thought to exist between science and religion—and wars have been fought over less.

Spats still breakout from time to time, as in 2005 when the Society for Neuroscience provoked protests by inviting the Dalai Lama to speak on meditation and mindfulness at its annual conference. But even by the late twentieth century a fertile area of overlap had opened up between science, particularly quantum physics, and what we might loosely call the counterculture. Timothy Leary, the LSD pi­oneer, and Werner Erhard, the founder of EST, were both attracted to quantum physics, which a layperson could readily sample at venues such as Big Sur and the Santa Fe Institute. Meanwhile, some scientists and historians of sci­ence were beginning to mutter about the need for a more holistic approach within science itself Philosopher of sci­ence Evelyn Fox critiqued reductionist biology's emphasis on "master molecules," such as DNA, at the expense of the whole organism. At a somewhat less respectable aca­demic level, the physicist Fritjof Capra discerned a conti­nuity between quantum mechanics and Eastern mysticism and asserted that the natural world was not made up of dis­crete subunits, but of interacting vibrations. The path was clear for the explosive growth of integrative medicine in the. twenty-first century, in which the philosophical contradic­tions between the different treatment modalities could be dismissed with a wave of a hand and a mumbled reference to quantum physics.

Holistic Biology

By the late twentieth century, there is no question that medical science needed some sort of paradigm shift, if only to accommodate the fact that a "whole person"—body in addition to mind—is not well represented by a cadaver. Not only do we think and feel, but we react to the world in microscopic ways that are not visible to our minds and not easily accessible to our willpower or control. We bleed when cut, and if we are lucky the blood clots without our conscious intervention. The "system". that is a whole person contains many levels and parts. Some are macroscopic and some are microscopic; some are material, such as an organ, others apparently immaterial, as in the case of thoughts. How they interact to create a stable, or at least briefly stable, system has been the ongoing challenge to biological science.

The assumption, which has been around long enough to be almost unquestioned, has been that all parts and layers of the body work in concert. When we talk about human biology we are of course talking about the biology of mul-ticellular beings composed of subunits like tissues and cells. All these tissues and cells are presumed to work in har­mony, each selflessly performing its assigned function, like obedient citizens of a benign dictatorship. Heart cells beat

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in unison, liver cells store glucose, red blood cells carry oxygen. Anything else would be a disaster, right? Thus the

biology of multicellular beings is biased toward a holistic outlook. We aren't content to describe, say, a kidney; we want to know what its function is—what it does in service to the whole.

The assignment of functions to different parts or sub­units of the body goes back at least to the seventeenth cen­tury, when the English physician William Harvey figured out that the beating of the heart keeps the blood circulat­ing, although why circulation was important was still not clear at the time. Prior to this discovery, anatomists had been content to describe and locate the organs, leaving it to physiologists or metaphysicians to explain what the or­gans actually did and how they fit into the body as a whole. According to Harvey, the heart had a "function," and, as biologists quickly inferred, so must all other subunits and parts of the body. Pick up a contemporary biology textbook and you will find it thickly populated, by the word "func­tion," sometimes applied even to molecules. A 2014 cell biology textbook finds various ways of describing the com­mitment of cells and tissues to their functions: They have the "responsibility" or "task" of performing these functions, or they are said to be "specialized" to perform them,6 much like soldiers in an army or professors in a university.

Harvey's discovery revealed the body to be a kind of ma­chine, cleverly built up out of interconnecting, smoothly cooperating parts that had no volition of their own. As a seventeenth-century Italian anatomist proclaimed, "A hu­man body, as to its natural actions. . . is truly nothing else but a complex of chymico-mechanical motions, depending on such principles as are purely mathematical."' This me­chanical view, which still dominates biology today, in no way challenged religion: After all, an extraordinarily bril­liant designer must be behind the whole thing, or must at least have breathed life into some inert prior substance. And indeed the more we learn about how the body works, the more supernaturally marvelous its working seems. Con­sider how the body heals its wounds. First, a cascade of chemical reactions closes the lesion by making blood clot. At the same time, cells rush in from the bone marrow and other sites to chase out microbes, remove damaged tissue, and replace it with fresh, intact cells and tissues, so that we are prepared for any future wounds.

If the body is a perfect clockwork mechanism, this was, according to a cheap and dirty form of Darwinism, because perfection was inevitable. Bodily parts that didn't work, or work optimally, would be eliminated by natural selection, leaving only the "fittest" organisms to survive and breed. In the sociobiology that thrived in the 1960s, there was an evolutionary rationale for everything, and any trait or phys­ical characteristic that did not contribute to the survival of the species would be weeded out as a waste of energy. This led to a noxious defense of the status quo, often denounced by feminists as "determinism": We are the way we are—say, warlike or male supremacist—because to be any other way would be less "fit," and the sculptor that shaped us this way is not God but natural selection.

The trouble was that many things cannot be explained in terms of "fitness," including vestigial characteristics like

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male nipples and the appendix, as well as purely structural features that just seem to be required by the available "de‑

signs" in our genomes. Biologists Stephen Jay Gould and

Richard Lewontin deemed that such structural features are the analog of "spandrels" in the design of cathedrals: They

don't "do" anything except to fill in a preexisting pattern

of arches. Natural selection, Gould and Lewontin pointed out, is not the only force governing evolution, nor had

Darwin ever suggested that it was. Changes in the environment—climate changes or the sudden arrival of an asteroid—can cause the extinction of whole species that may have been supremely well adapted the moment before disaster struck. Meanwhile, apparently useless features like male nipples may be conserved over generations simply be­cause the plan for them remains in our genetic material.

So the unacknowledged bias in biology is optimistic, even utopian. Our bodies are perfectly adapted to the environment—or at least to the environment our distant ancestors faced—and they are that way because they could be no other way. In their critique of evolutionary biology, Gould and Lewontin invoked Voltaire's insanely optimistic Professor Pangloss, who had declared that everything was for the best in this "best of all possible worlds." The same could be said of the "functional" view of the body, which carries with it the assumption that all the parts and subunits act in harmony, ever alert to the needs of the whole. This is how we are introduced to biology as students—as the study of ideally functioning complex systems in which dis­ease and death are disappointing aberrations.

But all is not well in this best of all possible worlds, and the aberrations are too common, not to mention too dramatic, to dismiss. Consider cancer, which is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Many cancers can be blamed on chemical agents or radiation from outside the body, such as cigarette smoke or occupational hazards like benzene, but so far only about 60 percent of cancers can be traced to particular carcinogens.' For example, no car­cinogens have been discovered to explain cancers of the breast, colon, or prostate. All we know is that individual cells within these organs sometimes break ranks and start reproducing madly, creating tumors that can destroy the en­tire organism. Or consider autoimmune diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, which afflict 5 to 8 percent of the population and arise when the immune system abandons its designated "function," which is to pro­tect the body, and attacks the body itself 9 The body's own immune cells have also been implicated in the development of coronary artery disease, the greatest single cause of mor­tality in the United-States and Europe.

The functionalist view of the body is still immensely helpful, but only if we remember that it is an approxima­tion. Most skin cells, for example, behave as we would ex­pect them to if their functions are to serve as a protection against the outside world, to perspire, and to provide us with tactile experience. But some will become cancerous and attempt to take over the entire body—and what is the "function" of melanoma? We need to admit that instead of acting as a harmonious whole, the body can serve as a bat­tleground where its own cells and tissues meet in mortal combat.

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The potential theoretical basis for intrabody conflict had been laid out by Rudolf Virchow in the late nineteenth

century, when he proposed that the smallest living subunit

of the body was the cell, and that all cells arose from other cells. It was the latter proposition, expressed as Omnis eel‑

lula e cellula, that tended to attract the most attention

because it implied that even the most ferocious cancer cell was the descendant of a peaceable, law-abiding healthy cell.

But in some ways it was the first proposition—that the cell was the smallest living subunit of the body—that per­haps should have generated more excitement. At the time

of Virchow's work, other biologists were beginning to suc­ceed in cultivating body cells outside of the body—in what

came to be called "tissue cultures," bathed in a nutrient fluid such as a serum. The stage was set, by the beginning of the twentieth century, for a thorough study of these curious microscopic entities—cells—that make up living organisms.

But this was the road not taken. The middle of the twen­tieth century brought the stunning discovery of the struc‑

ture of DNA and its role in heredity. Almost overnight,

biology entered its extreme reductionist phase, zipping right past cells to get to the more glamorous molecular level,

where DNA, RNA, and proteins ruled. Cancer research

came to focus on the DNA mutations that predispose cells to a career of selfish reproduction. Immunology down­played the cellular dynamics of the immune system in favor of an obsession with antibodies—the protein molecules that can mark a "foreign" cell, like a microbe, for destruction—although it is chiefly specialized immune cells called macrophages that do the destroying. My first thesis adviser at Rockefeller University won a Nobel Prize for elucidating the structure of antibody molecules. My second thesis adviser got far less recognition, and a much smaller lab, for his work on how macrophages kill and digest their prey.

Cancer is hard enough to explain: Why would a cell un­dertake a campaign of conquest that can only end in that cell's own death? But cancer is commonly traced to errors in cell division, and it is easy to imagine such errors lead­ing a healthy cell to produce two cancerous daughter cells. Autoimmune diseases, like rheumatoid arthritis and multi-pie sclerosis, in which the immune system attacks healthy tissue within the body, pose a more vexing philosophical problem for biology. It is possible to imagine a single cell producing cancerous offspring, but it is not so easy to see how the many delicate mechanisms making up the immune response—which involve interactions between multiple types of cells—could be mobilized against the body's own tissues. Posed with the possibility of such an attack, bi­ologist Paul Ehrlich simply postulated the existence of a built-in horror autotoxicus, or "horror of self-poisoning," that would somehow prevent such hideous mistakes. How could there not be such a thing, since "life cannot harm it­self," as the "dogma" of horror autotoxicus put it? For an organism to undermine itself would be, in Ehrlich's words, "dysteleological in the highest degree,"° meaning that it would serve no purpose.

Fifty years later, in the middle of the twentieth century, the Australian immunologist Frank Macfarlane Burnet took Ehrlich's dictum about the impossibility of auto‑

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immune disorders a little further when he proclaimed that the true function of the immune system was a meta‑

physical one: to distinguish "self" and "non-self"—the

latter being foreign material such as microbes and the former being one's own tissues. These are terms drawn

from psychology or philosophy; they are "nebulous," as philosopher of science Alfred I. Tauber has pointed out, adding that "the self can hardly be viewed as a scientific concept."" In fact, it was barely even a concept at all un­til about the seventeenth century, when languages such as English and German began to use the word "self" as something other than an intensifier (as in "I did it myself"). Then, as we shall see in a later chapter, the "self" began to replace the "soul" as a special kind of kernel within each individual, walled off in part from everyone else. Attention turned inward, as people were encouraged to know themselves through, for example, the widespread use of mirrors, the writing of journals and autobiographies, and the painting of portraits, often self-portraits. "Western individualism" was born, along, eventually, with psychoanalysis and any number of afflic­tions of the self.

So why did Burnet choose such a "nebulous" and patently unscientific concept to explain the work of the immune system? Some scholars have speculated that he was influenced, like so many people of his class, by Freud, and perhaps actually attracted by the aura of subjectivity that hovers around the notion of the self. He could, after all, have used some other term like "the organism" or "the individual" to describe what the immune system is trying to maintain. But if he was looking for a way to talk about the organism versus the "others," generally meaning for­eign invaders like microbes, the self/non-self distinction was apt enough. At the heart of immunology is a military metaphor: Non-self is the enemy, usually represented by a bacterium or a virus, and has to be destroyed by the immune system, while "self," meaning the body's own tis­sues, of course has to be left alone. For example, a popular 1987 book, optimistically entitled The Body Victorious, described the immune system as

reminiscent of military defence, with regard to both weapon technology and strategy. Our internal army has at its disposal swift, highly mobile regiments, shock troops, snipers, and tanks. We have soldier cells which, on contact with the enemy, at once start producing homing missiles whose accuracy is overwhelming... [as well as] reconnais­sance squads, an intelligence service and a defence staff which determines the location and strength of troops to be deployed.12

The military metaphor can even be tapped to help explain—or excuse—autoimmune diseases. Any human so­ciety within a spear's throw of potential enemies needs some kind of defensive force—minimally, an armed group who can defend against invaders. But there are risks to maintain­ing a garrison or, beyond that, a standing army: The warriors may get greedy and turn against their own people, demand­ing ever more food and other resources. Similarly, in the case of the body, without immune cells we would be helpless in

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the face of invading microbes. With them, we face the possi­bility of treasonous attacks on our "selves"—the autoimmune diseases that Burnet at one point likened to "a mutiny in the forces of a country.13

In fact, no compelling evolutionary explanation for the

existence of autoimmune disease has been offered—just the excuse that the immune cells, despite their supposed func­tion of distinguishing self from non-self, sometimes make a "mistake." And why should that be? One popular hypothe­sis, proposed in 1989, is that the relatively hygienic environ­ments of affluent societies do not give immune cells enough

practice in facing their "real" enemies from the microbial world. They grow up, in other words, soft and pampered. But today there is increasing acknowledgment that the link between lack of childhood exposure is not one of cause and effect. One possibility is that highly hygienic environments may simply allow more children to live long enough to develop an autoimmune disease. 14 As Burnet commented, "one cannot discuss autoimmune disease without getting into deep water philosophically, "15

We could say, in retrospect, that Burnet was torn between two paradigms: One, the holistic, utopian one, saw the body or organism as a well-ordered mechanism, evolutionarily ordained to be exactly as it is. In the other emerging para­digm, which could be called dystopian, the organism is a site of constant conflict—as between cancer cells and normal cells or between the immune system and the other tissues in the body. The conflict may result in some sort of com­promise in which, for example, the disease settles into a chronic condition. Or it may end, sooner rather than later, in the death of the organism. These two paradigms, utopian and dystopian, may coexist in the same individual mind, Burnet's for example, but to my knowledge they have yet to square off in open combat. There however was a near collision in the early 1990s, for anyone who was paying attention, and it was not about autoimmune disease or can­cer, but about something more normal and apparently healthy—menstruation.

Blood Feuds

The onset of menstruation can be appalling, even terrify­ing, to the young girl who experiences it. There may be painful cramps, leaky tampons or pads, bouts of anemia. Yet, at least among the affluent and educated, every effort is made to normalize this oddly violent occurrence, even to prettify it. A parenting website advises:

It's also important for parents to paint the process of men­struation in a positive light. If a mother refers to her period as "the curse," her daughter might get a negative impression of the whole experience. Instead, mothers can explain that monthly periods are a natural and wonderful part of being a woman. After all, without them, women couldn't become mothers. 16

Undeterred by the question of why a twelve-year-old girl should find it "wonderful" that she is now capable of becom­ing pregnant, the positive pro-menstrual propaganda goes on

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in its upbeat way. A writer for the American Psychological Association offers "another way to keep-it-positive":

Some parents have successfully put together a Welcome to Womanhood Basket that might include chocolate, a heat­ing pad, hygiene supplies and perhaps a good book on the topic (or a novel from her favorite author), if she doesn't al­ready have one. 17

Somehow, the gift of a heating pad and hygiene supplies may seem more ominous than welcoming.

In the "positive" view, menstruation has a serious bi­ological function. Every month, at least in humans, the lining of the uterus grows thick, supposedly to provide a soft cushion for any fertilized eggs that find their way into it. If no embryo implants, the uterus sheds this lining, if only because it would be costly, in a caloric sense, to main­tain it—hence the mess of blood and tissue fragments that make up the menstrual discharge. But repeated monthly over decades, the shedding of the uterine lining is itself very costly; women typically lose a pint of blood a year and sometimes several more, creating the risk of anemia. So, if natural selection prevails, and if it works to optimize a species' fitness, why do we menstruate so copiously? In par­ticular, why do humans lose so much more blood than any other creature?

The answer—or at least an answer—came from an un­likely source. In 1993, Margie Profet, a thirty-five-year-old with no academic background in biology, proposed that the real function of menstruation is to cleanse the vagina of

pathogens that may have been introduced by an intruding penis.'8 I welcomed her hypothesis, which seemingly made the case that menstruation is not a result of female "un­cleanness," as patriarchal religions had insisted. Catholic churches, for example, had barred menstruating women;

Jewish law required women to undergo a ritual bath after their periods. But according to Profet's theory, menstrua‑

tion, for all its messiness, was actually an effort to maintain

the naturally pristine condition of the female body—a sort of douche in reverse. Within a couple of years, Profet had

won a MacArthur "genius award" and been profiled in Sci‑

entfic American, Omni, Time, and People. She became the exemplar of the kind of optimistic biology in which every‑

thing "happens for a reason," that reason being to preserve the individual organism and propagate the species. There was still conflict in her model, but only the ancient conflict between humans (or other mammals) and their traditional enemy, microbes.

I tracked her down in the late 1990s to ask a question based on my years of study into the effect of animal preda‑

tors on human evolution and history, plus my own experi‑

ence of warnings you are likely to encounter in bear-ridden wild areas: Might not copious menstruation have been a

risk factor for predator attacks, especially in the carnivore-ridden "evolutionary environment"? Her terse answer—that "humans are not a cryptic species"—was biologically uninformed, since a "cryptic species" is not one that has to hide from predators but one that is morphologically identical to a species with a different genome. But mine was only one of a growing number of questions about her

132 NATURAL CAUSES THE WAR BETWEEN CONFLICT AND HARMONY 133

theory. Other critics brought up the lack of data on the cleansing effect of the menstrual flow and her failure to ex‑

plain the fact that human menstruation is so much more copious than that of any other mammal. In fact, very few mammals menstruate at all, and the few that do—other

"higher" primates, some bats, and the elephant shrew—lose far less blood than humans, although there is no evidence

that the semen of their males is any less germ-ridden than

that of human males. Profet's other much-heralded theo­retical proposal—that the "morning sickness" characteristic

of human pregnancy served to protect the fetus from expo­sure to foods that might cause birth defects—was similarly assailed, and in about 2004, Margie Profet simply disap­peared, only to resurface in 2012 and rejoin her family of origin after a period of poverty and illness.19

Today the emerging scientific consensus about menstru­ation hinges on conflict within our species—a possibility

that would until recently have been deeply disturbing to bi‑

ologists. In this view, the buildup of the uterine lining does not serve to entice embryos to implant, but to prevent all

but the most robust and agile embryos from ever having a

chance. I will not attempt to trace the lineage of this coun­terintuitive idea, except to say that another renegade scien‑

tist, Robert Trivers of Rutgers, had argued in the 1970s that

the father and mother have different genetic interests at stake. Put crudely, the father "wants"—or more accurately, his genes should want—the embryos he has fertilized to

implant and live; the mother's interest is in destroying any potentially defective embryos that might waste her energy on a fruitless pregnancy. Trivers, who is no less a fascinat‑

ing character than Profet, deserves a book of his own, and in fact has written one, Wild Life, that has less to say about science than about his adventurous career, including his membership in the Black Panther Party and long residency in Jamaica. Maybe these experiences gave him the moxie to challenge the more harmonious and utopian tendencies in biology. Not only did he find deadly competition be­tween the sexes even in their most intimate moments, but he proposed that our genomes contain many stretches of DNA (often subsumed under the label "junk DNA") that are truly "selfish" in the sense that they

have discovered ways to spread and persist without con­tributing to organismal fitness. At times, this means encod­ing actions that are diametrically opposed to those of the majority of genes. As a consequence, most organisms are not completely harmonious wholes and the individual is, in fact, divisible. 20

Trivers's work seems to have emboldened his friend, Har­vard biologist David Haig, to offer a far more dystopian view of reproduction than anything Profet and her admir­ers could have imagined. In 1993, the same year that Profet published her work on menstruation, Haig put forth the surprising view that pregnancy was shaped by "maternal-fetal competition:' The fetus and the placenta that attaches it to the maternal bloodstream strive to extract more nutri­ents from the mother, while maternal tissue fights to hold on to its nutrients—often to the detriment of the mother. For example, the fetus may interfere with maternal insulin

134 NATURAL CAUSES THE WAR BETWEEN CONFLICT AND HARMONY 135

production, leading to elevated blood sugar levels that are injurious to the mother but deliciously nourishing to the fe­tus. Or the fetus and placenta may release chemicals that raise the mother's blood pressure—apparently to guarantee a ready flow of nutrients to the fetus—although at some risk to the mother and ultimately to the fetus as well.

But the maternal/fetal battle begins before implantation, when the embryo and its placenta have to fight their way through endometrial lining to get access to the maternal bloodstream. As evolutionary biologist Suzanne Sadedin, who once studied with Haig, wrote:

Far from offering a nurturing embrace, the endometrium is a lethal testing-ground which only the toughest embryos survive. The longer the female can delay that placenta reaching her bloodstream, the longer she has to decide if she wants to dispose of this embryo without significant cost. The embryo, in contrast, wants to implant its placenta as quickly as possible, both to obtain access to its mother's rich blood, and to increase her stake in its survival. For this reason, the endometrium got thicker and tougher—and the fetal placenta got correspondingly more aggressive. 21

In other words, a kind of arms race has gone on between the human endometrium and the human embryo/placental combination. Human placentas are extraordinarily tough fighters compared to those of other species, and our en-dometria are correspondingly thick and forbidding. Hence the uniquely heavy flow that human females experience—the cramps, bloodstained panties, and perhaps also the

widespread cultural notion that women are peculiarly dis­abled versions of men.

Many phases of women's reproductive cycle, from men­struation to labor, resemble the kind of inflammatory re­sponse the human body usually mounts when invaded by pathogens, except that in the reproductive case the targets are not pathogens but human cells and tissues. Menstru­ation, for example, is not the gentle, autumnal-sounding process of "shedding" an endometrial lining that it is usu­ally described as. When no embryo implants, the uterus releases chemical signals summoning immune cells to come in from the bloodstream and devour its thick endometrial lining, which quickly becomes a killing field, with the de­bris pouring out of the vagina. Fortunately, during most of human existence, thanks to frequent pregnancies and lengthy periods of lactation, human females probably en­dured very few menstrual periods during their lifetimes.

So far no adequate explanation has been found for the fact that among humans, about 80 percent of those who suffer from autoimmune diseases are female, suggesting that as holistic "systems," men are much better designed than women. Or it may be that we should see autoimmune dis­eases as just another part of the greater reproductive burden borne by women: All the inflammatory storms whipped up by menstruation and pregnancy may lead to a hazardous level of immune sensitivity, or, to put it in Burnet's vague philosophical terms, maybe pregnancy and the prepara­tions for it inherently blur the distinction between self and non-self.

But the point is that intrabody conflict—between cells

136 NATURAL CAUSES

and their own sibling cells within the same organism—is not confined to pathological conditions like cancer and autoimmune diseases, where it can be traced to a mutation or described as a "mistake." Deadly combat among cells is part of how the body, and especially the human body, con­ducts its normal business, which certainly includes repro­duction. If cells are alive and can seemingly act in their own interests against other parts of the body or even against the entire organism, then we may need to see ourselves less as smoothly running "wholes" that can be controlled by con­scious human intervention, and more as confederations, or at least temporary alliances, of microscopic creatures.

It is disconcerting to think of the biological self, or body, as a collection of tiny selves. The image that comes to mind is the grotesque portrait of a super-sized king in the fron­tispiece of philosopher Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan: On close inspection, the king turns out to be composed of hun­dreds of little people crowded into his arms and torso. Hobbes's point was that human societies need autocratic leaders; otherwise they risk degenerating into a "war of all against all." But no "king" rules the community of cells that makes up the body. Despite, or sometimes because of, all the communications—chemical and electrical—that con­nect the cells of the body, disagreements and mixed signals can always occur. What we need is a paradigm that includes not only the marvelous harmony within living organisms, but the conflicts that routinely break out.

"SUCCESSFUL AGING" 163


CHAPTER SEVEN: THE WAR BETWEEN CONFLICT AND

HARMONY

1. Quoted in David Kaiser, How the Hippies Saved Physics: Science, Counterculture, and the Quantum Revival (New York: W. W. Nor­ton, 2011), 266.

2. Penny Lewis, Integrative Holistic Health, Healing, and Transforma­tion: A Guidefor Practitioners, Consultants, and Administrators (Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas, 2002), 20.

1. Ibid., 21.

"Systems and Systems Thinking," Encyclopedia.com, www.encyclopedia.com/science/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/systems-and-systems-thinking.

Joel C. Magnuson, "Pathways to a Mindful Economy," Society and Economy 29, no.2 (2007): 253-84, wwwjstor.org/stable/ 41472084?seq= 1#page_scan_ tab _contents.

George Plopper, Principles of Cell Biology (Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning, 2014).

"William Harvey," www.umich.eduI-'ece/student_projects/ anatomy/people_pages/harvey.html.

4. George Johnson, The Cancer Chronicles: UnlockingMedicine's Deepest Mystery (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2013), 143; Brett Is‑

226 ENDNOTES

rae!, "How Many Cancers Are Caused by the Environment?," Sci-entficAmerican via Environmental Health News, May 21, 2010, www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-many-cancers-are-caused-by-the-environment!.

9. DeLisa Fairweather and Noel R. Rose, "Women and Autoimmune Diseases," Emerging Infectious Diseases 10, no. 11(2004): 2005-1l,wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/10/11/04-0367 article.

10. Quoted in Alfred I. Tauber, "Immunology and the Enigma of Self­hood," in Growing Explanations: Historical Perspective on Recent Science, ed. M. Norton Wise (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004), 207.

10. Alfred I. Tauber, The Immune Se(fi Theory or Metaphor? (Cam­bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 141.

9. Quoted in Emily Martin, "Toward an Anthropology of Immunol­ogy: The Body as Nation State," Medical Anthropology Quarterly, New Series, vol. 4, no.4 (December 1990): 410-26, quote on 411.

Quoted in Warwick Anderson and Ian R. Mackay, Intolerant Bodies: A Short History ofAutoimmunity (Baltimore: Johns Hop­kins University Press, 2014), 89.

12. Lois N. Magner, A History ofinfectious Diseases and the Microbial World (Healing Society: Disease, Medicine, and History) (West­port, CT: Praeger, 2009), 205.

9. Quoted in Anderson and Mackay, Intolerant Bodies, 89.

"Talking to Your Child About Menstruation," KidsHealth, http:!/kidshealth.org!parent/positive/talk/ talk about menstruation.html#.

Karol Maybury, "A Positive Approach to Menarche and Menstrua­tion," Society for the Psychology of Women, American Psychological Association, www.apadivisions.org!division-35! news-events!news/menstruation.aspx.

"Margie Profet," Wikipedia, https:/!en.wikipedia.org!wiki! MargieProfet.

Brendan Maher, "Missing Biologist Surfaces, Reunites with Family," Nature.com, May 31, 2012, http:!!blogs.nature.com!news!2012!05! missing-biologist-surfaces-reunites-with-family.html.

Austin Burt and Robert Trivers, Genes in Conflict: The Biology of Selfish Genetic Elements (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006), 3.

Suzanne Sadedin, "What Is the Evolutionary Benefit or Purpose of Hay­ing Periods?," Quota, updated November 7, 2016, wwquora.com/ What-is-the-evolutionary-benefit-or-purpose-of-having-periods.



B Ehrenreich NATURAL CAUSES CH 6 Death in Social Context

 B Ehrenreich NATURAL CAUSES CH 6  Death in Social Context

Barbara Ehrenreich 



CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION Ix

Chapter One: Midlife Revolt 1

Chapter Two: Rituals of Humiliation 14

Chapter Three: The Veneer of Science 32

Chapter Four: Crushing the Body 51

Chapter Five: The Madness of Mindfulness 71

Chapter Six: Death in Social Context 91

Chapter Seven: The War Between Conflict and Harmony 112

Chapter Eight: Cellular Treason 137

Chapter Nine: Tiny Minds 151

Chapter Ten: "Successful Aging" 162

Chapter Eleven: The Invention of the Self 181

Chapter Twelve: Killing the Self, Rejoicing in a Living World 197

NOTES 213

ABOUT THE AUTHOR 235

=====================

CHAPTER SIX Death in Social Context

any of the people who got caught up in the health "craze" of the late twentieth century—people who exercised, watched what they ate, abstained from smoking and heavy drinking—have nevertheless died. Lucille Roberts, owner of the chain of women's gyms that introduced me to the fitness culture, died incongruously from lung cancer at the age of fifty-nine, even though she was a "self-described exercise nut" who, the New York Times reported, "wouldn't touch a French fry, much less smoke a cigarette." Jerry Rubin, who devoted his later years to try­ing every supposedly health-promoting diet fad, therapy, and meditation system he could find, jaywalked into Wil­shire Boulevard at the age of fifty-six and died of his injuries two weeks later. If this trend were to continue, everyone who participated in the fitness culture—as well as everyone who sat it out—will at some point be dead.

Some of these deaths were genuinely shocking. Jerome Rodale, the founder ofPrevention magazine and an early pro­moter of organic food, died of a heart attack at age seventy‑

Image

92 NATURAL CAUSES DEATH IN SOCIAL CONTEXT 93

two, while taping The Dick Cavett Show—a death made par­ticularly memorable by Rodale's off-camera statement that he had "decided to live to be a hundred?'2 Jim Fixx, author of the bestselling The Complete Book ofRunning, believed he could outwit the cardiac problems that had carried his father off to an early death by running at least ten miles a day and restrict­ing himself to a diet consisting mostly of pasta, salads, and fruit. But he was found dead on the side of a Vermont road in 1984, at the age of only fifty-two. In 2017, Henry S. Lodge, coauthor of the bestselling Younger Next Year: Live Strong, Fit, and Sexy— Until You're 80 and Beyond, died of pancreatic cancer at the still-youthful age of fifty-eight. In an obituary, his coauthor Chris Crowley wrote:

I suppose the question may arise: doesn't his premature death undercut the premise of the book? No, not for one minute. We always said that the life-style we were promoting—and which Harry followed carefully—would reduce the risk of death from cancers and heart disease, among other things, by half, but not entirely. You could catch a lousy break, "ski into a tree" or "grow a tangerine in your brain pan," as [our] book puts it.3

Even more disturbing, to those who knew about it, was the untimely demise of John H. Knowles, director of the Rocke­feller Foundation and promulgator of what became known as the "doctrine of personal responsibility" for one's health. Most illnesses are self-inflicted, he argued—the result of "glut­tony, alcoholic intemperance, reckless driving, sexual frenzy, and smoking,"4 as well as other bad choices. The "idea of a 'right' to health," he wrote, "should be replaced by the idea of an individual moral obligation to preserve one's own health?' But he died of pancreatic cancer at the age of fifty-two, prompting one physician commentator to observe that "clearly we can't always be held responsible for our health."'

Still, we persist in subjecting anyone who dies at a seem­ingly untimely age to a kind of bio-moral autopsy: Did she smoke? Drink excessively? Eat too much fat and not enough fiber? Can she, in other words, be blamed for her own death? When two British entertainers, David Bowie and Alan Rick­man, both died in early 2016 of what major US newspapers described only as "cancer," some readers complained that it is the responsibility of obituaries to reveal what kind of cancer.6 Ostensibly this information would help promote "awareness" of the particular cancers involved, as Betty Ford's openness about her breast cancer diagnosis helped to destigmatize that disease. It would also, of course, prompt judgments about the victim's "lifestyle?' Would David Bowie have died—at, we should note, the quite respectable age of sixty-nine—if he hadn't been a smoker?

Apple cofounder Steve Jobs's 2011 death from pancre­atic cancer continues to spark debate. He was a food fad­dist, specifically a consumer only of raw vegan foods, espe­cially fruit, refusing to deviate from that plan even when doctors recommended a diet high in protein and fat to help compensate for his failing pancreas. His office refrigerator was filled with Odwalla juices; he antagonized nonvegan associates by attempting to proselytize among them, as bi­ographer Walter Isaacson has reported:

94 NATURAL CAUSES DEATH IN SOCIAL CONTEXT 95

At a meal with Mitch Kapor, the chairman of Lotus soft­ware, Jobs was horrified to see Kapor slathering butter on his bread, and asked, "Have you ever heard of serum choles­terol?" Kapor responded, "I'll make you a deal. You stay away from commenting on my dietary habits and I will stay away from the subject of your personality. "7

Defenders of veganism argue that his cancer could be at­tributed to his occasional forays into protein-eating (a meal of eel sushi has been reported), or perhaps to exposures to toxic metals as a young man tinkering with computers. A case could be made, however, that it was the fruitar-ian diet that killed him: Metabolically speaking, a diet of fruit is equivalent to a diet of candy, only with fructose in­stead of glucose, with the effect that the pancreas is strained to constantly produce more insulin. As for the personality issues—the almost manic-depressive mood swings—they could not unreasonably be traced to frequent bouts of hy­poglycemia. Incidentally, the sixty-seven-year-old Mitch Kapor is alive and well at the time of this writing.

Similarly, with sufficient ingenuity—or malicious intent—almost any death can be blamed on some failure or mistake of the deceased. Surely Jim Fixx had failed to "listen to his body" when he first felt chest pains and tightness while running, and maybe if Jerry Rubin had been less self-absorbed, he would have looked both ways before crossing the street. Maybe it's just the way the human mind works, but when bad things happen or someone dies, we seek an explanation, and prefer­ably one that features a conscious agency—a deity or spirit, an evildoer or envious acquaintance, even the victim him- or herself We don't read detective novels to find out that the uni­verse is meaningless, but that, with sufficient information, it all makes sense.

Mass disasters afflicting hundreds or thousands of people of varying degrees of virtue or sinfulness have often required massive supernatural explanations. One of the most con­founding disasters in European history was the great earth­quake that leveled Lisbon in 1755. The first tremors struck on the morning of All Saints' Day, demolishing many of the city's buildings. After the tremors, a thirty-nine-foot-high tsunami swept up streets full of frantic quake survivors, and this in turn was followed by a huge fire originating in house­hold hearths, which had been left unattended during church services. Altogether, somewhere between thirty thousand and sixty thousand lives were lost, this vast range reflecting the fact that there were no serious efforts to count the dead.

An earlier city-destroying disaster, the 79 CE eruption of Mount Vesuvius, which left the Roman city of Pompeii buried in lava, had occasioned no moralizing, if only be­cause the prevailing deities were not known to be moral exemplars. Jupiter, Juno, and the rest of the pantheon were vain, capricious, and generally indifferent to human suffer­ing. But by the eighteenth century, the pagan gods had all been replaced by a single monotheistic deity who had the double responsibility of being both all-powerful and all-good. This was a tricky combination at best, and the root of the theological puzzle of "theodicy": If God is perfectly good, how can he let bad things happen? True believers rushed in to assert that if he flattened Lisbon, that must be because Lisbon was wicked, which may have been a fair

96 NATURAL CAUSES DEATH IN SOCIAL CONTEXT 97

assessment. AS one historian observes, in pre-quake Lis­bon, the convents usually doubled as brothels'— althoughthe moral reckoning is a little complicated by the fact that cathedrals and the local headquarters of the Inquisition toppled or burned along with the dens of iniquity.

Historians can discern a bright side to the Lisbon earth­quake: It helped instigate the new intellectual era known as the Enlightenment. While the faithful debated whether it was even worthwhile to try to rebuild the city God had so clearly marked for destruction, when it might be better to devote oneself to prayer and acts of penitence, the French philosopher Voltaire published a lengthy poem refuting the entire idea of a good God:

And can you then impute a sinful deed To babes who on their mothers' bosoms bleed? Was then more vice in fallen Lisbon found, Than Paris, where voluptuousfoys abound? Was less debauchery to London known, Where opulence luxurious holds the throne?9

Voltaire, who dabbled in chemistry and physics in his own home laboratory, proposed that the earthquake was the result of "natural causes," which would eventually be understandable through patient observation. It would not be until the twentieth century that the theory of plate tec­tonics arose, and with it the notion of an unstable planetary surface composed of shifting puzzle pieces. But Voltaire helped establish that there were no moral lessons to be de­rived from the carnage of 1755. It was an accident.

But nearly three hundred years after the Lisbon earth­quake and the philosophical debates that followed it, we have returned to the habit of dissecting the dead for the moral failings that undid them. Had they neglected impor­tant religious rituals and prohibitions, or, in the contempo­rary version, had they smoked cigarettes and ingested fatty meats? Can we learn anything from their lives and deaths that will help us avoid the same fate?

There is of course a major difference between the intel­lectual groundwork of the eighteenth century and that of the twenty-first: Our predecessors proceeded from an as­sumption of human helplessness in the face of a judgmental and all-powerful God who could swoop down and kill tens of thousands at will, while today's assumption is one of al­most unlimited human power. We can, or think we can, understand the causes of disease in cellular and chemical terms, so we should be able to avoid it by following the rules laid down by medical science: avoiding tobacco, ex­ercising, undergoing routine medical screening, and eating only foods currently considered healthy. Anyone who fails to do so is inviting an early death. Or to put it another way, every death can now be understood as suicide.

Liberal commentators countered that this view repre­sented a kind of "victim-blaming:' In her books Illness as Metaphor and AIDS and Its Metaphors, Susan Sontag argued against the oppressive moralizing of disease, which was in­creasingly portrayed as an individual problem. The lesson, she said, was "Watch your appetites. Take care of yourself. Don't let yourself go710 Even breast cancer, she noted, which has no clear lifestyle correlates, could be blamed on a "cancer

98 NATURAL CAUSES DEATH IN SOCIAL CONTEXT 99

personality," sometimes defined in terms of repressed anger, which presumably one could have sought therapy to cure. Little or nothing was said, even by the major breast, cancer advocacy groups, about possible environmental carcinogens or carcinogenic medical regimes like hormone replacement therapy. A 1998 official UK "Green Paper" on health sum­marized that "it is finally up to the individual to choose whether to change their behaviour to a healthier one:"

While the affluent struggled dutifully to conform to the latest prescriptions for healthy living—adding whole grains and gym time to their daily plans—the less affluent re­mained for the most part mired in the old comfortable, unhealthy ways of the past, smoking cigarettes and eating foods they found tasty and affordable. There are some obvi­ous reasons why the poor and the working class resisted the health craze: Gym memberships can be expensive; "health foods" usually cost more than "junk food." But as the classes diverged, the new stereotype of the lower classes as willfully unhealthy quickly fused with their old stereotype as semi­literate louts. I confront this directly in my work as an ad­vocate for a higher minimum wage. Affluent audiences may cluck sympathetically over the miserably low wages offered to blue-collar workers, but they often want to know "why these people don't take better care of themselves," why, for example, do they smoke or eat fast food? Concern for the poor usually comes tinged with criticism.

And contempt. In the 2000s, British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver took it on himself to reform the eating habits of the masses, starting with school lunches. Pizza and burgers were replaced with menu items one might expect to find in a moderately upscale restaurant—fresh greens, for example, and roast chicken. But the experiment was a mortifying fail­ure. Both in the United States and the UK, schoolchildren dumped out their healthy new lunches or stamped them un­derfoot. Mothers passed burgers to their children through school fences. Administrators complained that the new meals were vastly over budget; nutritionists noted that they were cruelly deficient in calories. In Oliver's defense, it should be observed that ordinary "junk food" is chemically engineered to provide an addictive combination of salt, sugar, and fat. But it probably matters too that he didn't bother to study local eating habits before challenging them, nor did he seem to have given much thought to creatively modifying them. In West Virginia, he alienated parents by bringing a local mother to tears when he publicly an­nounced that the food she normally gave her four children was "killing" them. 12

There can of course be unfortunate consequences from eating the wrong foods. But what are the "wrong" foods? In the 1980s and '90s, the educated classes turned against fat in all forms, advocating the low-fat diet that, journalist Gary Taubes argues, paved the way for an "epidemic of obesity" as health-seekers switched from cheese cubes to low-fat desserts.'3 The evidence linking dietary fat to poor health had always been shaky, but class prejudice prevailed: Fatty and greasy foods were for the poor and unenlight­ened; their betters stuck to bone-dry biscotti and fat-free milk. Other nutrients went in and out of style as medical opinion shifted: It turns out that high dietary cholesterol, as in oysters, is not a problem after all, and the doctors

have stopped pushing calcium on women over forty. In­creasingly, the main villains appear to be sugar and refined carbohydrates, as in hamburger buns. Eat a burger and fries washed down with a large sugary drink, and you will prob­ably be hungry again in a couple of hours, when the sugar rush subsides. If the only cure for that is more of the same, your blood sugar levels may permanently rise, causing the condition we call diabetes.100 101

Special opprobrium is attached to fast food, thought to be the food of the ignorant. Filmmaker Morgan Spurlock spent a month eating nothing but McDonald's offerings to create his famous Super Size Me, documenting his twenty-four-pound weight gain and soaring blood cholesterol. I have also spent many weeks eating fast food because it's cheap and filling, but in my case, to no perceptible ill ef­fects. It should be pointed out, though, that I ate selectively, skipping the fries and sugary drinks to double down on the protein. When at a later point a notable food writer called to interview me on the subject of fast food, I started by mentioning my favorites (Wendy's and Popeyes), but it turned out that they were all indistinguishable to him. He wanted a comment on the general category, which was to me like asking what I thought about restaurants.

The Great White Die-Off

If food choices defined the class gap, smoking provided afire-wall between the classes. To be a smoker in almost any in­dustrial country is to be a pariah, and most likely a sneak. I grew up in another world, the 1940s and '50s, when cigarettes served not only as a comfort for the lonely but a powerful social glue. People offered each other cigarettes, and lights, indoors as well as outdoors, in bars, restaurants, workplaces, and living rooms, to the point where tobacco smoke became synonymous with human habitation, and, for better or worse, the scent of home. In John Steinbeck's 1936 novel In Dubious Battle, a cynical older labor organizer offers a young migrant worker a fresh-rolled cigarette, along with some advice:

You ought to take up smoking. It's a nice social habit. You'll have to talk to a lot of strangers in your time. I don't know any quicker way to soften a stranger down than to offer him a smoke, or even to ask him for one. And lots of guys feel insulted if they offer you a cigarette and you don't take it. You better start. 14

My parents smoked; one of my grandfathers could roll a cigarette with one hand; my aunt, who was eventually to die of lung cancer, taught me how to smoke when I was a teenager. And the government seemed to approve. It wasn't till 1975 that the armed forces stopped including cigarettes along with food rations.

As more affluent people gave up the habit, the war on smoking—which was always presented as an entirely benev­olent effort—began to look like a war against the working class. When the break rooms offered by employers banned smoking, workers were left to brave the elements outdoors, where you can see them leaning against walls to shelter their cigarettes from the wind. When working-class bars went

nonsmoking, their clienteles dispersed to drink and smoke in private, leaving few indoor sites for gatherings and conversa­tions. Escalating cigarette taxes hurt the poor and the work­ing class hardest. 

102  103

The way out is to buy single cigarettes on the streets, but strangely enough the sale of these "loosies" is largely illegal. In 2014 a Staten Island man, Eric Garner, was killed in a chokehold by city police for precisely this crime. 15

Why do people smoke? The most common explanation, reinforced by Steinbeck, is that peer pressure leads people to start smoking, after which the addictive power of nico­tine leaves them without much choice. There has been little exploration of the inherent pleasures of smoking, as if the very mention of them would undercut the antismoking cause. An exception was a 2011 column in which a journal­ist boldly asserted:

I love smoking, I like the way it tastes after a meal or with a cocktail, I like the way it fends off boredom, I like it on a hot, sweaty summer day and I like it on a cold, crisp winter night.... In the end, the ritual and routine of smoking, not to mention the nicotine, puts me at ease and relaxes me. 16

Nicotine activates the brain's "reward pathways," so that reactivating them becomes a form of self-nurturance and a way of countering pressure and overwork as well as, some­times, boredom. I once worked in a restaurant in the era when smoking was still permitted in break rooms, and many workers left their cigarettes burning in the common ashtray so that they could catch a puff whenever they had a chance to, without bothering to relight. Everything else they did was for the boss or the customers; smoking was the one thing they did for themselves. In one of the few stud­ies of why people smoke, a British sociologist found that smoking among working-class women was associated with greater responsibilities for the care of family members—again suggesting a kind of defiant self-nurturance.'7

When the notion of "stress" was crafted in the mid twentieth century, the emphasis was on the health of execu­tives, whose anxieties presumably outweighed those of a man­ual laborer who had no major decisions to make. It turns out, however, that the amount of stress one experiences—measured by blood levels of the stress hormone cortisol—increases as you move down the socioeconomic scale, with the most stress being inflicted on those who have the least control over their work. In the restaurant industry, stress is concentrated among the people responding to the minute-by-minute demands of customers, not those who sit in corpo­rate offices discussing future menus. Add to these workplace stresses the challenges imposed by poverty and you get a com­bination that is highly resistant to, for example, antismoking propaganda—as Linda Tirado reported about her life as a low-wage worker with two jobs and two children:

I smoke. It's expensive. It's also the best option. You see, I am always, always exhausted. It's a stimulant. When I am too tired to walk one more step, I can smoke and go for another hour. When I am enraged and beaten down and incapable of accomplishing one more thing, I can smoke and I feel a little better, just for a minute. It is the only re­laxation I am allowed. 18

104 105

Nothing has happened to ease the pressures on low-wage workers. On the contrary, if the old paradigm of a blue-collar job was forty hours a week, an annual two-week vacation, and benefits such as a pension and health insurance, the new expectation is that one will work on demand,. as needed, without benefits or guarantees of any kind. Some surveys now find a majority of US retail workers working without regular schedules19—on call for when the employer wants them to come and unable to predict how much they will earn from week to week or even day to day. With the rise in "just in time" scheduling, it becomes impossible to plan ahead: Will you have enough money to pay the rent? Who will take care of the children? The consequences of employee "flexibil­ity" can be just as damaging as a program of random electric shocks applied to caged laboratory animals.

Sometime in the first decade of the twenty-first century, demographers began to notice an unexpected uptick in the death rates of poor white Americans. This was not sup­posed to happen. For almost a century, the comforting American narrative was that better nutrition and medical care would guarantee longer lives for all. It was especially not supposed to happen to whites who, in relation to peo­ple of color, have long had the advantage of higher earnings, better access to health care, safer neighborhoods, and of course freedom from the daily insults and harms inflicted on the darker-skinned. But the gap between the life ex­pectancies of blacks and whites has been narrowing. At first, some researchers found the rising mortality rates of poor whites less than surprising: Didn't the poor have worse health habits than the affluent? Didn't they smoke?

According to the New York Times, economist Adriana Lleras-Muney, one of the first to note the mortality gap, of­fered the explanation that "as a group, less educated [and thus on the whole, poorer] people are less able to plan for the future and to delay gratification. If true, that may, for example, explain the differences in smoking rates between more educated people and less educated ones."" Another researcher, economist James Smith at the Rand Corpora­tion, amplified on this point a few years later: Poor people don't seem to realize that "a lot of things you might do don't have an immediate negative impact—excessive drink­ing, smoking, and doing drugs can [feel good in the short term] —but the fact is it's going to kill you in the future'21

Poor white Americans were, in other words, killing themselves, and this was not a mere blip in the data. In late 2015, the British economist Angus Deaton won the No­bel Prize for work he had done with fellow economist Anne Case, showing that the mortality gap between wealthy white men and poor ones was widening at a rate of one year each year, and slightly less for women. A couple of months later, "economists at the Brookings Institution found that for men born in 1920, there was a six-year difference in life expectancy between the top 10 percent of earners and the bottom 10 percent. For men born in 1950, that difference more than doubled, to 14 years."22 Smoking could account for only one-fifth to one-third of the excess deaths. The rest were apparently attributable to alcoholism, opioid ad­diction, and actual suicide—as opposed to metaphorically killing oneself through unwise lifestyle choices.

106 107

But why the excess mortality among poor white Americans? In the last few decades, things have not been going well for working-class people of any color. I grew up in an America where a man with a strong back—and better yet, a strong union—could reasonably expect to support a fam­ily on his own without a college degree. By 2015, those jobs were long gone, leaving only the kind of work once rele­gated to women and people of color, in areas like retail, landscaping, and delivery-truck driving. This means that those in the bottom 20 percent of the white income dis­tribution face material circumstances similar to those long familiar to poor blacks, including erratic employment and crowded, hazardous living spaces. When a member of my extended family needed a loan to pay her mortgage, I was surprised to discover that her home was not a house; it was a single-wide trailer she shared with two other family mem­bers. Poor whites had always had the comfort of knowing that someone was worse off and more despised than they were; racial subjugation was the ground under their feet, the rock they stood upon, even when their own situation was deteriorating. That slender reassurance is shrinking.

There are some practical reasons too why whites are likely to be more efficient than blacks at killing themselves. For one thing, they are more likely to be gun owners, and white men favor gunshots as a means of suicide. For an­other, doctors, undoubtedly acting in part on stereotypes of nonwhites as drug addicts, are more likely to prescribe pow­erful opioid painkillers to whites than to people of color. Pain is endemic among the blue-collar working class, from waitresses to construction workers, and few people make it past fifty without palpable damage to their knees, back, or rotator cuffs. In 2011, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention declared an "epidemic" of opioid use, in which the victims are mostly white. 2' As opioids became more ex­pensive and closely regulated, users often make the switch. to heroin, which varies in strength and can easily lead to ac­cidental overdoses.

It's hard to find historical analogies to the current white-collar die-off in the United States. Perhaps the closest is the sudden drop in male life expectancy associated with the fall of communism in the Soviet Union. As jobs were lost and the old infrastructure of social welfare measures—free medical care and education—came apart in the 1990s, Russian male life expectancy fell from sixty-two to fifty-eight; women's hovered around seventy-four.24 Other post-communist countries did not suffer such a startling transition, in part because they did not undergo the same "shock therapy" that international financial institutions had prescribed for the Soviet Union. As in America, "lifestyle" factors are easy to invoke: The fall of communism led to an upsurge in alcoholism and alcohol-related deaths.

Or, for a more global and somber analogy, we could reach back to the deadly consequences of European expan­sionism in the sixteenth through the twentieth centuries, and still ongoing. The number of indigenous people killed in this "single, multi-century, planet-wide exterminatory pulse,"25 whether by bullets, disease, or mass deportations, has been estimated at fifty million. 26 But when the shoot­ing stopped, the survivors were often left suffering from what could be a fatal malaise, characterized by alcoholism, depression, and suicide. This was the background for anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss's 1955 Triste Tropiques: decimated native cultures, stripped of customs, rituals, or traditional means of subsistence, left listless and dispirited by their encounter with the West. 

108 109

The advocacy group Cultural Survival reports that throughout the Western Hemisphere, indigenous peoples suffer from high rates of alcoholism and suicide. The same can be said of the peoples of Oceania and northern Russia, as well as the aboriginal groups of Taiwan. Furthermore, we can safely conjecture that dislocation, epidemics, de­population, and subjugation have put indigenous peoples everywhere at high risk of depression and anxiety. 27

Like twentieth-century Russian workers or nineteenth-century Polynesians, the American working class—or at least the white part of it—which could once hope for steady work at decent pay, has lost much of its way of life.

In current political conversations, the anomalous mor­tality of poor white Americans is often elided or confused with the larger problem of economic inequality. Until very recently, any shortcomings the United States experienced in the realm of health and mortality relative to other ad­vanced countries, such as its embarrassingly high rate of infant mortality, could be chalked up to "diversity": The American numbers were being dragged down by the pres­ence of a historically and relentlessly disadvantaged racial minority, or so we were told. But clearly race does not ex­plain everything—poverty itself shortens life spans. What has happened is that the gap between the rich and the poor has widened abruptly in the last forty and even the last five years, to the point where the richest 1 percent of Americans now own 35 percent of the nation's net worth.28 The trailer parks, tenements, and tent cities of the poor coexist, how­ever uneasily, with the penthouse-topped towers of the rich.

In fact, the gap between rich and poor—not only in the United States but in other highly unequal societies, such as the UK and Israel—has widened to such an extent that a single word, "health," no longer suffices to describe what was once a universally desirable biological status. The in­creasingly polarized economic situation demands the more nebulous and elastic concept of "wellness." At the lower end of the wealth and income spectrum, wellness presents itself in the form of the corporate wellness programs now of­fered by about half of employers. These range from in-house gyms to ambitious surveillance programs that subject em­ployees to periodic measurements of quantities like blood pressure and body mass index. Failure to participate or to comply with weight loss goals can mean being forced to pay higher premiums for health insurance or even outright fines, although there is no evidence that such programs either improve employees' health or reduce employers' ex-penses.29

But aside from punitive corporate programs aimed at retail and midlevel white-collar employees, wellness is mainly the domain of the rich, described in the fitness industry as a "luxury pursuit." Vogue magazine's online site Style.com goes further, announcing that wellness is "the new luxury status symbol," which can be displayed simply by carrying a yoga tote bag and a bottle of green vegetable-based juice. 

110 111

An advantage of wellness as a status symbol is that it is less likely to incite the envy of the lower classes than, say, furs and diamonds, plus the practice of wellness goes on largely out of sight, in hard-to-access spa­ces like private gyms and spas There are hundreds if not thousands of luxury wellness resorts around the world (al­though some of them may be traditional resorts to which the word "wellness" has been appended for marketing pur­poses). At their most ambitious, these resorts offer some­thing far more comprehensive than mere "health," which still carries the taint of its old definition as the "absence of disease." Every known modality of self-improvement is on hand: yoga, Rolfing, detoxification, tai chi, and medi­tation, plus more esoteric practices such as hot stone mas­sages, "sound therapy," often involving Tibetan singing drums, and "phototherapy." At a "destination" wellness re­sort, the scenery and even the local indigenous people may be enlisted in the healing process:

Our private, customized wellness retreats will reconnect you to your mind, body, and spirit in some of the world's most breathtaking places. We invite you to partake in sa­cred rituals alongside the Kalahari's Shamans, rebalance your body with private yoga classes in ancient Indian tem­ples, refocus your mind as you chant with monks in Bhutan, and partake in healing practices such as massage, Reiki, and soaking in hot springs at luxurious onsens throughout the Japanese countryside. Whether you find yourself meditating in the foothills of the Himalayas, or en­gulfed in the peaceful solitude of Botswana's saltpans, our

wellness vacations will take you on an adventure of pur­pose, power, and personal renewal.30

No unifying theory—or, of course, cultural source—undergirds the hodgepodge of practices and interventions offered in the name of wellness. But if you read enough of the advertising literature, a common theme emerges, in which the key terms are "harmony," "wholeness," and "bal­ance." To the extent that there is a philosophy here, it is holism, the source of the familiar adjective, "holistic." Everything—mind, body, and spirit, diet and attitude—is connected and must be brought into alignment for maxi­mum effectiveness, whether to achieve "power" and "per­sonal renewal" or just to lose a few pounds. Conflict may be endemic to the human world, with all its jagged inequal­ities, but it must be abolished within the individual. To what end? To feel good, of course, which is the same as feeling powerful. Put in more mechanical terms, wellness is the means to remake oneself into an ever more perfect self-correcting machine capable of setting goals and moving toward them with smooth determination. As Soren Kierkegaard wrote in a famous devotional text, "purity of heart is to will one thing,"3' although he did not mean that one thing was stronger quadriceps.




THE WAR BETWEEN CONFLICT AND HARMONY 113




CHAPTER SIX: DEATH IN SOCIAL CONTEXT

1. Susan Dominus, "The Lives They Lived; Ladies of the Gym Unite!," New York Times Magazine, December 8, 2003, www.nytimes.com/2003/12/28/magazine/the-lives-they-lived Iadies-of-the-gym-unite.html.

2. Dick Cavett, "When That Guy Died on My Show," Opinionator (blog), New York Times, May 3, 2007, http:!/opinionator.blogs .nytimes.com/2007!05/03!when-that-guy-died-on-my-show!?r0.

3. Chris Crowley, "Harry Lodge: A Personal Memoir," Younger Next Year, March 16, 2017, wwyoungernextyear.com!harry-lodge-personal-memoir!.

4. Quoted in Howard M. Leichter, "Evil Habits' and 'Personal Choices': Assigning Responsibility for Health in the 20th Cen­tury," Milbank Quarterly 81, no.4 (December 2003): 603-26, www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov!pmc!articles!PMC2690243!.

2. Raymond Downing, Biohealth: Beyond Medicalization: Imposing Health (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2011).

1. Ian Shapira, "What Kind of Cancer Killed Them? Obituaries for David Bowie and Others Don't Say," Washington Post,January22, 2016, wwwwashingtonpost.com/local/what-kind-of-cancer-killed-them-eobituaries-for-david-bowie-and-others-dont-say!2016!01!21! b4ac24e8-bf9a-1 1e5-83d4-42e3bceea902storhtml.

Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2011), 224.

Mark Molesky, This GulfofFire: The Destruction ofLisbon, Or Apocalypse in the Age ofScience and Reason (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2015), 55.

4. "Poémesur/ed&isiredeLisbonne,"Wikipedia,https:!/en.wikipedia.org! wiki/Po%C3%A8mesurled%C30/oA9sastredeLisbonne

1. Quoted in Michael Fitzpatrick, The Tyranny ofHealth: Doctors and the Regulation ofLstyle (New York: Routledge, 2002), 9.

Quoted in ibid.

Arun Gupta, "How TV SuperchefJamie Oliver's 'Food Revolu­tion' Flunked Out," AlterNet, April 7, 2010, wwwalternet.org/ story! 146354!how_tv_superchef_jamie_oliver's_'food -revolution'-flunked-out. 

Gary Taubes, "What If It's All Been a Big Fat Lie?," New York Times Magazine,July 7,2002, wwwnytimes.com!2002/07!07/ magazine!what-if-it-s-all-been-a-big-fat-lie.html.

224 ENDNOTES ENDNOTES 225

14. John Steinbeck, In Dubious Battle (1936).

15. "Death of Eric Garner," Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/ wild/Death_of_ Eric _Garner.

16. Christopher Mathias, "I Love 'Loosies': In Defense of Black Mar­ket Cigarettes," Huffington Post, April 6, 2011, wwwhufiingtonpost corn/christopher mathias/i love loosies in defense_b_845698.html.

17. Hilary Graham, "Gender and Class as Dimensions of Smoking Be­haviour in Britain: Insights from a Survey of Mothers," Social Science &Medicine 38 (1994): 691-98.

18. Linda Tirado, "This Is Why Poor People's Bad Decisions Make Perfect Sense," Huffington Post, November 22, 2013, www.huffingtonpost.com/linda-tirado/why-poor-peoples-bad-decisions-make-perfect-sense_b_4326233.html.

19. Aspen Institute Economic Opportunities Program, Working in America, "Retail Workforce, Employment and Job Quality," De­cember 2015, https://assets.aspeninstitute.org/content/uploads/ files/content/upload/Shop%20Til%2OWho%20Drops%20-%20 Backgrounder%20-%20FINAL.pdf.

20. Gina Kolata, "A Surprising Secret to a Long Life: Stay in School," New York Times, January 3, 2007, www.nytimes.com/2007/01/03/ health/03aging.html?_r=0.

21. Kimberly Palmer, "Do Rich People Live Longer?," US. News & WorldReport, February 14,2012, http://money.usnews.com/ money/personal-flnance/articles/2012/02/14/do-rich-people-live-longer.

22. Sabrina Tavernise, "Disparity in Life Spans of the Rich and the Poor Is Growing," New York Times, February 12,2016, www.nytimes.com/2016/02/13/health/disparity-in-life-spans-of-the-rich-and-the-poor-is-growing.html?

23. "Prescription Painkiller Overdoses at Epidemic Levels," CDC Newsroom, November 1, 2011, wwwcdc.gov/media/releases/ 2011/pl 101_flu_pain_killer_overdose.html.

24. Eugen Tomiuc, "Low Life Expectancy Continues to Plague Former Soviet Countries," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, April 2, 2013, wwwrferLorg/content/life-expectancy-cis-report/ 24946030.html.

25. Tom Engelhardt, quoted in Barbara Ehrenreich, Dancing in the Streets:A History of Collective Joy (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2006), 161.

26. Ibid., 162.

27. Alex Cohen, "The Mental Health of Indigenous Peoples: An International Overview," Cultural Survival Quarterly Magazine, June 1999, wwwculturalsurvival.org/ourpublications/csq/article/ the-mental-health-indigenous-peoples-an-international-overview.

28. G. William Domhoff, "Wealth, Income, and Power," WhoRulesAmerica.net, September 2005, updated April 2017, www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html.

29. Judy Peres, "Workplace Wellness Programs Popular, but Do They Improve Health?," Chicago Tribune, December 12,2014, www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-workplace-wellness-met-20141212-story.html.

30. Absolute Travel, http ://absolutetravel.com/special-interest-travel-tours/wellness-retreats/.

31. "Purity of Heart Is to Will One Thing by Sören [sic] Kierkegaard," www.religion-online.org/showbook.asp?title=2523.