Dynamic Healing
Healing follows a parallel course
in our bodies, psyches, and cultures
by Marco J. de Vries, MD, PhD
One of the articles in Good Medicine (IC#39) Fall 1994, Page 23
Copyright (c)1994, 1997 by Context Institute
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Healing can take a similar form at various systems levels from the cellular
to the planetary. The health care system itself may need to go through these
stages, which begin with pain and end- in some cases - with transformation.
Marco J. de Vries, MD, is the founder and director of the Helen Dowling
Institute for Biopsychosocial Medicine in Rotterdam. He is professor emeritus
of General Pathology at Erasmus University, and has training in Gestalt
therapy and Psychosynthesis. The following is an excerpt from de Vries'
article in the book Towards a New Science of Health, edited by Robert
Lafaille and Stephen Fulder, and published by Routledge, 1993.
Through the normal strains of living, breaks and restorations of a system's
integrity are occurring all the time on a minor scale. When we move, muscle
contractions may cause small ruptures of blood capillaries, which are stopped
by thrombocyte aggregation, after which the lining of the vessel is repaired.
Vulnerability is the price we pay for being highly evolved.
Healing is the process of recovery of the integrity of an injured
system. There is only a thin line separating healing, as defined here,
and the continuous turn-over and replacement of worn-out elements of the
system, such as the cells of the skin or intestinal lining. Healing and
these other processes are a dynamic part of the living system's mechanisms
of homeostasis, self-organization and self-renewal. If the old state of
a system cannot be restored, we often see that the system creates new forms
and functions in the processes of compensation and transformation. Healing,
as an adaptation to a challenging environment, is in line with evolution.
This model of healing is intended to be practical, holistic, and applicable
to system levels of very different characters, such as cells, organs, individuals,
groups, species, cultures, ecosystems, or even our planet.
THE STAGES OF HEALING
The process of healing passes through a number of stages, each of these
being indispensable. Arrest of the process in one of its stages, or skipping
a stage, usually results in permanent disability or chronic progressive
disease. The stages are described below as discrete steps. However, in practice,
stages may overlap and they often may be passed through repeatedly.
Pain: Pain is not usually thought of as a stage of healing. That
it is, is illustrated by the serious consequences of the absence of pain
in certain neurological disorders. One example is tabes, a complication
of syphilis, in which certain tracts in the spinal cord, carrying pain stimuli
to the brain, are affected. In patients with this disorder, minor injuries
of the joints of the leg, such as all of us experience daily, are not repaired.
This may lead to complete disorganization and destruction of the joints
of the hip, the knee, or the ankle, in the course of only a few weeks.
Here we have a first instance of 'homology,' for on the psychological
level too it is common that a disruption of the personality can only be
healed when pain is experienced or allowed to surface.
Pain may be defined as a universal sign indicating disruption, or
the impending disruption, of the integrity of a system on any level. It
moves the organism to mobilize all its resources for repair, transformation,
and healing. Our definition of pain applies to physical, emotional, mental,
existential and relational pain, all indicating a break of integrity, in
a person, between persons or between a person and his environment.
Provisional recovery of integrity: The hallmark of this vital
phase is the temporary bridging of the break. In skin wounds the hemostasis
mechanism forms a blood clot, which later transforms into a crust, thus
covering the wound. After severe loss of blood or body fluids, a series
of complicated mechanisms temporarily restore blood pressure and volume,
providing time for the much slower process of renewal of the various blood
elements.
On a higher system level, that of the organism as a whole, a very interesting
phenomenon, seen after battlefield and traffic injuries, belongs to this
stage. Even after very severe injuries, such as multiple bone fractures,
people are able to bring themselves into safety by running away from danger;
pain only manifests itself after they are safe. This "analgesia"
is probably the effect of endorphine production on the brain's pain centers.
In these cases the integrity of the person as a whole is endangered and
one's life is temporarily saved, even at the risk of extending or complicating
existing injuries.
Denial, the first stage of dying as described by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross,
may also be seen as the first stage of healing. After the diagnosis of a
serious illness, the fear of annihilation may be so great, that it threatens
the integrity of the whole personality. The, usually temporary, denial provides
the time and space necessary to mobilize all one's resources for reorganizing
life and personal transformation.
Healing
The word "healing" has common origins with the Greek word holos,
which has the meaning of "whole", "wholeness", "total",
or "complete." Wholeness is not the same as being happy or living
without pain, frustrations or handicaps; wholeness may be achieved in the
presence of disease or infirmity.
Destruction and removal: In the course of a healing process, the
breaking up and the elimination of dead, non-viable, or non-functional structures
are essential. If not removed, they will delay or even prevent healing.
One of the important tasks of a surgeon is to remove dead and suppurating
tissue. As with pain, medicine and pathology teach us that something often
experienced as negative and to be avoided, in this case destruction, may
actually be indispensable for healing.
On the physical level, the breaking up and removal of dead tissue is
the function of the inflammatory reaction aided by various types of scavenger
cells. Inflammation is not only a response to infection, but occurs after
any tissue damage, whatever its origin.
This stage of healing can be of importance in serious life crises, such
as after the loss of a spouse or a job, when facing a serious disease or
physical handicap. It is often essential for healing one's personal integrity
to dissolve and eliminate old thought forms, expectations, and value patterns
that are no longer meaningful or functional. This process of re-evaluation
and letting go usually involves pain, confusion, fear, and disorientation.
A very similar phenomenon can be observed in the history of the sciences
during a paradigm shift. As we may experience in our time, the dissolution
of no longer viable theories, models, and views may take much struggle,
time, and patience. As Max Planck, the physicist who originated quantum
theory, ironically remarked: "Science proceeds funeral by funeral."
Regeneration, reparation and compensation: Regeneration is
the replacement of lost elements of a system by elements of the same type.
On the physical level, cells, tissues, organs and, in plants and the lower
animal species, even complicated structures such as stems and limbs, are
regenerated. Replication of stem cells and their differentiation into specialized
cells, such as muscle, bone and vascular tissue, is the basic mechanism
in this process.
Although humans have little capacity to regenerate brain tissues, we
excel in nature by the regenerative powers of mind and spirit. One of the
many testimonies to this in history and literature is Victor Frankl's book,
Man's Search for Meaning, in which he describes his survival from
the utterly adverse conditions of a German concentration camp. Similar accounts
have recently been published by patients with serious or crippling diseases.
Reparation is the replacement of the lost elements by more primitive
elements. After a heart attack, lost muscle tissue is replaced by connective
tissue which later turns into a scar. Although the scar tissue cannot restore
the contractile function of heart muscle, it does provide the support and
union needed to repair the defect. Scars, then, pose certain limitations
of function on the organizational level involved.
Compensation is the taking over of the function of lost and irreplaceable
elements by other elements of the same type. In the case of a heart attack,
remaining muscle fibers may enlarge and thus increase their contractile
power.
A related mechanism is reallocation of lost function to other
parts of the system involved. A striking example of the powers of reallocation
is provided by some of the hydrocephalic children described by John Lorber.
In one boy, vision, normally mediated by the back parts of the cerebral
hemispheres - in this case absent - appeared to have been taken over by
a parietal remnant of the brain.
As we have seen, regeneration may be limited and thus functional limitations
may be permanent. However, this only applies to the level of the system
involved. The integrity of a system level or the system as a whole cannot
be judged from the changes on lower levels of organization. Healing may
take place in the presence of limitations or permanent loss.
From the microscopic observation of scar tissue at the site of a previous
heart attack, one cannot evaluate the function of the heart as a whole.
This function may be quite adequate. Patients whose locomotor system has
been seriously crippled by rheumatoid arthritis or infantile paralysis,
have been able to live meaningful lives and fully express their life's purposes.
Similarly, persisting neurotic patterns on certain levels of the personality
do not preclude profound personal and spiritual transformation.
Just as with the loss of the regeneratory capacity of body parts, it
appears that the evolutionary force in nature is more interested in promoting
the evolution of the systems as a whole than that of their parts.
Restitution, remodelling, and transformation: The final stage
of the healing process is probably the most fascinating and at the same
time the least understood. Without restitution, remodelling, or transformation,
healing will not only remain incomplete, but may eventually lead to serious
complications and secondary malfunction. During this stage, the new elements
formed in the previous stage are integrated into the organization of the
system as a whole. This means that either the original architecture is
restored in accordance with the system's blueprint and program, or that
the system is reorganized as a whole. The latter event, which I call
transformation, may involve a change of blueprint and program.
This process closely resembles morphogenesis as occurring in embryonic
development. It involves the alignment of like elements (as with
the newly regenerated epithelial cells at the surface of a wound), the ordering
of groups of unlike elements (surface epithelium, glands and connective
tissue of a wound) and the junction and interconnection of the various
elements (for examples, the connections between a newly formed vascular
bed and the surrounding blood vessels, so that blood circulation in a wound
is restored). Just as in morphogenesis, one of the greatest mysteries of
this process is the source of information for the program being expressed
in the restoration of function and architecture. It is here that the concept
of morphogenetic fields is very helpful in increasing our understanding
of the healing process. Even after extensive destruction of forms and structures,
the morphogenetic field for the lost parts seems to be somehow preserved
and, on the condition that the previous stages are completed, insures completion
of healing.
One of the clearest illustrations of remodelling on the physical level,
is the undisturbed healing of a bone fracture.

In its first stages the integrity of the broken bone is provisionally
restored by a blood clot, into which connective tissue grows. After removal
of dead bone fragments, regeneration sets in with the formation of primitive
bone tissue, growing out into an irregular mass, called the callus. In the
last stage, a process of transformation of the newly formed bone takes place.
Scavenger cells eat away superfluous bone. (But how do they know where to
stop eating?) Then the bone is ordered into parallel, or concentric layers
and these are joined and aligned in precisely the right way to ensure optimal
mechanical stability under the forces to which it is, or will be, subjected.
Homologies of this stage can be found on higher system levels. For example,
there is evidence that reorganization of one's life plan, life-style and
patterns of interpersonal relationships, may improve the chances of healing
in cases of ischaemic heart disease and cancer. In children or elderly people
who have suffered brain damage, the re-integration into the family structure
may be vital to the recovery of the mind-brain interface and physical rehabilitation.
On the other hand, failure of this stage of healing after disease, or
personal or interpersonal life crises may be reflected in poor physical
health. It may be a factor in the manifestation of such common Western illnesses
as high blood pressure, cardiac infarction and cancer.
When reorganization, remodelling, and transformation are interfered with,
the previous stage, regeneration, may then carry on unchecked, leading to
overgrowth of cells and tissues, and ultimately, total disorganization.
A classic example is cirrhosis of the liver, which in the majority of
cases is caused by alcohol abuse. Stages 2 to 4 of the healing process are
all active in an attempt to repair the chronically recurring damage to which
the liver is subjected. However, especially in long-standing cases, signs
of stage 5 are noticeably absent in microscopical sections. Overgrowth of
liver cells (regeneration) and connective tissue (reparation) lead to increasing
and ultimately irreversible disruption of the liver architecture. In the
absence of remodelling, newly formed blood vessels remain unconnected to
the blood circulation or form abnormal connections, leading to the circulatory
complications of cirrhosis: fatal hemorrhage and ascites. Finally, in about
15 percent of cases, carcinoma of the liver develops.
Cancer itself is disorganized growth, rather than excessive growth (many
cancers have a relatively slow growth rate). We may tentatively conclude
that cancer is the result of disturbed (re)organization and transformation.
In other words, a failure of the expression of the architectural plan of
a tissue.
Using cancer as a metaphor, and looking at our planet as a living organism
of which we are an integral part, we might say with some justification that
Gaia is suffering from cancer. In order for the last stage of healing of
our planet to take place, humanity may have to become responsive to the
"morphogenetic" field which has the potential for initiating our
transformation.
FACILITATING HEALING
Rest, protection, and support: On many levels of organization,
a healing system in its first stages has a high degree of vulnerability.
Many medical measures with a long historical tradition are based on this
insight, such as bed rest, bandages, splints, arm slings, and ice bags.
These principles also hold for healing on higher system levels. After
recent life crises, confrontation with death, interpersonal crises - and
even in the case of disruptions on the level of organizations, cultures,
nations, and political systems - a skilled healer will provide rest, protection
and support.
At this time, a call for activity on the patient's part, or an appeal
to his will power or responsibility would be premature. This is the time
for the qualities of the heart, not so much those of the sword.
Nutrition and nourishment: In times of acute crisis, endocrine
activity increases, greatly increasing the body's consumption of stores
of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. It has recently become clear that
patients with serious injuries or shock have a greatly increased calorie
requirement.
The same applies to aspects of nourishment other than dietary. Much more
attention should be given to the nourishing aspects of verbal and nonverbal
communication, sound and music, light and colors, literature, and many other
needs of the human mind and soul, which might directly facilitate healing.
One only has to visit a modern hospital, to fully appreciate the lack of
such nourishment.
Touch: It has recently been found that human touch has profound
effects on various physiological functions such as cardiac rate, heart rhythm,
blood pressure, and respiration. These effects were recorded even in deeply
comatose patients. Measures such as massage increase the local blood flow
and stimulate nervous activity, both known to be essential ingredients for
healing. In addition, touch can alleviate pain.

The effect of human contact on the heart rate of a comatose
and paralyzed man. At "A" a nurse arrived, held his hand, and
spoke to him reassuringly. "B" is the time of withdrawal. Notice
the decrease in heart rate and the stabilization of heart rhythm during
and after contact between the nurse and the patient.
(From J.J. Lynch, see references.)
Activity, movement, and use: In contrast to the early stages,
in the later stages of healing patients' activity is necessary and decisive.
Bone fractures are again a good example. Movement, use, and putting weight
on the bone stimulate the reconstruction of bone and the realignment of
bone layers parallel to the lines of force, ensuring optimal adaptation
to the mechanical loads to which it is normally exposed.
Where permanent limitations are unavoidable, activity will initiate reorganization
and transformation, and thus healing on a higher level of the system. This
is true for all levels. People with serious limitations of their locomotor
system can sometimes demonstrate astonishing powers of transformation by
changing their body scheme and patterns of movement in such a way that their
limitations are only apparent to an experienced observer.
Will and responsibility: Very little is understood about the biological
mechanisms by which the will affects physiological functions and healing.
It has long been known that those who "fight for their lives"
heal faster and live longer. This is true for minor disorders, such as influenza
and skin wounds, as well as for major diseases such as cancer and heart
attack. On the other hand, one may expect a worse prognosis in patients
who have given up or who have lost all meaning in life. In extreme cases,
loss of will can cause those without any previous illness to die, for example
shortly after the loss of a spouse.
The most elementary level of taking responsibility is the patient's
choice about the treatment proposed by his physician. At a higher level
of self-responsibility is the difficult task of marshalling the will
to change one's life-style, habits and patterns of behavior. For example,
to stop smoking or drinking alcohol, to change dietary habits or the way
one responds to life situations and other people.
The drive to give meaning and a sense of purpose to life, even
against a background of radical changes of life situation, is the highest
level of taking responsibility. The power people develop in doing so allows
them to transcend their personal situation, including serious illness, physical
limitations, pain, sorrow, and impending death. Paradoxically, on this level
one can heal oneself without being cured on the physical level. In a special
sense this is also true of the choice to die, the final stage of healing.
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Cousins, N. (1979) The Anatomy of an Illness as Perceived by the Patient,
London: Norton.
Engel, G. L. (1971) "Sudden and rapid death during psychological
stress," Ann. Intern. Med. 74: 771-82.
Frankl, V. (1962) Man's Search for Meaning, New York: Simon &
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Goodwin, B . (1984) 'A relational or field theory of reproduction and
its evolutionary consequences', in M. W. Ho and P. T. Saunders (eds), Beyond
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----(1983) "The Emergence of a new paradigm in medicine: reflections
on the nature of reality and medicine," in J.L. Grashuis, J.A.F. Oomen,
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