Managing the self as both body and mind, where both have an influence
on each other, where both have significant unconscious aspects and
where both are dependent on external inputs (such as nutritional on the
one side or perceptual on the other) is an art and not a science. It takes
place in real time with multiple changes in many components. If, as
physicians have suggested, severe stress results in atrophy of the
hippocampus and this reduces the memory resources available to allow the
body to react appropriately to future stress, this has consequences.
It means that we must engineer our
environment (which includes society) to avoid severe stress and we must
seek means to engineer our bodies to recover from past severe stress so
that they can deal with current and future stress. A
degree of social engineering and a degree of corrective personal
engineering may be necessary to enable us to live the good life and to
make informed decisions about preserving it, but the choice of what
constitutes the good life always remains an individual and not a social
one.
Social or bodily engineering that creates stress or
is non-consensual or is imposed from without (except under the most
extreme of diseased or psychotic conditions) is counter-productive.
There is a point of balance at which most people most of the time will
have to accept their 'difference' from the normal as ‘just who they
are’. Take the range of mental issues created by
dysfunctionality of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis [HPA axis]:
anxiety disorder, bipolar disorder, insomnia, post-traumatic stress,
borderline personality disorder, ADHD, deep depression, burnout, chronic
fatigue, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel and addiction.
The
decision on where these issues are dysfunctional is too often a social
one and not an individual one. The social often imposes the very demands
on the body that result in the mental problem and then the social,
instead of changing its own practices, seeks its own solution to a
problem that it created. As a result, and this applies
across social policy to issues of social exploitation and abuse, instead
of a serious problem of painful dysfunction being dealt with under
conditions of personal care for a relatively few, large numbers of
people divert skilled time into patching up so that people can go back
into battle.
Much of modern psychological medicine has
degenerated into a form of ‘normalisation’ and into a castigation by
implication of 'difference'. This has happened, as in social policy,
because a large class of persons can only get a living and meaning from
acting as definers of others. We all see the absurdity of a
doctor working through the night to save the life of a man who is to be
executed next morning. At least the patching up of warriors and workers
has the cynical social purpose of defending the system or keeping its
economic wheels turning but, today, we are in a different condition
again.
Mass health and social services provision has
created a half-baked world where a vast class of persons exists to
maintain people whose trauma and miseries are real enough but are as
likely to be created by social circumstances, poor nutrition and crowded
conditions as they are by something organic. By the
beginning of the twenty-first century, our economic structures now
depend on an industry of helpers and a vast mass of persons who must be
helped. They do not rely on strong, willful, self-reliant individuals in
a position to intevene directly to support the weakest members of the
community - we drive the vulnerable into a 'system'.
The
sheer scale of the resources required to maintain this system means that
the socially isolated and the psycho-somatically ill are increasingly
taking resources from the minority who badly need short term sustained
intensive help. These last just fall into the mass - the helped - to add
more customers for the growing class of helpers. The
height of absurdity is reached when our entire culture becomes geared to
helping those who appear to need to help by hiring them as helpers
('full employment'), a worthwhile palliative up to a point but one
which, in effect, simply accepts that the way we conduct our social
affairs should be 'normalised' as a shared 'lesser misery'.
The
poverty of aspiration is staggering. The height of our aspiration is
now that everyone has a 'job', a functioning role in a dysfunctional
system. Nobody appears to be able to consider how the system might be
made more functional - perhaps everyone just accepts that it cannot in a
form of conservative pessimism that has merely been re-labeled
‘progressive’. Worse, this conservative pessimism on the
'official' Left (which is now the ruling order regardless of party) must
bring everyone under the same health and welfare model. No matter that
placebos, shamans and herbal medicines might actually reduce demand on
the system. These must always be avoided in favour of more expensive
interventions (although we re-assert here the absolute primacy of scientific medecine).
Herbal medicines almost certainly regulate
the HPA system and, under experienced guidance, can be made to accord
with individual body chemistries. The placebo effect may offend
rationalists but works - and if it works, why not embrace it
pragmatically? Our concern should only be that people do not use alternative self-medication in preference to scientific medication but only to supplement and self-treat in the grey area between serious dysfunction and apparent health. The truth is that a purely scientific approach to
the body-mind continuum is not truly scientific when dealing with most
needs most of the time - as opposed to serious need some of the time. It
is an ideology of rational intervention that has reached its lowest
point with the recent bureaucratic interference by the EU to ban the use
of herbal substances as ‘untested’. If the fear is that people will believe the local witch can cure cancer, then the fear is justified but if the fear is that people will choose minor irrationalities that offend the sensibilities of rationalists, then the fear is neurotic - and, oddly, irrational.
This ideology of excessive mass
scientific interventionism, as opposed to precautionary advice on nutrition, exercise and mental health based on treating people not as children but as autonomous adults, is the last gasp of an over-simplified scientific materialism
and it deserves underground resistance at every level. The real reason
why this ideology is dominant is because we are talking here about
economics and power and not about any real concern for the self development and empowerment of those autonomous individuals.
Welfare systems arose out of real
need - the sort of need that still exists in much of the emerging world.
Unfortunately, like roads, the solution creates more demand. Because
basic care and emergency intervention required taxation, the class
interest of the public sector and the need to keep the taxpaying
majority supportive came to meant that 'universalism' spread services
widely instead of where they were needed most. Hence the anomaly of a massive, expensive and unnecessary child benefits system in place while over a 1,000 kids in a rotten English borough faced appalling sexual abuse because the resources of time and money were not there to protect them.
As demand
and expense has increased, the subsequent and necessary 'cutting' process
has meant that the same services are just more thinly spread. There is a failure to
invest in the wider social infrastructure that caused the stress-related
illnesses in the first place and neglect of those who most need
expensive but decisive intervention. We now have a grossly
inflated public sector whose politics are a deadweight on the economy
and on our culture, enforced 'cuts' which harm those in most dire need
for political reasons and a grossly dysfunctional social structure that
drives psychological and psychosomatic illness.
And what
is at the heart of this degraded system in which the 'official' Left is fully
complicit? Scientists have found evidence to suggest that social
subordination leads to chronic stress - the subordinated are less
aggressive, less in control of themselves and constantly anxious about
dominant others in our own species. Does this not sound
familiar? We have a culture that is ostensibly free but one in which
there is no connection between the mass and political decision-making,
in which the economy is volatile and dependent on 'global factors' and
where most wealth and power trickles down from a tiny group at the top
of our tree. We may as well be apes.
And the consequences
of this widespread social subordination is chronic stress, expressed as
psychosomatic illness and neurosis but also as a lack of engagement in
the local community or in enterprise, as addictive behaviour and
impulsiveness (especially with bank credit before 2008) and as cynicism. Our
politicians are obsessed with grandstanding overseas (apparently we are diminished in the eyes of some Parliamentarians because our Prime Minister is not grandstanding in Kiev instead of worrying about Rotherham), process and keeping the busted system
ticking over but none of them understands the central problem of our
time - how to return a sense of power and meaning to the people they
clearly despise in their hearts or see just as fodder for their own drive to have the power to 'do good' at them or for them instead of with them.
Given our conditions, our problem is not
that we are too aggressive as a population but that we are not
aggressive enough. Every now and then, some extreme case of violence
(such as Raoul Moat, the Ipswich serial killer or gun-killings in
South London) creates a surge of anxiety about the psychopaths in our
midst but these are tiny events in a country of over 60 million people. What
is far more worrying is that the vast bulk of our huge population
simply takes the unutterable amount of ordure heaped on them by
incompetent governors and experts without protest - and then goes home,
gets sick and thanks the system for treating them for the disease the
system brought on them in the first place. We are back to
the world of Milgram. The few who can capture the machine, the alpha
apes, can command millions ... and that should really worry and depress
us.
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