The Elephant in the Room... - Functional Neurol...

Functional Neurological Disorder - FND Hope

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The Elephant in the Room...

nurmihusa profile image
4 Replies

Been thinking about how apt the old parable about the six blind men and the elephant is to our various conditions...and our various battles with the medical "experts"...

From Wikipedia:

In various versions of the tale, a group of blind men (or men in the dark) touch an elephant to learn what it is like. Each one feels a different part, but only one part, such as the side or the tusk. They then compare notes and learn that they are in complete disagreement.

The stories differ primarily in how the elephant's body parts are described, how violent the conflict becomes and how (or if) the conflict among the men and their perspectives is resolved.

In some versions, they stop talking, start listening and collaborate to "see" the full elephant. When a sighted man walks by and sees the entire elephant all at once, the blind men also learn they are all blind. While one's subjective experience is true, it may not be the totality of truth. If the sighted man were deaf, he would not hear the elephant bellow.

It has been used to illustrate a range of truths and fallacies; broadly, the parable implies that one's subjective experience can be true, but that such experience is inherently limited by its failure to account for other truths or a totality of truth. At various times the parable has provided insight into the relativism, opaqueness or inexpressible nature of truth, the behavior of experts in fields where there is a deficit or inaccessibility of information, the need for communication, and respect for different perspectives.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bli...

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nurmihusa
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cathys20 profile image
cathys20

Great Analogy, probably true in most of our instances. I always say thats why they are called practicing physicians, it is limited, but practice does prayerfully make perfect they say. Hopefully in our case sooner than later. So many of us have been so hurt by this profession, I often am taking back to the oath, "DO NO HARM" I think most of us would agree we have been hurt much more by those who are committed to help than the illness itself. So sad. Wish they could open their eyes and read even this board along that one simple truth. Thank you for posting. We are not alone. :-) God Bless, Cathy

nurmihusa profile image
nurmihusa in reply to cathys20

Practice definitely does NOT make perfect! Hehehe! You nailed THAT!

Kadaffy profile image
Kadaffy

Very good analogy...If the different professions collaborated for once maybe we could get some answers. They all point to a different cause that is outside their profession and don't want to see how theirs is part of it.

nurmihusa profile image
nurmihusa in reply to Kadaffy

Cooperation. A fundamental life skill neither taught nor respected. Sigh.

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