praise for the first edition of
How to Be Sick
“This is a book for all of us.”
— SYLVIA BOORSTEIN,
author of Happiness Is an Inside Job
“An immensely wise book. Health psychology has been poisoned by the view that the best way to approach illness is through a muscular, militant resistance. Toni Bernhard reveals how letting go, surrendering, and putting the ego aside yield insights and fulfillment even in the presence of illness. A major contribution.”
— LARRY DOSSEY, MD,
author of Healing Words
“A profound, compassionate, and intimate guide for living wisely.”
— GIL FRONSDAL,
author of The Issue at Hand
“When we lose our physical health, it can seem like we’ve lost our life. Toni Bernhard, with unflinching realness and deep insight, shows us how the fires of loss can clear the way for a new and profound capacity for appreciation, love, and understanding. This book can bring you more fully alive by healing your spirit.”
— TARA BRACH,
author of Radical Acceptance
“Told with relentless honesty and clarity.”
— STEPHEN BATCHELOR,
author of Buddhism Without Beliefs
“An encouraging book that treats sickness as something to welcome because, when you are sick, that is the obstacle that has to be your gate. This book is full of compassion about how to sit sweetly with your difficulties — which means not making yourself wrong for having difficulties.”
— JOHN TARRANT,
author of The Light Inside the Dark
“Toni Bernhard offers a lifeline to those whose lives have been devastated by illness, and shows us all how to transform suffering into peace and even joy.”
— LYNN ROYSTER FUENTES,
founder of the Chronic Illness Initiative at DePaul University
“A road map to finding grace and balance amid affliction.”
— CHRISTINA FELDMAN,
author of Boundless Heart
“Practical, wise, and full of heart.”
— JAMES BARAZ,
author of Awakening Joy
“This warm and engaging book can help with even the most difficult situation.”
— THOMAS BIEN, PHD,
author of Mindful Recovery
“How to Be Sick is a good friend to keep close by so that illness doesn’t become the enemy.”
— ED & DEB SHAPIRO,
authors of The Unexpected Power of Mindfulness and Meditation
“Don’t pass up this book — and don’t be misled by the title. This book isn’t about being sick as much as it as about living right now. This practical yet exceedingly graceful book is a love story — about life, the endurance of the human spirit, and the power of a sustaining relationship.”
— ALIDA BRILL,
author of Dancing at the River’s Edge
“Living a life of peace and contentment is not difficult when life is cooperating — but what happens when the reality of our lives is suddenly turned upside down and shaken by hardship or affliction? This book is an inspiring and instructive guide for coping with a chronic condition or life-threatening illness, but it is much more than that. Each chapter is about unpacking the highest truth in the lowest places of our lives.
The book is called How to Be Sick, but it’s really about how to live.”
— JIM PALMER,
author of Divine Nobodies
“An intimate, gripping, profound, and eminently useful book about being joyfully and wisely alive no matter what happens to you.”
— RICK HANSON, PHD,
author of Buddha’s Brain
“Who would have thought that there is a ‘how to’ for being sick? But now there is! Deeply moving and impressive. I highly recommend her book as a must-read for anyone who is ill or caring for someone ill. Her gifts will transform you.”
— LEWIS RICHMOND,
author of Aging as a Spiritual Practice
“A warm and compassionate guide for navigating illness on a personal and practical level, a level physicians rarely see or discuss with their patients. The greatest compliment I could give this book is that I will be recommending it to all of my chronically ill patients as a guide for remaining happy even in the absence of good health.”
— ALEX LICKERMAN, MD,
former director of primary care at the University of Chicago
“A unique and creative adaptation of spiritual practice to the challenges of chronic illness. How to Be Sick is a wise, compassionate book that will help all of us live well.”
— DOROTHY WALL,
author of Encounters with the Invisible
“Each of us finds our way to live with the challenges and uncertainty of illness. Toni Bernhard found a path that led to balance, wisdom, and love. She caringly points us to the possibility of finding happiness even in the midst of difficult conditions.
That is a true gift.”
— FRANK OSTASESKI,
founder of the Metta Institute
“An eloquent and compelling account. This book is a major achievement.”
— Spirituality and Practice
“Very compelling — great teaching interwoven into the heartful human drama of family, illness, and day-to-day life.”
— SHAILA CATHERINE,
author of Focused and Fearless
“A must-read with a solid dose of hope.”
— LORI HARTWELL,
author of Chronically Happy
“Everyone should read this book — anyone who is sick, anyone who loves someone who is sick, and anyone who has ever experienced things being other than they’d hoped they would be. Toni Bernhard openheartedly shares the deep pain and equally deep joy of her experience in a way that allows us to validate the pain of our own circumstances, and still find joy and contentment within any context.
“She offers simple, deeply wise practices that reduce the suffering associated with grasping for things to be other than they are by allowing us to accept and enjoy things exactly as they are, including our own desire for something else. Her willingness to step fully into her life after it’s been dramatically narrowed by illness, and to share this process with us, inspires us each to live our own lives more fully, accepting the challenges that arise, and finding the joys inherent in each moment.
“I plan to buy a copy for everyone I love.”
— LIZABETH ROEMER, PHD,
coauthor of The Mindful Way through Anxiety
“Readers need not be Buddhist or meditators to benefit from Toni’s wisdom.”
— Cheri Register,
author of The Chronic Illness Experience
“You don’t have to be sick to benefit from the advice in this book. This is a book on how to live fully.”
— JOY SELAK,
author of You Don’t LOOK Sick!
A BRAND-NEW EDITION OF THE BEST-SELLING CLASSIC WITH ADDED AND UPDATED PRACTICES.
In 2001, Toni Bernhard got sick and, to her and her partner’s bewilderment, stayed that way. As they faced the confusion, frustration, and despair of a life with sudden limitations — a life that was vastly different from the one they’d thought they’d have together — Toni had to learn how to be sick. In spite of her many physical and energetic restrictions (and sometimes, because of them), Toni learned how to live a life of equanimity, compassion, and joy.
This book reminds us that our own inner freedom is limitless, regardless of our external circumstances. A must-read for anyone who is — or who might one day be — sick or in pain.
PRAISE FOR THE FIRST EDITION OF
How to Be Sick
“Beautiful, heartfelt, and immensely courageous.
TRULY WORTH READING.”
— Sharon Salzberg, author of Lovingkindness
“Full of hopefulness and promise…
this book is a perfect blend of inspiration and encouragement. Toni’s engaging teaching style shares traditional Buddhist wisdom in a format that is accessible to all readers.”
— Huffington Post
“An invitation to gently set aside the fear and the fight in order to truly live.”
— Psychology Today
“AN INSPIRING WORK.”
— Joseph Goldstein, author of A Heart Full of Peace
For Tony
In sickness and in health,
to love and to cherish,
till death do us part.
Contents
Foreword by Sylvia Boorstein
Preface to the Revised Edition
Preface to the First Edition
How Everything Changed
1. Getting Sick: A Romantic Trip to Paris
2. Staying Sick: This Can’t Be Happening to Me
Pain Is Part of Life
3. The Buddha Tells It Like It Is
4. The Universal Law of Impermanence
5. Who Is Sick? Who Is in Pain?
Finding Peace and Joy
6. Finding Joy in the Life You Can No Longer Lead
7. Soothing the Body, Mind, and Heart
8. Using Compassion to Alleviate Your Suffering
9. Facing the Ups and Downs of Chronic Illness with Equanimity
Turnarounds and Transformations
10. Getting Off the Wheel of Suffering
11. Tonglen: Spinning Straw into Gold
12. With Our Thoughts We Make the World: An Appreciation of Byron Katie
13. The Present Moment as a Refuge
14. Wise Action: What to Do and What Not to Do
15. Zen Helps
Balancing Community and Isolation
16. Communicating with Care
17. Connecting with Others and Appreciating Solitude
18. And in the End . . .
A Guide to Using the Practices to Help with Specific Challenges
With Gratitude
Recommended Reading
Index
About the Author
Foreword
“YOU ARE GOING TO BE OKAY!” Words of reassurance are the first therapy offered to people who awaken after a surgery, or are revived after an accident, or just before the disclosure of a fearful diagnosis. “You are going to be okay” often goes along with the summary of what now needs to happen to make things better. “You’ll need to stay a few more days in the hospital and then you can go home and finish recuperating there.” Or, “We’re on the way to the hospital and the doctors there are ready for you.” Or, “We’ll do chemo and then radiation and it might be a hard year but the chances are good that you’ll be your old self again afterward.” “You are going to be okay,” in these circumstances, means “Things are uncomfortable now, but you will get well. You will be better.” But it doesn’t always happen that way.
This is a book for people who will not be their old self again and for all those for whom, at least now, getting better isn’t possible. This is a book that most reassuringly says even to those people, “You, too, are going to be okay — even if you never recover your health!”
Toni Bernhard is the perfect person to write this book. In the middle of a vibrant, complex, gratifying family and professional life — literally from one day to the next — she took ill with a hard-to-diagnose and basically incurable, painfully fatiguing illness that waxes and wanes in its intensity, that sometimes seems to respond to a new treatment and then doesn’t after all, that doesn’t get worse but also never gets better. Years after the onset of her illness, she is still sick. She knows the cycle of hoping and feeling disappointed from the inside out as well as the cycles of deciding to give up hope in order to avoid the pain of disappointment and the sadness, and then the relief, of surrender.
Decades ago, a friend of mine, a man with a family and friends and flourishing career, said of his unexpected, debilitating illness, “This isn’t what I wanted — but it’s what I got.” He said it matter-of-factly, without bitterness, as if he understood that it was the only reasonable response. I knew that he was telling me something important. It is a fundamental human truth, transcending cultures and traditions, that the wisest response to situations that are beyond our control, circumstances that we cannot change, is noncontention. In this book, Toni shows how her longtime study and meditation practice in the Buddhist tradition help her accommodate her situation with gentle acceptance and compassion. The techniques that Toni presents for working with one’s mind in the distressed states it finds itself when facing an uncomfortable and unchangeable truth are basic Buddhist insights and meditation practices, but they are nonparochial. They will work for anyone.
This book is written for people who are ill and aren’t going to get better, and also for their caregivers, people who love them and suffer along with them in wishing that things were different. It speaks most specifically about physical illness. In the largest sense, though, I feel that this book is for all of us. Sooner or later, we all are going to not “get better.” Speaking as an older person who has had the good fortune of health, I know that the core challenge in my life, and, I believe, in all of our lives, from beginning to end, is accommodating to realities that we wish were other, and doing it with grace.
Toni has given us a gift by sharing her life and her wisdom, and I am grateful for it.
Sylvia Boorstein
Preface to the Revised Edition
IT’S BEEN EIGHT YEARS since How to Be Sick was published. I had no idea that what began as a collection of notes to myself about how to make the best of living with chronic illness would turn into a book with a worldwide following.
I undertook the work involved in preparing a new edition for two principal reasons: to clarify the ideas and practices from the original book and to share new ones. To that end, every chapter has either been rewritten, expanded, or revised. There’s a lot of new material in this book!
In addition, when How to Be Sick was first published, I assumed its audience would be mostly Buddhist. To my surprise and delight, this has not turned out to be the case. People from all (or no) spiritual and religious persuasions have been helped by my Buddhist-inspired approach and the practices I offer. Because I underestimated the audience, the first edition was full of “Buddhist” words from two languages — Pali, the written form of the Buddha’s language, and Sanskrit. People ask me in emails, “What was that word you used for ‘compassion’ again?” Well, in this edition, when a Pali word translates clearly and adequately into English, I use the English word. And so, the word for “compassion” is now . . . compassion!
Finally, I wrote How to Be Sick with only physical pain and illness in mind. Yet many people have written to me about how the book has helped them or a loved one cope with chronic mental illness, such as anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, or PTSD. I want to be sure they feel included in this new edition.
In the past eight years, some of my health issues have remained the same. I still have the chronic illness that you’ll read about in the first two “autobiographical” chapters of the book. But I’ve also been coping with some new health problems that have increased my pain levels, sometimes dramatically.
The major health event for me since the first edition was published is that I was diagnosed with breast cancer in November 2014. I underwent a lumpectomy and a course of radiation treatment. My prognosis is good, but the episode has worsened my longtime illness, and I also struggle to cope with the side effects of the medication I take to prevent a recurrence. I’ve learned that breast cancer, too, is a chronic illness.
After the first two chapters, I limit discussing my personal health to places in the text where I think my experience will help you, the reader, understand a point I’m making or a practice I’m describing. How to Be Sick was never intended to be a me
moir. It’s a practical guide. In this new edition, I’ve continued to try to strike a balance between personal stories and keeping the text focused on chronic illness in general.
My readers struggle with a vast array of mental and physical problems. Despite this, I’ve learned in the past eight years that we have more in common than we have differences. No matter where we live in the world, no matter what educational level we’ve reached, no matter what our financial situation is, no matter how much support we get from family and friends, we’re in this together.
It warms my heart and lifts my spirits to be able to help people with my writing. Some days, that’s what keeps me going. My deep thanks to each and every one of you.
Toni Bernhard
Preface to the First Edition
One, seven, three, five — Nothing to rely on in this or any world; Nighttime falls and the water is flooded with moonlight. Here in the Dragon’s jaws: Many exquisite jewels.
— SETCHO JUKEN
IN MAY OF 2001, I got sick and never recovered.
The summer of 2008 marked my seventh year of living with chronic illness. One night that summer, at about ten P.M., my husband came into our bedroom and joined me on the bed that has become my home. My husband’s parents named him Tony; my parents named me Toni. We met when we were dating each other’s roommates in college. On the morning of November 22, 1963, he knocked on my apartment door with the news that President Kennedy had been assassinated. Tony and I have been inseparable ever since. By ten P.M., I’m in what we call “stun-gun” state — as if I’ve been hit with a Taser — meaning it’s often hard for me to move my body and do anything other than stare blankly into space.
I greeted him with, “I wish I weren’t sick.”
Tony replied, “I wish you weren’t sick.”
There was a slight pause, then we both started laughing.
“Okay. That got said.”
It was a breakthrough moment for the two of us.
We’d had this exchange dozens of times since the summer of 2001, but it took seven long years for the exchange to bring us to laughter instead of to sorrow and, often, to tears. This book is intended to help the chronically ill and their caregivers move from tears to laughter. Not always laughter, of course, but laughter enough. (Please note that in my writing, “chronic illness” includes chronic pain.) The book’s coverage includes the following:
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