Diagnosed with a frightening illness, people can do frightening things–like take the fear, anger and sadness to the gym, every day, for periods of time that a healthy person might find disturbing. Are they running towards health, or running away from illness. Geezer thinks it’s academic: They’re just running, and just running is just fine, so observers should just chill. Now comes the New York Times with a sensibly modest piece about this not uncommon response to very scary news. “Faced with a chronic condition or a terminal diagnosis,” writes Bethany Lyttle, “some
individuals start training regimens that even the healthiest of us
would find taxing. And the result is a fascinating if somewhat
incongruous equation: people fighting sickness or disease who are, at
the same time, in the best shape of their lives.”
Dr. Gail Saltz, a psychiatrist at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, tells the Times that “It’s not always as simple as some sort of headlong rush into denial or a desire for supreme control. People who have a close brush with their own mortality sometimes experience a reaction akin to separation anxiety. A separation that, in this case, is from life.â€Â
Dangers of the manic response, the Times warns, include pushing oneself too hard, or coming to believe that extreme fitness will carry one back to a full and healthy life.Benefits include gaining some sense of control over a body that is otherwise out of control. And living just a little bit harder.
Read more in the New York Times.