Health in Relationships

Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

Ok back home from the Relationship Audit day. Will post some thoughts on that soon. But I have to admit the highlight of the day for me was the train ride back to London with fellow delegate Minette Coetzee. She is a Nurse-Lecturer (love that idea by the way!) from South Africa and she shared a series of wonderful stories and insights about the role of relationship in health and healing. She contrasted the standard medical paradigm, the one that treats diseases following a well-documented and not very intuitive process of labelling the illness and then following programmed steps to defeat it… with a relational approach that is based on connecting to the sufferer. The latter approach tends to avoid words like “patient” as it is based on a more equal idea of the relationship a healer might have with someone wanting healing.

Can’t document the whole conversation. In fact, I’ll just pick this insight. Take the case of a nurse holding a child and comforting the child until it can sleep. The breakthrough for the nurse is not in noticing the healing effect of her contact on the child. It is in appreciating the healing effect on her/him of holding the child until it sleeps. Thus healing is not a one-way process. Minette also shared the story of the nurse whose breakthrough in working with AIDS sufferers came when she had an image of sharing the disease with the patient. At that point, her whole way of engaging with AIDS sufferers changed. I often talk about the need to show up to relationships. This is a marvellous example of just that.

We also talked about how the archtitecture of health care often plays to a reductionist view, with patients divided into compartments, isolated from each other and from the nursing staff. In contrast, she told me of a hospital in Nairobi built on the principle of the circle, with nursing stations and a social area in the centre providing focus and connection for the sick children around them. (As a fan of Open Space and Improv, I have a lot of enthusiasm for the impact of arranging people in circles…)

Oh and PS if you like this post, you’ll probably also enjoy Rob Paterson’s on relative status in health.

Share Post

More Posts

Bunny Bunny

A funny game illustrates what we may be missing in many of our meetings

Leading from the clown

I shot this in a single eight-minute take, which is in the spirit of an experience of Ralf Wetzel’s workshop, Leading from the Clown. Clown training is probably the deepest and most challenging work I’ve done. Enjoy.

Noticing

The power of small gestures and noticing

Small p presence

Getting away from grandiosity or solemnity. small p presence is about being open to the life around us

Small i improv

Facilitation is often about small, subtle acts of noticing and experimenting

More Updates

Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

Proprioception of thought

In his book Dialog William Isaacs tells a strange story. A woman wakes in the night to find herself being strangled by an unseen foe. After struggling in the dark,

Johnnie Moore

Cheesemakers…

So in the next reflections video I talk a bit more about the wisdom of Monty Python when working with organisations… And here are the two clips I refer to.

Johnnie Moore

Unhurried Update

I’ve been hosting Unhurried Conversations here in Cambridge for more than two years now. Here’s a post from a few months back describing the approach. It continues to be a

Johnnie Moore

Doing a Henchard

I must say I am thoroughly enjoying the massive public response to the 2012 Olympic Logo. What a well-deserved pushback to the ludicrous hype with which the thing was launched.