I was diagnosed with aggressive Prostate Cancer about 7 months ago.  Since then 
I’ve had a variety of interventions (there were complications) and treatments 
with another one about to start.

 

My own experience of the medical system is rather different from what is being 
described.  I found the physicians and the other staff to be extremely 
efficient (and hopefully effective)… with reasonable levels of capacity for 
communication (it is very individual and the joke in the clinics is that the 
self-selection for speciality is in part based on those who like to cut and 
those who like to talk :(

 

The overall process was one which I didn’t find particularly alienating… there 
was adequate communication and an almost overwhelming amount of information 
provided through pamphlets, books, seminars and direct communication with the 
professionals where there were reasonable opportunities for feedback .  There 
are organized support groups for patients and their families and I’ve had 
access to a dietician and an exercise kinestheologist.  And all of this was 
covered by our Medicare so the only direct cost to me so far has been for 
parking and some of the pharmaceuticals.  Also, based on my experience with the 
US health care system the absence of overhead paperwork for me and the health 
professionals overall made my life (and the management of tension levels) and 
I’m presuming their lives infinitely easier and less stressful.

 

Time is given to discuss/analyse alternative therapies (of course not 
encouraged but not dismissed out of hand) and overall I haven’t so far had any 
problems in maintaining a sense of personhood except when at one point I 
required an acute intervention where I was only too happy to lie back and let 
others exercise their competences.

 

All this to say as a strong endorsement of our Canadian single payer medical 
system and to suggest that the experience (and one’s necessary reaction to 
this) might be highly localized and nationally specific.

 

M

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Annie Abrahams
Sent: June 2, 2016 4:07 AM
To: NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] La Cura: possibilities?

 

Dear Salvatore,

La Cura is a great project with great results. I hope I'll be able to read the 
book (in English or French or Dutch) one day.

This email triggers a lot of thoughts in me, a lot. And I have questions. They 
are probably answered in the book, or on the website, that I tried to go 
through. I don't speak, nor read Italian, so all I got was a notion of, so far.

Let me tell you first, that 18 month's ago I had a part of one of my lungs 
removed because I had a lung cancer. My cancer is gone, no radition etc, I was 
very lucky. 
About one year ago, when I was still recovering (there were a lot of 
complications) I had to do three performances for turbulence 
http://turbulence.org/commissions/besides/ . It was impossible to follow the 
initial plans we made with Martina Ruhsam and so we decided to work with where 
we were and did a conversation on "death and illness" (there is a video of it 
on the webpage).


That was June last year. Some people who watched it expressed the wish to talk 
with us, to become part of this discussion. In between September 2015 and March 
2016 we had around 4 private online conversations. We is six women (we didn't 
choose that on purpose) - three who lost a very dear person, three who had been 
confronted with dead personnaly. Because we lost the technology (waterwheel 
stopped - Ivan Chabannaud died) we stopped. It ended. No idea where it could 
have led us. But we had some very strong moments, some very intense feelings 
shared, we have been very lucky with this. It served 6 people in getting 
through something very intimate together, something we couldn't even share with 
the people we loved. 
Personnally I think it was good it stopped, I was somehow "over" it and wanted 
something else.

Your mail brought something back.

You must also have confronted with thoughts about the end of your live, about 
the possibility of dying. I can't find anything about in La Cura. 

What I can see of La Cura is all very positive. Was it like that for you? Or 
didn't you want anger, fear etc. be a part of the project?

 

I have been very angry about the medical system and I still am. Every time when 
I have to go back for control examinations, I feel I lose myself, I become a 
medical dataset, a small element in the hospital machine. Every time I feel 
awfull to be treated as an object, as a sickness, as several sicknesses (there 
is absolutely no coordination unless you try to that yourself). It took me one 
year to get over that anger and to start to also be grateful for my recovery 
for the chance I had.

Your project is about the cure. What I miss is death and sickness being a part 
of it. Maybe, maybe we could start a collection of online sources who try 
explicitely to touch on that part ?

All the best

Annie Abrahams

 

On Tue, May 31, 2016 at 7:43 PM, xDxD.vs.xDxD <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Dear Friends,

 

sorry for cross-posting.

 

some time has passed since, in 2012, we launched the "La Cura" project when I 
was diagnosed with a brain cancer. The action turned out to become an emergent, 
worldwide participatory performance aimed at redefining the word "cure", 
bringing it out of hospitals, administrations, bureaucracies and the 
ingenuities of e-health approaches, and bringing it back into society.

 

 

 

Thousands participated (also many of you all, for which I thank you).

 

We were all able to draw upon the rich culture of biopolitics, antipsychiatry, 
feminism and gender studies to collectively build an active reflection to 
confront with the separation, encoding, privatisation, access and inequalities 
of current medical approaches, putting in place new models and patterns in 
which health is a commons built upon an high-quality relational environment 
which is inclusive, accessible, caring, cooperative.

 

Dozens of publications have been produced, and thousands of artworks, texts, 
poems, images, videos, artistic performances, articles on major news headlines, 
and more, establishing a wide, active, trans-disciplinary action which 
connected arts, design, sciences, humanities and the everyday life of thousands 
of people in the search and enactment of new ways in which to "cure" by 
considering people's health something which we all can actively participate to, 
using everything from advanced technologies, knowledge, relations, presence and 
hugs ;)

 

All of this has enormous implications on the economies and power-schemes of 
health. In the age of data, quantified self and of hyperconnectivity, this is 
also a metaphor for processes which can happen elsewhere in society, to 
confront with complex issues such as education, energy, finance, labour, and 
more.

 

To continue the process, we have transformed "La Cura" into a book:

 

http://www.artisopensource.net/items/la-cura-the-book/

 

The book, for now, is only in Italian, and we're trying to get it translated in 
other languages, as well (and please do propose if you want to collaborate to 
the translation: it would be a great help)

 

In the objective of the participative performance, the book also has a strong 
online presence built through the fact that we're collaboratively designing the 
ways in which this type of action could be replicated in many other forms and 
in relation to multiple other domains.

 

We're working with schools, universities, student groups, rural communities, 
citizen groups, activists, children, elderly and, well, many other types of 
people. In Italy, for now, but we are starting the process of momentum building 
so that all of these efforts can lead to international, interconnected results 
which we can all work with to provoke impact and change.

 

Here are just three of the many initiatives which are already going on:

http://www.artisopensource.net/2016/05/09/the-encounter-of-two-books-in-trieste-from-mental-asylums-to-la-cura/

http://www.artisopensource.net/2016/04/23/la-cura-erbe-indisciplinate-the-report-from-the-workshop-at-ruralhub/

http://www.artisopensource.net/2016/05/04/la-cura-and-the-festival-of-creativity-in-ariccia-to-study-the-biopolitics-of-interfaces/

 

 

We've started from education. In the knowledge ("Conoscienza") section of the 
website (http://www.la-cura.it) we are assembling the materials for the 
education program which is being contributed by all participants to the action. 
We currently have materials on interface politics; biopolitics; food; energy; 
data; privacy; autobiography; self-representation; building collaborative 
knowledge-bases; handling large-scale emergent p2p communication processes; 
fighting cancer while maintaining autonomy, dignity and self-determination; 
social networks strategy for activists; filter bubbles; the evolution of 
medicine; information overload and health; open data and medicine; open 
science; the implications of algorithmic patients. And some more.

 

All the materials and knowledge are currently hosted on GitHub (you can go to 
the links from the website), as we're setting up alternatives which can be more 
independent, sharable, replicable, and free.

 

Why am I telling you all of this?

 

For a number of reasons. The first of which is a call for participation.

 

First: there are many of you on the list who do things which would be of 
fundamental importance for the process.

 

We ask you all: if all of this resonanates whith what you do and care about, 
please get in touch! We will find a way to do things together.

 

Second: let's figure out how to create momentum internationally. We are working 
on translations (of the book, of the knowledge base, of the workshops 
materials, of the software tools... ), and on getting people, organisations, 
schools, universities, institutions, governments involved, in Europe and in the 
rest of the world. There are no fixed models for this: we get in touch and 
create something meaningful together, then we make it happen and release the 
knowledge so that if it is useful of helpful for other people they can 
repurpose, reuse, expand, change it as they please, as long as they share the 
knowledge and tools in these accessible ways.

 

If you are interested in creating any of the workshops, in creating one, in 
creating some other kind of action: please, get in touch!

 

Third: a festival in Bologna.

 

An incredible thing is happening: a 3 day festival is forming practically 
autonomously in Bologna on La Cura, and it will take place on July 8-10.

 

When we decided to do a little participatory reading marathon of the La Cura 
book in Bologna and we got in touch with the city administration and with some 
of the local organisations to make it happen, momentum started building up 
autonomously, so much that everything has grown into a full-blown festival 
lasting 3 full days and which is gathering contributions in ways which are 
completely emergent.

 

This is truly a thing of beauty for us, as we don't have any control on it, and 
we're just welcoming people in to make sure that their proposals fit into the 
objectives and values of La Cura. A city based committee has formed for this 
process, and this as well is an open collaboration, so that anyone is welcome 
there, too.

 

So, if you want to join in to that, as well, please do and get in touch.

 

And, Fourth: a summer school.

 

We have reached an agreement with Milan's Design Triennale and with the 
"Condividi la Conoscenza" event to host an artistic production which will 
reflect upon the idea of a "new sensibility": the possibility to imagine a new 
sense, along Gregory Bateson's idea of art as that process which creates the 
aesthetics, the sense of beauty, for what "interconnects", for "difference". We 
will create the artwork collaboratively in a summer school in Florence, with 
the collaboration of ISIA Design, the design university where we teach, and the 
result will be exhibited in downtown Milan at the Triennale's locations.

 

More info about this will follow soon, but if you're interested already feel 
free to get in touch.

 

That's a lot of things: sorry for the long message.

 

I hope this finds your interest and that you will consider participating in any 
form you can.

 

All the best to you all!

Salvatore

 

 

-- 

[MUTATION] Art is Open Source -   <http://www.artisopensource.net/> 
http://www.artisopensource.net

[CITIES] Human Ecosystems Ltd -  <http://human-ecosystems.com/> 
http://human-ecosystems.com

[NEAR FUTURE DESIGN] Nefula Ltd -  <http://www.nefula.com/> 
http://www.nefula.com

[RIGHTS] Ubiquitous Commons -  <http://www.ubiquitouscommons.org/> 
http://www.ubiquitouscommons.org

---

Professor of Near Future and Transmedia Design at ISIA Design Florence:  
<http://www.isiadesign.fi.it/> http://www.isiadesign.fi.it/


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-- 

On exile, resettlement, language, performance ... and even internet:
Displaced - A conversation with Soyung Lee (by Annie Abrahams)
https://aabrahams.wordpress.com/2016/05/03/displaced-a-conversation/ 

I don’t know where this is going 
<https://aabrahams.wordpress.com/2016/05/30/iterations/>  7/06-23/06 Résidence 
Itérations, Constant Brussels. 

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