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Abstract
This thesis is an autoethnographic analysis of congestive heart failure and recovery.
Everyone gets sick, and sickness becomes a central part of the ill person’s identity. Illness is a
fundamental part of being human. Advancements in medical techniques and technology allow
more and more people, people who would have otherwise been dead or unable to function, to
enjoy living in the world of the healthy, even if their health may be fleeting or fragile (Frank,
1995). Congestive heart failure and severe cardiomyopathy are such illnesses and are a perfect
ground for a narrative approach to medicine due to their fluctuation between periods of clinical
stability and exacerbation (Volpe & Testa, 2019).
Arthur Frank (1995) establishes the narrative genre of automythology as a medical
journey and highlights the importance of storytelling in medicine, develops the idea of the body
as a text - and that of the sick body as a story to be told in order to heal - and that the story of the
sick is worth telling. Medicine is organized and communicated through storytelling events
(Hunter, 1991) and through medical narrative, humans can come to better understand
themselves, their illness, each other, and the world around them (Cousins, 1979).
Volpe and Testa (2019) state that storytelling is a pivotal tool for healing in many
cardiovascular conditions such as heart failure and cardiomyopathy (2019). Through trials and
tribulations, death and eventual rebirth, a transformation can occur that provides a new approach
to living. Through an automythology composed of journals, lived experiences, stories, and
analysis applied to the structure of Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey, I utilize the healing power
of narrative. Through the reclamation of my identity as a runner, I come to better understand my
own condition and journey while assisting others on theirs.