Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Nostalgia

Episode Date: September 4, 2020

Lately, have you found yourself pining for a simpler time? An easier time? Maybe just, like, ANY time other than your current one? You may be experiencing nostalgia. This week on Sawbones, we'll track... its evolution from a clinical diagnosis to a possible healing tool.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Sawbones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken as medical advice or opinion. It's for fun. Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil? We think you've earned it. Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction from that weird growth. You're worth it. that weird growth. You're worth it. Alright, time is about to books. One, two, one, two, three, four. We came across a pharmacy with a toy and that's lost it out. We saw through the broken glass and had ourselves a look around.
Starting point is 00:00:56 Some medicines, some medicines that escalate my cop for the mouth. Wow. Hello, everybody, and welcome to Sobbing's Emerald Tour of Miss guided medicine. I am your co-host Justin Tyler McElroy, the first. And I'm Sydney McElroy. That implies that there will be a second. You never know, Sid. You never know. A lot of people.
Starting point is 00:01:22 Oh, I know. No, I know. Oh, I know. I know I know. Oh, I know. I know Dr. Wild knows. Everybody knows that there will not be a Justin McRoy the second. We got all the kids we can handle. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:35 Who's Dr. Wild? I don't know. I couldn't remember the actual name of the dude who did my vasectomy sign up with Dennis and Dr. Wild. And I just thought it's so funny to go to a Dennis thing Dr. Wilde, it just seemed like kind of a stretch. You know, it's funny, I've been thinking a lot about. When you had your bisectomy? Yeah, fondly thinking back to it, because it's the last time
Starting point is 00:01:54 I was able to sit for two days and do nothing with ice. With frozen peas. Yeah, for frozen peas on my genitals. And I've been thinking about fondly to it. It was a very relaxing time in my life. I could, now it could have gone anywhere, which makes it a lot nicer, but I didn't. And that's a key difference to where we're at right now
Starting point is 00:02:22 in our lives. Right. I think what you were experiencing, maybe a lot of people are experiencing, although probably not longing for a surgical procedure that they've had in the past, perhaps, perhaps, you're not embracing the recovery period of a surgical procedure, perhaps, you never know. I never had my tonsils out, but I always remember everybody talking about how you got popsicles afterwards. So it seems like something you may remember fondly. Would you say you're
Starting point is 00:02:51 experiencing some nostalgia? It is more than fair and not just about surgery recovery said, I've been experiencing a lot about a lot of things that I feel like I maybe didn't appreciate when I could do them. Leaving the house. Yeah, that's a great one. Going to the store or the mall, all long say movies, restaurants, movies, oh, I miss movies, I miss them. Being in crowds, I always, I did not enjoy being in crowds until I couldn't. And now I miss being in a crowd. Imagine what that would be like. No, that's why I couldn't. And now I miss being in a crowd. Imagine what that would be like.
Starting point is 00:03:25 No. That's why I'd have to think about it. I got an email requesting that we talk about nostalgia, which I didn't know had a history as an ailment, as a diagnosis, not just a feeling, until I received this email. And I was very, I'm very grateful that I did because I find this fascinating.
Starting point is 00:03:45 This is really... You've gotten into this one. I love it when Sydney gets excited about a topic, especially when she reads a lot about it, because it means we get to have a lot of conversations about it. And I love to see you captivated. It's one of my favorite Sydney modes. Well, thank you. I'm reading a whole book about it now, which I'll talk about.
Starting point is 00:04:03 A whole book about it. No need to brag, Dr. McElroy. And I also felt like it was timely. I think a lot of us are probably experiencing that longing for a time before any other time pretty much. Thank you. When I looked back, I realized several people have recommended this. Thank you Miranda and Matt and Brittany and Anna and Lauren and Jeremy for emailing and mentioning this.
Starting point is 00:04:29 I did not, like I said, I had no idea of this history, of the concept of the word nostalgia. And maybe you don't either. So, safe bet. Yeah. Safe bet if you didn't. The word itself. Unless I had an article in Uncle John's bathroom reader, I am not aware of anything medical that you don't know about.
Starting point is 00:04:49 Okay. You're not aware of anything. No, that's fair. Yes, that is true. Unless it was an article in Uncle John's Bathroom Reader. One of the many volumes. The word comes from the Greek. I knew the Alja part from Algo, which is pain. Anything with an Algebra is hurting. A Myalgia, your muscles are hurting. An Arthraalgia, your joints are hurting. So, Algebra usually means pain. So that's the Algebra part of nostalgia. But I didn't know the other
Starting point is 00:05:18 part, Nostos, coming, comes from the Greek for homecoming. So it's an interesting concept, homecoming pain, the pain of homecoming, pain associated with homecoming. I experienced that quite a few times in my high school years. Lot of rejection there. I believe I was one of the... Yeah, we don't need it. That's a story for another. You'd broken my heart and church hands.
Starting point is 00:05:40 We don't. I just said, you said we didn't need it to well on it. Anyway, I think it's interesting because as we'll get into how this term came about, but it's actually not a homecoming, right? It's like a psychological homecoming that you're experiencing. Right. You're mentally home going home and that's causing you pain. But the origin of it comes a lot, is a lot more literal.
Starting point is 00:06:01 The idea of pain because you can't, because a homecoming is not occurring. You can't go home. So the term almost wasn't, it's really weird to think about like the history of this word, because I think that idea of nostalgia means so much to us now.
Starting point is 00:06:19 And I feel like especially as a kid of the 90s, seeing like the fashion trends and things of today, it feels very poignant to me. Cause I see a lot of people that I'm like, you're walking straight out of a devious catalog from 1996 right now. My friends are gonna enjoy and appreciate it. But I don't think, I don't think Johannes Hofer
Starting point is 00:06:42 knew about devious catalog either. He was a medical student in Basel, Switzerland, in 1688. He was studying a mere 17 miles from his hometown of Mollhaus. But 17 miles was a lot harder to travel back than I guess. Sure. You know, like... We get new. No cars.
Starting point is 00:07:02 Get a horse? Oh, good news. Yeah, I mean, I think they're expensive like a horse. Yeah, a buggy. Probably lying all over the place though horses back then. Probably not as hard to come by. He had previously read in theology and philosophy in university, but he had decided to pursue medicine as his career.
Starting point is 00:07:19 And that's where he went to medical school. And at the time, it was required that medical students present sort of a preliminary dissertation about some sort of disease, state, or treatment, and then you would have to like, you'd write your paper, describing it, and then present it to a panel of physicians and defend it like a dissertation, right? And typically, you would choose something that was known. Like I'm just going to do a deep
Starting point is 00:07:50 dive into this already well described and understood condition or well we thought we understood it at the time. And then I'm going to present it and they're going to ask me some questions that I've just approved that I know about it and that will be the whole thing, that was kind of the idea. And these were called disputatios. What he presented was called a dissertation, which is a whole new idea. The idea, as a medical student, I'm going to present to you a whole new disease
Starting point is 00:08:18 that I have named myself. It's a pretty big swing, I feel like. It is a big swing. It is. I mean, if you can imagine, if you are in medical training doing that right now, like, hello, fellow doctors, I came up with a disease, and I'm going to tell you about it now. It'd be wild. He, now, the idea that there was this illness that had not yet been named was already
Starting point is 00:08:42 out there. Obviously, he didn't, you know, him and the idea. Right. There was the idea of Heimwe, or homesickness, or what the French called la maladie du pays, which was a disease state. The idea that you could get so homesick that you were sick, literally sick, not just like, I miss home, like, I'm in bed, I have a fever. I broke like broken heart syndrome. The idea that you could be experiencing something emotionally so much that it costs physical symptoms.
Starting point is 00:09:14 Although at that point, you have to understand the idea of like how the mind connects to the body and not just the emotional part of that, but the actual like chemical, you know, neurotransmitters and things. None of that was understood. Right, we had no, right. This is all before those concepts.
Starting point is 00:09:38 He was also inspired by stories of like soldiers or servants who would be commonly be sent from their hometown, maybe they're a little village, to go work in like a rich person's house in a city or something. So be very far away from home and probably not, you know, if you're a soldier, you can't go home until you're given the order to. And if you were one of these servants, you were not allowed to, maybe never, depending on what the, you know, what you were contracted or whatever to do.
Starting point is 00:10:09 And these people would be removed from their native lands and then would get very, very sick and until they were kind of repatriated, put back home, they, some of them would die, that's how severe this illness was. And so he wanted to describe that. What was that? It's also probably I would imagine at this point, more brutal, because you didn't spend time away from where you were. Like these days, we have planes and cars and what have you. So you know, it's not uncommon cars and what have you. So you would, you know, it wasn't, it's not uncommon,
Starting point is 00:10:47 I think, for people to travel far away from their home for periods of time. Must be very much more jarring if you lived your entire existence in one place to find yourself, you know, halfway across the world. You see a lot of this, and I was going to get into this a little later, but I think it's good to bring it up now. What you're talking about is one of the reasons why they thought initially the people who
Starting point is 00:11:07 got this illness got it. This concept that especially people in rural communities or mountainous areas grow up sort of isolated and only know their families, the people immediately around them. And so when you take them away from home, they feel that a lot more intensely than people who grew up in cities who maybe are used to the idea that you leave your families at some point. It is just normal. Like, I will move away and I'll, you know, we'll write letters or whatever, but this is just not, it's normal. And you can see as this idea of this is of an illness is more and more understood that kind of argument like well, it's just these rural mountain people who get it
Starting point is 00:11:54 Which I felt I feel like it's very interesting because I see echoes of that in the way we talk about West Virginians today and probably other Regions of Appalachia. How so? The idea that people always come back. You've heard this, I'm sure. West Virginians, they always end up coming back home at some point. They might move away, but they come back home. I've heard that concept. I have no idea if that's true.
Starting point is 00:12:18 I don't know of any evidence for that, but you'll hear that idea that, like, well, people from these mountainous areas feel that pull to go back home. And it's weird, because you got to wonder if there aren't like cultural, you know, this is kind of reverberating throughout time, this idea. But anyway, he tried out different ideas for how he would name this.
Starting point is 00:12:44 Eventually he tried, initially he tried no somania, which means return madness. It's a little much. That's a little intense, I feel. He tried a phylopatrodomania, which is literally madness caused by yearning for the homeland. Little verbose. But nostalgia was the one that he liked the best. It was the one that stuck. And it makes sense.
Starting point is 00:13:04 It sounds nice. It's a nice sounding word. He also wanted to separate it from Emania because Emania at that point was a clinical entity that seemed a lot less. You couldn't understand it and you didn't quite know what to do about it at that point. The all the different things they called Emania,
Starting point is 00:13:22 because there were lots of different things that are not what we would describe today as like a diagnosed manic state that would fall under the heading at this point of Mania. And he wanted something that you could fix. And nostalgia was known to be fixable as he will, as we'll get into. So he presented his paper with his definition,
Starting point is 00:13:39 his name, his treatments, his case studies, the physiology of it, whatever he defended it, his mentors, Jacob Harder and Theodore's Winger, both thought he did a great idea, and they did a great job, and they thought this idea was so important that they took an unusual step. They published it. This was not done for a preliminary medical student dissertation. Sure. This was not typical.
Starting point is 00:14:00 So the fact- My first research project. Exactly. The fact that this was published was very strange. And Zwinger would go further later when he published a collection of important papers, he included this in there. And it is fair to say that both these other guys would kind of take credit for this at different times.
Starting point is 00:14:20 But I guess at this point in history that was not uncommon. Things were kind of generated from like a student and a professor collectively and it was not unusual for Professor to maybe take credit for a student's work and Things as to exactly who wrote what was always sort of nebulous so that these are not bad guys. This was the time The symptoms that offer laid out were very varied. Some had what you would expect. Sadness, obsessive thoughts about their homeland, anxiety, insomnia, weakness, loss of appetite, those kinds of things, right? Things we would expect with someone who, what we would probably call depression, right? Others would progress to things like feverish or breathing problems.
Starting point is 00:15:05 Some might have clotting issues. Brain inflammation, rashes, bleeding, or regular heart rhythms. Seems like a lot. Things that we probably would not call nostalgia now, right? So you can see where this idea of nostalgia encompassed a longing for home, probably psychiatric diagnoses of things like depression and anxiety, and then also some other illnesses that were just kind of thrown in there. But if they happened in somebody who was missing home, they called it nostalgia.
Starting point is 00:15:45 His theory hoffhrilays out as to why this happens. What is going on in the human body? Because this was very much. Is it physically speaking, you mean? Yes, what is on the physiology of this? Because this is as medicine is moving away from the humors and moving into this sort of like mechanistic view of the human body. So this was at this moment in history
Starting point is 00:16:02 as a transition point in our understanding of what's happening. So it would be typical for you to try to explain on Like a microscopic level what is happening in the brain when this happens. He believed that our our animal spirits Our anima our soul if you will this animal spirits is what they would have called this and this was not a spiritual concept But this is but I mean, there's a lot of overlap there. What are whatever we're talking about these animal spirits is what they would have called this. And this was not a spiritual concept, but there's a lot of overlap there. Whatever we're talking about, these animal spirits were walking along the white tubules in our brains and would get stuck in the oval center, which is where our memories are. In the oval center?
Starting point is 00:16:40 These were the names. Anyway. I like that's accessible. In the oval center of. Oh, that's accessible. In the oval center of our brain, where our memories of our home and times gone by all live, the animal spirits would be wandering down those tubules. They'd kind of get stuck there on one specific memory of our home. Typically, this was very much associated with like your homeland,
Starting point is 00:17:04 your hometown, your house, your home. Typically, this was very much associated with like your home, your homeland, your hometown, your house, your, you know, your home. And they would get stuck there and kind of clogged up. And they would excite that one region over and over and over again, just that one until like as you, as you can kind of envision, you're focused on it, your hyper focused on it, you're obsessed with it. And what would result from that, your imagination would be stimulated. And you would begin to visualize and like vividly imagine this memory that these animal spirits in your brain are stuck on. You know, I was ready to get all smug when it was, you said, we're moving away from humoral medicine into a more mechanistic view.
Starting point is 00:17:46 I was like, that's right. Here we go, real science. Show them how it's done. I did not expect you to be like, so anyway, we got a brain yolk and there's a bunch of tiny brain dogs and they latch on to a memory and they clog up your brain pipes, you know?
Starting point is 00:17:59 Just basic science. I think it's beautiful. It's beautiful. It's just like, I'm not sure how much we've improved of the humeral system with this particular. It's so evocative. The idea that you're, I mean, and this is at a time where things like passions and imagination were dangerous ideas because they led people to behave in ways that weren't orderly and to think in ways that weren't orderly. And so when you say it stimulates the imagination, that's not like imagination.
Starting point is 00:18:31 It's like, uh-oh, now we're in trouble. So these were very serious ideas that were being communicated. And I know it seems silly, but it's kind of a beautiful way of imagining nostalgia. Your passions get focused on something that you remember until you can visualize it. You see it, you're experiencing it and feeling it so strongly, but you can't have it. And so the longing becomes so intense. This was his idea. But anyway, because of this, it blocks the flow of these spirits throughout the body, through what was known at the time as the commonsenseory, in which is what was thought to connect your mind
Starting point is 00:19:06 and your body, because all the animal spirits get clogged up in your brain. So the rest of your body suffers. So your blood becomes thick and clots, your flim becomes too thick. From the dog, from the tiny spirit animals. Well, no, because they're not there. They're up in your brain.
Starting point is 00:19:21 Right, okay. They're stuck up in your brain. And normally they would be getting out your blood and mucus. Thening those things out. Your gastric juices are diluted of all the things they need. And so you'd, that's why you don't have an appetite because you can't digest food because nothing's working properly. And the stomach and the cogs aren't there.
Starting point is 00:19:38 In terms of treatments, what he proposed was the usual stuff first. Some mercury, maybe some wine, try this thing that might make you puke, a variety of tonics for things like fevers or a heart tonic, things like that. If all else fails, bleed them. Bleeding was always recommended. And all the while while you're doing this, distract them, try to get them to focus on now and here and where they are.
Starting point is 00:20:05 Tell them, we got to forget about home. You can't think about that place anymore. That's gone. That's over. But there was only one cure. And that was the nice thing about this. And why I think you could theorize he would want to present it, is that there was a surefire cure to nostalgia. Send him home. To send him home. And that's what he says. At the end of the day, wherever your patient is in the world, no matter how sick they are, if you have to put them on a stretcher, get them home and they will always 100% of the time be cured of their illness. What's
Starting point is 00:20:39 weird about it is that so he puts this out there into the world creates this word nostalgia this idea nostalgia like solidifies it as a concept he finishes his medical studies he his final dissertation like his big work by the way was about uterine drop C which was the uterus filling with fluid and becoming inflamed anyway nothing to do with nostalgia is my point. So he goes on to never write about or talk about or lecture about nostalgia again. He goes back to his hometown. He becomes a doctor. I thought you would appreciate this. He later decides to leave his medical career for public service. He becomes burgermeister. What? It's like the head of the town council
Starting point is 00:21:29 was called the burgermeister. Oh dang it. I cooked up a list in my head of like 10 different things. Burgermeister could be and that's like the not even in the top 100 coolest. So he was the burgermeister and then he said, can I be burgermeister? You can be the burgermeister of our house.
Starting point is 00:21:44 Yes. He he ascended the... Can I be burger-westered? You can be the burger-wester of our house. Yes. He ascended to other levels of public service and spent the rest of his life. And I mean, he did important work in his town, but he never addressed nostalgia again. He just like threw this idea out into the ether and then went back to his life. And then...
Starting point is 00:22:02 And then of course, we've never heard of Nistalgia since then. Uh, no, that's not actually what happens. Now I'll tell you what happens next, but first we got to go to the billing department. Let's go. The medicines, the medicines that ask you let my car before the mouth. So Nistalgia has been, uh, is run and wild. He's set free. The idea has been unleashed on is run and wild, set free. The idea has been unleashed on an unsuspecting populous.
Starting point is 00:22:28 It's interesting. The power of language and using, if you want to persuade people, if you want to convince people, make sure the words you pick sound nice is really illustrated here. And having a word for it. Like, it really does condense the, there's a lot of ideas that I think it would be easier to communicate if we had words for them. Do you know the one I was thinking
Starting point is 00:22:51 about yesterday? I wish there was a word for, I know it looks like my hands are really full and I need help, but if I let any of these things go, I'm going to drop them all, so please just let me go to where I need to go. Imagine we had one word for that very complicated concept that we need to communicate to people. For me, I got a weekly basis. I know it looks like I'm carrying a lot of things and I need help, but if I let one of these things go, I'm going to drop them all so please let me go on to where I need to go. Give me one word for that, please. Well, I mean, that's on, come up with it.
Starting point is 00:23:22 I don't have that kind of power. Maybe it was a hashtag. I don't know if Dr. Hoffer did, but he thought he did and he did it. So I guess that's true. Maybe I should just believe in myself. I'll give you a magic feather later. All right. The problem I've always had is confidence.
Starting point is 00:23:37 I don't think that's just as a cis white man. I've always struggled with confidence. Anyway, nostalgia was out there. And it's funny because there were further publications of his paper like in collections and things where authors would try to change it to other words. They would change the word nostalgia to other terms,
Starting point is 00:23:57 but nostalgia kept coming back. That was the one that stuck. And it does sound nice, especially compared to the other ones we've talked about. It was a nice sounding thing. It's weird because you really, what you talked about, why didn't he just write about a subset of melancholy? Melancholy was a well-known diagnosis at the time, which again, similar to depression today,
Starting point is 00:24:17 but kind of a more nebulous idea. But this could have been looked at as a subset of melancholy. A lot of the symptoms were very similar other than returning home. The treatments were pretty similar. Although with melancholy, you usually told people to travel. What you need is a good travel. The idea was really important for a few different reasons. Like I said, this was a time where we were shifting in our understanding of disease and what caused it away from the humors.
Starting point is 00:24:49 We've talked about before ontology, the idea that we need to classify like in taxonomies. This was the era of that. We're moving into the time where people sat down and just made big trees of medical diagnoses. This is part of this tree and this is a subset of this diagnosis, and all that kind of thing to try to classify everything that could go wrong in the human body. Like I said, our concept of emotion and passion and all this was changing. Is it good or is it bad? If you have these kinds of problems, are you a weak person?
Starting point is 00:25:25 That was initially thought. Like, if you were prone to nostalgia, are you, is there something wrong with you, you're weak? And there's something wrong with like, you're the way that you think and feel, your emotions are bad, or moving into, as the years pass, this idea of sensibility as being a good thing. Someone who was able to cry and experience emotion
Starting point is 00:25:46 and passion was thought to be more in touch with their pure self, more in touch with nature. Again, there's this tie to people who live in rural areas are able to cry like this because they have been, they haven't been diluted by city life yet. Right, right unt Untouched myself. Yeah, this kind of longing for nature and connection, that idea was big at the time.
Starting point is 00:26:10 And nostalgia spoke to all of this. And so I think it really captured a lot of people's imaginations as like, oh, maybe this explains it. Maybe this is the key. This is the thing we have not been able to figure out. And as our world is changing so rapidly, this is why we're not adapting. If I don't feel good, I have an answer now. And soldiers got it a lot. It's interesting. Hofford and Wright about soldiers at all in his dissertation, which is a weird thing to leave out. Yeah, it's almost like a built-in
Starting point is 00:26:44 control group almost that you would have, you know what I mean? And it was known to occur most commonly among soldiers, specifically Swiss soldiers, which maybe why Hofferdin mentioned it is because the Swiss soldiers did not like this connotation. Because when this first, this idea was first introduced, it would have insinuated like our soldiers aren't very good because they get homesick and they get nostalgia and then you have to send them home. So you wouldn't, it's kind of like you're undermining your military might by putting out this idea that like, hey, you know what, a lot of our soldiers get, a debilitating illness that will necessitate you to send them home.
Starting point is 00:27:26 This was also a time where Swiss mercenary soldiers were very commonly rented out by other nations, you know, to be used in their wars, especially France, but other countries as well. Swiss soldiers were sent all over the place because they were known to be, you know, an elite fighting force. So, Hoford doesn't talk about soldiers, but they were by far the most common patience to get nostalgia. To the extent where there was this story that was passed around that there was a certain
Starting point is 00:27:59 song you could not play around Swiss soldiers, there are... Who let the dogs out? No. There are sheep herder songs, simple melodies that would be played out in the fields to call the sheep back in, and that if you played these songs around a Swiss soldier, they would just dissolve into tears
Starting point is 00:28:20 and like be unable to function, and you would end up having to send them home. and like be unable to function and you would end up having to send them home. They were called Ron De Vosh is what they're called, these songs. You've heard one. It's a ball of black sheep. Do you know it's the... Very head of the lamb. It's the flute solo in the third section of the overture to Rossini's William Tell. Do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do Oh, okay. Yeah. That. And if they would hear it, they would dissolve into tears because
Starting point is 00:29:20 it would remind them so strongly of their hum land. have that for Nick Nick Nick Nick Nick Nick a lot of young so I get it. That makes me very nostalgic for my for my youth. It's like when a West Virginia in here's country roads. No. No, it's not like that. We get a belly full of that. As the now as the wars continued throughout that century, you would see nostalgia diagnosed among soldiers from all countries.
Starting point is 00:29:49 So it less and less became associated with the Swiss. To the great relief, I'm sure of the Swiss people. Our thing is chocolate and knives, and we don't need to talk about nostalgia anymore. In the clocks, yes, okay, fine. Chocolate knives and clocks, that's us. And the cheese, the holy cheese. You guys love that. There's lots to offer. Forget about our debilitating own segments. It was the only thing you could be sent home for in some armies, particularly in France.
Starting point is 00:30:18 That was the one thing that you just had to discharge the soldier and let them go back home, at least for a temporary leave because there was no other cure. And it would be completely debilitating to the military force if you left them there. Think about how much easier things would have been on Klinger if this had been the case. He could have just walked around
Starting point is 00:30:37 instead of trying to get discharged from mental illness. He could have just walked around like, I miss my dad, I really miss my dad. You know, he talks about home so much, like they order ribs from his hometown at one point because he misses them so much. I'm tan. Yeah, he's time period, he would have been more.
Starting point is 00:30:55 In the Civil War time period or in the times of these, the Napoleonic Wars, he could have been diagnosed with nostalgia and sent home. We should do a fanfic of mash where we like, he digs out the obscure rule and he's like trying to employ it. That'd be a good app. And then the other characters do doctor stuff. It was not uncommon.
Starting point is 00:31:14 If you look at like discharge papers from the time, nostalgia was a diagnosis that was given. And there were other cures, of course, especially because of the military connection, you would see things like just bully them out of it. Unfortunately, especially as we move into like this was common in the Civil War and the United States too. And the idea that you would shame them or bully them until they you'd be homesick for your half of the country that you're not anymore. There were also ideas about altitude. There was this
Starting point is 00:31:44 for a while people thought well since it mainly happened among Swiss people maybe it's because there used to be up in the mountains and now they're at these lower altitudes. So what we need to do is put them in a tower. So they would like try to take them up to a high building. That didn't work. Probably not a high building. This time period I would imagine. High as they had. Right. People. People tried like- It's three stories. What do you want? Why don't you feel better? You're 30 feet off the ground like an eagle.
Starting point is 00:32:10 They tried to give them dairy products because they thought it had something to do with hearty mountain breakfasts. Sure, ground breakfast. But none of that stuff helped. And this was a huge point of contention in the military because doctors would be saying, listen, they have nostalgia. We got to send them home. There's nothing we can do. And aention in the military because doctors would be saying less than they have nostalgia. We got to send them home.
Starting point is 00:32:26 There's nothing we can do. And a lot of the military officials were like, you're depleting our forces. You can't do this. So hence the shaming, the bullying, there was one commander who was rumored to bury soldiers alive if they suffered from nostalgia as a threat to everybody else. Basically, this is what happens if you have this. Like you're in a nostalgia.
Starting point is 00:32:49 Yeah. So, but a lot of doctors you'll see, a lot of soldiers did get sent home for this reason. As there were a lot of associations with nostalgia and tuberculosis. T tuberculosis we've talked about on the show before was a romantic disease for a while. It was thought a very poetic, beautiful way to be fit. Go. And love sickness, homesickness, nostalgia, all this. If you were a truly sensible person, if you were really in touch and able to experience real emotion, these were acceptable ways to go. Nostalgia got tied in, and there were probably people
Starting point is 00:33:25 who had TB who were diagnosed with nostalgia. Being nostalgic for not having TB, I would say. I would say other men. And there were other ideas that it came from, like I said, the mountains, from certain foods. People thought maybe it comes from masturbation, so you shouldn't do that. There was an idea for a while, doctors looked for a certain bone
Starting point is 00:33:42 in your body that caused nostalgia, and they were never able to find the nostalgia bone. But so too changed over time, our understanding of nostalgia as an illness, as opposed to a benign emotion. And so that was like the first step. You saw doctors begin to separate it out as to like, well, maybe there are people who are sick from nostalgia, or as we would eventually learn from many other diagnoses. But there are also just people experiencing nostalgia. It's just a
Starting point is 00:34:13 benign thing. It's just a feeling, and it's okay, and it's not a sickness. And from that split, nostalgia became more and more associated, the word with a normal global emotion that we feel from time to time and not an illness. I think it's interesting that at some point we made the juxtaposition from it being based in a location to being based on time. I mean, at some point, right, they're in no way at this point talking about the longing for the past, right? You're longing for your homeland, a place where you live, where I think we commonly use it to refer to like a time period that we cannot return to. Well, and I think that was interesting because that's got nostalgia that going by this has no cure.
Starting point is 00:34:57 You can't cure that. Exactly. Well, and they would argue it's not an illness either. And that was as we began to move away from this disease concept of nostalgia, the word nostalgia began to encompass these other ideas, like you said, not just a place, but a whole, a time, a state of being like childhood, you know, people that were with you or things you felt or smelled or tasted in those moments, all those things, nostalgia became associated with once it was disconnected from disease. It was also like you said, disconnected from location. And there were also like political implications that came with this as
Starting point is 00:35:37 well. People thought nostalgia was longing for us. You'll hear this language today, right? A simpler time, a gentler time. These sort of like what we're associated with conservative ideas, whereas progressives were not nostalgic because they were future-looking, you know, moving forward. The weirdest part, because I think we've come to a point now where we understand nostalgia as a distinct emotion that you experience and feel and it's not necessarily connected to a location or a nationality or a political leaning. It is just a feeling that we all have. Here's the weird part.
Starting point is 00:36:18 Not only do we now know it's not a disease, we now believe it might be good for you, perhaps, maybe. There are researchers, all over the world, that researchers in Japan, in England, there are a couple of places in the US where they've studied the effects of nostalgia on the human brain. And what they have found from these different studies is that it seems like activating the memory center of your brain with one of these specific nostalgic memories, not just any memory, not just like do you remember earlier today when you were in the bathroom room, a memory that would have been.
Starting point is 00:36:54 And I do, yes, fondly. Are you nostalgic for it? In a way, yes. So a memory like that, like when you were in the bathroom earlier and you're feeling nostalgic for that moment, it also, not only when you experience that memory, you're activating that part of your brain, you're activating dopamine in your brain, pleasure centers, you're releasing these feel good chemicals
Starting point is 00:37:15 that bring you pleasure and joy from experiencing nostalgia. So you get mood enhancement from experiencing nostalgia. It's like a pain that feels good, it's a good feeling, I think. Like a positive longing. Beyond that, there was another study who said people who experience nostalgia more often tend to be more empathetic.
Starting point is 00:37:36 They tend to socialize more, they tend to find more meaning in life than people who don't experience nostalgia very often. And there was even a study suggested that cold weather tends to trigger more nostalgia, which I thought was very interesting because I would say that's anecdotally, I would say I have experienced that.
Starting point is 00:37:54 And I always assumed it was connected with like, for us cold weather also equals certain holidays and perhaps that was why. Yeah, more in summer. I think about like back yard. That's interesting. Back yard like barbecues and playing outside. There is, they've seen some ideas that perhaps it is connected with cold weather and that
Starting point is 00:38:14 nostalgia can make you remember times when you were warm and can actually make you subjectively feel warmer as a result of activating those centers on your brain. That's cool. Not that that's going to, like, if you are exposed to the elements remembering a warm time, I feel like this is the giver now that we're in. This is not the giver.
Starting point is 00:38:39 You still need to get to a warm place. I'm not suggesting otherwise, but like it might make you think you're warmer than you are. There's actually at the University of Southampton, there is a whole nistouch group that's studying all these different effects on the human brain. And like also what could we learn about memory from this? They've tried this out with patients who have Alzheimer's or some other form of dementia that has caused them some memory loss. They have found that accessing musical memories, they can remember those a lot more clearly than other memories that are from the same time period and you would assume both would be gone.
Starting point is 00:39:13 So there's something special about certain sensations and things we can remember the way we record those memories. And perhaps when it comes to things that are nostalgic like a song that meant a lot to us or a show that meant a lot to us or something Maybe we can use those tools to help patients with memory loss access those memories There's an adult daycare called town square that is all modeled after 1950s America Because it looks like the environment that these patients are nostalgic for, and so they function better within it.
Starting point is 00:39:49 They remember more of what you do in certain environments because of that. So there's all sort of interesting implications. And all of this evidence, all of this research is very preliminary suggestive. I know on our show we're all very clear that we don't. One study does not mean something is necessarily true, but I think this is a good example of something that is benign to indulge in nostalgia is, you know, at worst a nice way to spend a few minutes.
Starting point is 00:40:22 And at best, perhaps cathartic in an important way, perhaps gives you a good feeling, helps with your mental wellbeing, helps with your ability to cope with a stressful situation, which I would argue we are all in right now. Yeah. It's a pretty, nobody's trying to sell you anything, which is nice.
Starting point is 00:40:43 They're trying to sell you in a stagia kit. I would actually argue there are many, many monthly subscription boxes that are doing precisely what you are saying, big butt. Well, in the moment that they start saying that they have research-based reasons to do this and that they have medical evidence that these things are good for you, I'll be the first to decry them. But as long as we're all just in agreement that sometimes it feels nice and it is not harmful to be nostalgic for something that made you feel good once long ago, I think that that is okay. Maybe our animal spirits do need to spend more time there. Maybe that wouldn't be harmful.
Starting point is 00:41:24 There's a great book, I'm still reading. I don't usually name sources, but this book explores all these ideas and then a lot more. So if this is something that interests you as much as it's interested me, it's called What Nostalgia Was, War, Empire, and the Time of a Deadly Emotion by Thomas Stodman, I'm reading it.
Starting point is 00:41:39 And if this kind of, I don't know, this just fascinated me and if this fascinates you. This has been a very interesting read. Thank you so much for listening to our podcast. We hope in the future you look finally back on this time where you were enjoying it. Thanks to the taxpayers for these, their song Medicines is the intro and outro of our program.
Starting point is 00:42:00 And thanks to Max, one fun network for having us as part of their podcasting family. And thanks to you, for listening. We really appreciate it. We will be back to you again next week, but until then, my name is Justin McRoy. I'm Sydney McRoy. And as always, don't jill a hole in your head. Alright! Maximumfun.org
Starting point is 00:42:36 Comedy and Culture Artist-out? Audience-supported

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