Although she was not born into affluence, when Christy Mack
found herself in the fortunate position of being able to give to charitable
causes, she and her husband, John Mack, chairman and CEO of Morgan Stanley,
started a family foundation to facilitate their philanthropy. Having experienced
several events in her life that focused her attention on problems in the
American healthcare system, Mack began to search for ways to "humanize" the
medical experience. Today she is president of the Bravewell Collaborative, a
group of philanthropists who work together to advance the growing field of
integrative medicine. I was the daughter of a North
Carolina physician. A great number of my father’s patients could not afford
health insurance, and some of them did not believe in transfusions or surgery
for religious reasons. He saw many of them in our home, and I vividly recall how
he would spend time with them there and in his office, learning about who they
were as people, not just body parts with diseases. He asked about their loved
ones, their jobs, what they did to relax, what their concerns were and how they
found joy in their lives. He donated his services to high school sports teams
and cared for his friends’ children at no charge when they became sick or
injured. His form of philanthropy was about sharing his love for medicine with
his patients.
My exposure to his compassion for his patients and his passion
for medicine has served as a great foundation for my work in philanthropy. After
we married and John had become a successful businessman, we found ourselves in a
position to provide financial support to others. For me, philanthropy is not
about giving back. It is about sharing a part of who you are, whether it is your
wealth or your wisdom, experience, knowledge, talent, skill or something as
simple as a smile. Over the years, I have experienced life-changing events—some
dealt with health, others with self-discovery. It was these experiences that led
me to the role I now play in helping to advance the practice of integrative
medicine. I realized that, in order to heal on any level after any type of
crisis, one needs to understand, embrace and work with the connectedness of
mind, body, spirit and community. I arrived at a new understanding of how people
and events affect one another on an energetic level, and how critical it is to
understand the wholeness of who we are in order to heal. These realizations were my catalyst for action. I studied
Reiki, an ancient form of Japanese energy healing, received my mastership and
became interested in working toward bringing an understanding of the
mind-body-spirit-community connection back into patient care. Through the
Christy and John Mack Foundation, founded in 1993, we financed Reiki programs at
the pediatric oncology department at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and the
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at New York-Presbyterian’s Morgan Stanley
Children’s Hospital. It is gratifying to see what this modality has done to
improve the care of both patients and health practitioners. One of the most profound experiences of my life was the last
night I spent in 2000 with my good friend Susan, who was in the hospital dying
from leukemia. I spent the night helping her accept the inevitability of her
death and connecting to her in a way that was emotionally profound in its
sadness, and yet breathtakingly sacred in its perfection. That night broke my
heart, it strengthened my soul and affirmed my resolve to effect systemic change
in our delivery of care, whether it is designed for those who are healthy,
convalescing or receiving palliative care. Integrative medicine was just coming into its own at the time,
and I began to support its emergence through our foundation. Leaders like Ralph
Snyderman, MD, Rachel Naomi Remen, MD, Dean Ornish, MD, and Jon Kabat-Zinn, PhD,
had been working within the healthcare system and with medical schools to effect
just such a change. They envisioned a new medicine that was patient-centered and
treated the whole person—body, mind, spirit and community. It is a medicine that
concentrates on prevention first. It educates and empowers patients to be
proactive and responsible for their own health and wellness, and combines the
very best of scientifically proven complementary and alternative modalities with
the very best of Western technology for the individuation of care.
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