By William Noonan Ph.D..
The metaphors of folktales help cancer patients in their therapy. Unlikely heroes and heroines lie in hospital beds. Living with cancer is hardly a fairy tale existence, yet the life portrayed in fairy tales metaphorically describes the inner journey traveled from illness to healing. The rich resources of these tales present a tremendous therapeutic benefit for patients trying to make meaning out of their experience of cancer. Like the heroes and heroines in fairy tales, after an arduous and dangerous journey, cancer patients find healing in the most unexpected places.
Emissaries from the Imagination
When we confront the reality of cancer, the questions “Why me?” or “What will become of me?” do not elicit rational explanations. Having cancer poses a crisis of meaning. The collective wisdom of folktales provides imaginative resources for making meaning out of illness. Charged with symbolic potency, the plot line and imaginary figures found in folktales tutor the imagination in new directions and offer containers of meaning to hold conflicting or disruptive experiences. The correct term to use for a tale is folktale because it refers to the tales that have come from the popular folklore of culture and encompasses more characters than fairies.
Fairies, dragons, and witches do not
populate our ordinary existence. They
belong to “once upon a time” which stands
outside the realm of rational explanations
and offers us another way to perceive
reality. As emissaries from the imagination,
folktale figures invite us to make
meaning out of life from the vantage point
of the fantastic. Belief in the extraordinary
caters not to reason, but to the rhythm of
dramatic form.
The Spell of Storytelling
Convinced of the therapeutic benefit of
folktales, I tell these stories to patients in
the hospital. I am amazed by their responses.
Patients lose the glazed stare
brought on from watching too much TV
and smile with the glee and rapture of
children. The spell of storytelling draws
them into the tale and sets in motion a
process of identification. Patients recognize
themselves as unlikely heroes or
heroines on journeys seeking life-giving
goals. They hear timeless messages
contained in folktales; ill-fated beginnings
become vehicles of redemption, mistakes
are survivable, obstacles are overcome,
and most important of all, despite the
bleakness of the worst circumstance, help
will always come.
Beauty and The Beast
The tale of Beauty and the Beast aided
a woman undergoing chemotherapy. She
named her cancer “The Beast.” In the
story, she was forced into a relationship
against her will. She had to figure out what
kind of relationship she would have with
cancer. The folktale gave her the clue.
After a period of separation, Beauty looks
into a magic ring and sees that the Beast is
dying. On her own volition, she returns to
the Beast and confesses her love for him.
With a kiss from Beauty, the Beast is
transformed into a prince.
As a gesture of faithfulness transforms
the Beast, the same happened with her
experience of cancer. Through the folktale,
she realized what cancer was teaching her
about living. She understood the cancer
was truly a prince in disguise and afforded
her an experience of life previously
unreachable. Only by going after what she
truly wanted did she achieve the quality of
life long sought. The story served as a
metaphor describing the unwanted nature
of cancer as well as the prince who taught
her about what it is to live fully.
Once after telling an elderly patient the
Arthurian legend, Sir Gawain and Lady
Ragnell, in which King Arthur must solve
the riddle of what a woman desires the
most, I asked the patient if the answer to
the riddle was true for her. (I am not going
to give away Arthur’s answer.) After a few
moments of reflection, a warm smile
swept across her wrinkled face and she
said, “You know, I have received all that I
have desired in my life.” I felt the warmth
of a fully satisfied life radiate from her.
Arthur’s answer to the riddle was an
insignificant detail of the story. The riddle
itself caught her attention and triggered a
flood of gratitude for a life lived well.
Dragonslayer
When listening to Dragonslayer, a
composite of several dragon tales I have
researched, patients easily identify cancer
with the Dragon. “It had a body round as
an apple when in contraction, but in bulk
equaled some notable hill in its rough garb
of bush and thickets. The dragon was able
to feed upon both people and beasts
without the least trouble to itself, as it
needed not to move from the spot where it
was lying. Its habit was to remain for
several years in the same place, and not to
move on till the whole neighborhood was
eaten up. Nothing seemed to hurt it
because its whole body was covered with
bumpy scales which where harder than
stone or metal.” Slaying the dragon cannot
be accomplished by any ordinary means.
Any cut or limb severed is instantly healed
and the dragon returns to the fight more
vigorous than before.
A tradition exists in the countryside that
the dragon might be overcome by one who
possesses the ring of the Wise King
Solomon. Only noone knew where the ring
was hidden. The hero of the story, a noble
knight, sets out to find the ring. After
many months of travel, he finds a wise
wizard who informs him that by learning
the language of the birds he will find the
magical ring of the Wise King Solomon.
Birds:Symbolic of the Spirit
Birds are a folktale motif often
interpreted as symbolic of the spirit.
Speaking about the spiritual perspective,
the wizard says to the knight (as well as to
the patient), “From the language of the
birds, you will learn many things which
mere human knowledge can never teach
you, for too often human knowledge
cannot rise above the situation in order to
gain a greater, higher perspective.” The
knight learns the language of the birds by
drinking a powerful potion brewed by the
wizard. On a metaphorical level, the
process is akin to chemotherapy. The
wizard gives the knight “nine spoonsful
each day. The potion was bitter to swallow
and it made him sleepy, but in three days
time, he was able to understand the
language of the birds.” Wisdom gained
from a spiritual perspective is only
achieved by going through a difficult
process.
On the advice of two “gaily plumed
birds,” the knight discovers the ring to be
in the possession of a sorcerer. Using the
power of the ring, the sorcerer tempts the
knight with splendid treasures which
appear to be real, but actually are only
illusions produced by enchantment.
Declining the enticing offers of illusion,
the knight remains single-minded in his
pursuit of the ring. Relying on his own wit
and skill, he tricks the sorcerer out of the
ring and returns victorious, ready to do
battle with the dragon.
The Knowledge of the Ring
The knowledge from the ring helps the
knight to design the proper armor to defeat
the dragon, and its magic bestows upon
him sufficient strength to carry on the
battle. A long and desperate fight ensues
between the knight and the dragon without
much advantage to either. Weary, but
unwilling to be vanquished by the dragon,
the knight discovers the victorious strategy
by once again listening to the birds. He
cuts off a part of the dragon and retreats to
a quiet, still position. The birds fly down
and scoop up the severed part before the
dragon has a chance to rejoin the piece.
Slowly, piece-by-piece, the dragon’s body
is carried off by the birds until all that
remains is the dragon’s head. With a single
blow, the head is smashed.
Cancer patients hear in this story
several embedded metaphors that lead
them in the direction of overcoming some
of the obstacles they face in dealing with
cancer. As the knight refused to be
tempted by illusions, cancer patients
discover those things in life that no longer
offer real satisfaction and discard them in
favor of what truly brings enjoyment in
life. Rather than trying to make the cancer
disappear all at once, they learn from the
story to take on the experience piece by
piece, one day at a time.
Quiet meditation becomes valued over
obsessive action when struggling against
the cancer. Asking for help is an essential
step on the journey toward healing, and
learning the language of the birds is an
exhortation to develop a spiritual perspective
towards having cancer. In a selfguided
meditation, one cancer patient
reported her birds said nothing at all.
When asked why they remained silent, the
birds told her they wanted to sing, but she
wouldn’t let them. These words of advice
became her incentive to spend her days
doing the activities she enjoyed the most
so that her birds, her spirit, could sing.
The Magic of Folktales
Discovering personal meaning through the magic of folktales is an invitation to explore the enchanted and dense forests of our past. We need to look in unexpected places and rely on resources we never imagined possible. The heroes and
heroines of folktales are usually the youngest, the dimwitted, or the rejected. In the story, The Golden Bird, the king says to his youngest son, “It’s useless, he’s even less likely to find the bird than his brothers and if he meets with an accident, he won’t know what to do. He hasn’t got it in him.” This is a refrain often written into our subconscience
from birth, yet the wisdom of folktales reminds us that there are redeeming forces within our souls which are undeveloped, but must unfold if we are to find personal meaning in our lives. For people coping with cancer, the challenge is to integrate the reality of cancer into their life stories in a meaningful way.

This article first appeared in the March/
April 1992 issue of Creation Spirituality.
Reprinted with permission of Dr. William
Noonan.
Dr. Noonan will be offering the Healing
Story Alliance pre-conference workshop
July 10, 2002, at the National Storytelling
Conference in Denver. The workshop is titled
“Emissaries of the Imagination.”
The workshop will include a presentation
of selected fairy tales written by cancer survivors,
an explanation of how this method
of story making is used for therapeutic purposes
and opportunity to experience the process.