in a perfect world, wellness would be holistic and balanced. But in the world we live in, where people fall ill and standard treatments fail and fail again, the outer orbits of the health-sphere can seem like the only place to be heard and to feel better.
Of course, quacks, fads, and snake oils have plagued humanity since, well, the Plague. Still, this is an era of post-truth politics, an age when health cures are defined by “having a moment” headlines more than peer-reviewed research, a time that has turned Goop, which pursues unconventional wellness methods, into a $250 million business.
That societal shift has unearthed a more radical, hands-on approach to what ails us—one where women with mysterious illnesses keep honeybees in their houses and sting away their disease.…
