Theocentric Medicine
Many Sufi stories tell of the trickster Mullah
Nasruddin. In one, Nasruddin is a self-employed
businessman who travels between Saudi Arabia and
Egypt each day. Nasruddin crossed the border 7 days
a week, 365 days a year, year after year, along
with a donkey carrying a saddle bag on his back.
There was a border guard whose duty it was to
search for contraband. He would diligently search
Nasruddin every day. He would inspect the donkey
and the saddle bag, and never find anything
suspicious.
After four years, Nasruddin retired, a wealthy
man. One day, he was sitting in a coffee shop in
Cairo when he was spotted by the border guard, who
had also retired. The guard came over and said,
"Nasruddin, I have no interest in persecuting you,
but I simply must know what you were smuggling all
those years."
"Donkeys," replied Nasruddin.
Sometimes we fail to see the most obvious facts
of our lives. We miss fundamental truths because
they are so obvious. And our Western understanding
of healing is missing the donkey. The donkey is
consciousness. The donkey is awareness.
I call the relationship between spirituality and
health "Theocentric Medicine." Its two most
important disciplines are mediation and prayer. It
represents a radical paradigm shift in the way we
perceive ourselves, and the way we understand
healing.
We forget that forty years ago, the notion that
mind could affect body was radical. Today it is
taken for granted. That's a paradigm shift. The
next shift is taking place before our very eyes.
This view holds that there is a third component to
the human being, which we call consciousness, which
is distinct and separate from both the body and the
mind. This, in effect, is who we are. To be more
specific, it is consciousness (the life principle),
which both animates and enlivens the previous two
components and which is responsible for the
functioning of the entire system.
This new paradigm holds that human beings are
made up of three components&emdash;a body, a mind,
and consciousness, and their relative importance
lies in this same ascending order. From the point
of view of religions, whether Abrahamic (Judaism
Christianity and Islam) or Vedic (Hinduism,
Buddhism, Jainism or Sikhism) the notion of
consciousness, spirit, or soul is fundamental and
age-old. However, from the perspective of the
Western healing professions, it is new and
important.
Descartes summed up the old model in his famous
aphorism: "I think, therefore I am." The new model
is: "I am conscious, therefore I am." Awareness is
more than thought. (AUTHOR: NEED BRIDGING SENTENCES
HERE) Meditation both explores the realm of
consciousness, and is the process by which
consciousness frees and observes itself.
|