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The Soul of Medicine

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The Soul of Medicine

 

by Thomas Moore

 

 

It's interesting that Jesus, whom we consider to be a

 

spiritual teacher and leader, was a healer. The

 

earliest images of him show him healing with the

 

gesture of his hand. It's also interesting that the

 

Buddha is honored in ritual and poetry as the Lapis

 

Lazuli Radiant Healing Buddha. He uses almost the same

 

gesture and holds a bowl of ointment in the other

 

hand. Shamans, too, around the world combine their

 

spiritual tasks with healing. It seems to be the very

 

essence of spirituality to tend physical and emotional

 

illnesses.

 

 

With the onset of modernistic attitudes in society,

 

our medicine took a turn toward the mechanical and

 

chemical. Whereas a spiritual healer might see the

 

sick person as a blend of body, soul, and spirit, we

 

separate the body out and treat it as though illness

 

had nothing to do with our emotions and the ways we

 

understand our experiences. We have made great

 

advances in the limited sphere of an isolated body,

 

but we still have much to learn about the connection

 

between specific emotions and particular illnesses.

 

 

Just weeks after publishing Care of the Soul 14 years

 

ago, I was invited by physicians to speak to them

 

about healing the whole person. Since then, I have

 

visited many hospitals and medical schools in several

 

countries, recommending that isolating the body is not

 

a good idea.

 

 

Along the way, I have discovered many programs called

 

" spirituality and medicine " where the emphasis is

 

usually on meditation, yoga, and various alternative

 

healing modes. Only occasionally do I find a

 

comprehensive view of the human being as made up of

 

body, soul, and spirit. Of course, that's my " thing. "

 

I am persuaded that the paradigm of mind–body medicine

 

is insufficient and that the deep soul is an important

 

ingredient in any definition of a whole person.

 

 

Let me paraphrase the first words I ever read by

 

Marsilio Ficino, spokesperson for soul in

 

fifteenth-century Italy. He begins his book on natural

 

magic saying, " There are three things in the world:

 

body, soul, and mind [later he refers to mind and

 

spirit interchangeably]. If the spirit is left to

 

itself, it will have no connection with the body. If

 

the body is left to itself, it will have no tie to the

 

spirit. What is needed is soul, between them and

 

adjusted to each. "

 

 

We have a good picture of the deep soul from the works

 

of C. G. Jung, James Hillman, and others. It is the

 

very depth of a person: the emotions and ties, the

 

failures and fears, a sense of home and body, all

 

intimate connections, dreams, loves, and reveries.

 

Tradition says that this deep soul makes us human and

 

unique. The soul is embedded in our everyday,

 

ordinary, imperfect concrete world.

 

 

The spirit, in contrast, gives us cosmic vision,

 

inspiration, principles for good living, a way to deal

 

with our mortality, and the sense of unbounded

 

transcendence. Both soul and spirit are essential and

 

animate the body. I often explain it this way: In the

 

presence of a highly spiritual or intellectual person,

 

you are amazed and instructed. In the case of a person

 

with soul, you'd like to go to dinner with him.

 

 

I frequently find that the medical people I work with

 

have not come to grips with death. Their education and

 

the ethos of their profession keep them focused on the

 

technical aspects of their work. Many find it

 

difficult to converse with their patients, and some

 

feel quite superior on account of their knowledge. In

 

other words, their work is lacking in soul. When I

 

suggest some reading or classes in matters of soul and

 

spirit, I'm always told that there just isn't enough

 

time. " Five minutes! " I said recently to a faculty

 

member. " We don't have three, " he said. Busyness seems

 

to be a special neurosis of the profession in its

 

modern form.

 

 

But many of us know physicians who have severed

 

themselves from the burden of modernism and can give

 

their patients adequate time and full attention.

 

 

What is needed is an escape from the bubble of

 

modernism. Medicine is devoted to evidence and proof.

 

Medical theorists come loaded down with research

 

findings, which they use to establish a sense of

 

certainty in a realm teeming with mysteries.

 

 

I ask the doctors: What image of the person will I

 

find in your consulting room? A skeleton? That's not

 

who I am. A plastic model of intestines? That's not

 

me, either. I'd like to see a person in animated

 

relationship to someone else in a particular place in

 

the world. That's what a whole person is. And when

 

whole persons get sick, their whole being, including

 

their families and friends, and probably their houses,

 

participate in the illness.

 

 

Spirituality gives the soul its vision and the soul

 

gives our lives emotional, intellectual, and even

 

physical vitality. If medicine would address us as

 

whole persons, having important relationships, living,

 

and working in a particular place, with our dreams and

 

fears and concerns, we might be able to heal from the

 

inside out.

 

 

Thomas Moore's latest book is Dark Nights of the Soul:

 

A Guide to Finding Your Way Through Life's Ordeals. He

 

is the author of Care of the Soul (careofthesoul.net)

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> The Soul of Medicine by Thomas Moore

> It's interesting that Jesus, whom we consider

> to be a spiritual teacher and leader, was a healer.

> The earliest images of him show him healing with

> the gesture of his hand. It's also interesting that the

> Buddha is honored in ritual and poetry as the Lapis

> Lazuli Radiant Healing Buddha. He uses almost the

> same gesture and holds a bowl of ointment in the

> other hand.

 

ok, you caught me on one of my nit picking Metal jitsu days but please don't

confuse an

artist's rendering with actual photo documentation.

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