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Cloud Hands Home Information and Bibliography
The
Self Reliance and Empowerment Path
In
oriental medicine it is said that disease is the physiological expression of a disharmony
of the energy system of the body. Acupuncture and herbal formulas, among other modalities,
are administered to rehabilitate the individual back to a state of balance and health. In
a similar fashion to western medicine, these are procedures that are "done to"
the patient. While these modalities are more natural and health enhancing than surgery and
medications they are still done to the patient who is often a passive recipient of
services. This dynamic is a betrayal of the essence of oriental medicine as revealed in
one of the great laws of oriental medicine, "teach rather than treat". In the
Nei Ching it says, "The inferior physician treats diseases, the superior physician
teaches the well to remain well".(19) We can see clearly the consequences of not
honoring this law in the modern world: people dependent on experts outside themselves to
"cure" them and a resulting health costs crisis. Qigong
captures the essence of oriental medicine in a personal practice, which includes all the
necessary tools for self-healing. Qigong is profound medicine, it is easily learned, it is
medicine that is always with the person, it has no cost, requires no memberships or
special equipment, the individual does not need a doctor's order, permission, diagnosis or
prescription, it is not necessary to go to an clinic, hospital or pharmacy to get it. This
is a medicine so completely simple that the average person, addicted to complexity,
probably won't use it. The medicine is in the person and needs only to be turned on. In
the 1950's in China it was a government mandate to explore the treasure of traditional
medicine as well as the technological medicine of the west for the most efficient
combination of clinical strategies. A group of gastro-intestinal cancer patients was
divided into several experimental groups.(13) One group received radiological and
chemo-therapeutic modalities, one group received radiological, chemo-therapeutic and
breath physio-therapy (Qigong) and one group received radiological, chemotherapy, Qigong
and Fu Zheng (immune enhancing tonic herbs). The results showed significantly longer
survival rates for the groups that had treatments from both Western medicine and Chinese
medicine together. Unfortunately, the Chinese were so enraptured with the Western
techniques that they did not have a group that used just Qigong and herbal formulas so we
can only speculate that such a group would have had better survival rates as well. It
is startling that this simple therapeutic tool should be so available and not have created
a revolution in health care. In 1896 in the United States a small book was written on the
powerful potential of breath practice, "Nature's Cure For Chronic Diseases: The
Greatest Health Discovery of the Age", by H. C. Borger.(28) This book, with no
reference to any oriental sources describes healing through breathing exercises. It's
rationale is focused primarily on oxygen metabolism and circulation. It is clear that
experts, not only in the mysterious orient but also in the western world, have found the
cultivation of the breath to be a profound therapeutic agent. Why then is breath practice
not a common therapeutic tool?
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