Category Archives: Articles on Health

Nightmares

line of trees nightwmares
It’s happening again! A week or so after practising what Ariel and Shya Kane wrote in “Working on Yourself Doesn’t Work” plus using the Waki blanket to bed, I have had nightmares again.

This could be an effect of Kane’s first principle: what you resist, persists. It could be that the electrical charges emitted by the Waki blanket energizes my subconscious to create havoc in my thoughts. It could be a kind of shaman’s sickness as described in Martha Beck’s book.

For 2 months or so I had a peaceful life living according to Joe Vitale’s “Zero Limits”: the Ho’oponopono paradigm. In my desire to hasten my recovery to be able to walk again without a cane, I have searched my numerous books for a non-traditional type of healing. I want to know how my thoughts may be sabotaging my healing. I want to know whether I am affected by the Law of Perversity I wrote about in May of this year.

“Structural learning and spontaneous intuition are not really at war with one another.” So wrote Jim Gilkeson. This is comforting to know as I continue to temper my rational thinking with awareness and education of the senses.
“The more truly differentiated our knowledge base and the more tools it has at its disposal, the greater the variety of our intuitive repertoire.” Jim Gilkeson continued.

Pain

Mexico Julie Hudtohan     If pain is only a physical reality, then perhaps it is justified to use any means to curtail it. But the soul also expresses itself within pain, and excessive dulling of pain also obscures the soul anf makes access to the spirit impossible. Pain has to do with the nerve processes of the body life processes, and we feel a vitality in the organs of the body… Soul processes are also reflected in the organs of the body and are thus intimately related to the life processes.
     My threshold of pain is very low. The text by Robert Sardello has some truth in it though so I chose to publish it. It has shocked me; I reserve my comments for another essay in the near future.

 

Explanatory Systems

     Matthew Budd wrote in “You Are What You Say”: Obviously, you and I are more than the sum of our parts. We have unique cares, intentions, commitments, feelings etc. We have preferences…
And we suffer over things and people we want or have lost. None of this can be explained by examining our parts. We exist as whole and unique organisms. We are part of nature and nature is seamless, a connected whole. Only in our explanatory systems is it separated.
     That is why when I had a voice problem for years in the 1990s my doctors could not explain what ailed me. Eventually I suggested Myasthenia Gravis and most of my doctors greed although a female neurologist vehemently refused to confirm this.
     I was often in turmoil. I had a crisis of Faith. I had too many issues with my in-laws. I had so many questions about our finances. I was definitely unhappy.
     Luckily a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and to Lourdes etc. gave me a new worldview. Slowly I integrated my mind and my body. Eventually my explanatory system changed for the better.

Loss

WE stormed heaven with formula prayers and did visualizations. I even used the Hawaiian system of healing: Ho’oponopono. But we lost our brother-in-law.
We have accepted our loss. However, I can”t help but do the slomo-after-the-game recap. Analysis. What went wrong? Was this a case of the law of perversity at work?
I realize it’s useless to harbor resentments against God. Today I found in “Wildflower Living” by Liz Duckworth heartwarming statements:
“Comfort comes not from understanding the reasons for an unfair event. Rather, it comes from FAITH, from trusting God in the darkness.”

Another pearl of wisdom :Faith means believing in advance what will only make sense in reverse

Struggle

David Victor Photography

This morning I realized I have so much in my life especially in our condo. After I got two plants, I have been coveting, anything else in the condo would be superfluous. But I felt a colorful whirling garden décor wanting “to join up” with me. I must have thought of the décor for quite some time. My thinking must have been haphazard. Eventually I saw three of these in the salon I patronize. The décor manifested elsewhere prompting me to further delay my gratification.

Yesterday I finally acted on my desire by inquiring about the price – very affordable. But I didn’t feel enough motivation to buy one. I must have been suppressing my materialistic inklings. I read that the materialism springs from our fundamental inadequacies. Early on I was initiated into the popular belief that there is something basically flawed in me as well as in everybody else. We have all been banished from the Garden of Eden. To recover our lost inheritance we have to toil and struggle – “by the sweat of our brow”.

My Buddhist books have taught me not to add suffering to my pains. I saw the décor would clash with the minimalist design of our condo. I chose not to struggle with the desire for the décor. I realized the minimalist theme was more desirable to me.

So I took for granted I had to earn every good thing. After my elementary school years, family life confirmed that this indeed is a “valley of tears.” It was difficult to believe that there was a benevolent world to start with. Anything good seemed to emanate from outside myself: financial support from relatives, happy times with neighbors and schoolmates, alleviation of physical pains from Dad and from other doctors. I didn’t have any inkling about my creative power.

For a long time even God was a distant concept. He had to be recognized and acknowledged because those in authority said so. It was as if we were helpless characters in a tragic novel with no way to act independently from the script written for us. I remember my mother was forever chained to her rosary. I suspected she feared that the meager resources she was doled out with to give her family a decent life would be forfeited if she stopped praying.

I grew up having no model for abundant living. Come to think of it, who had models for abundance? Those who lived lives of comfort and plenty were considered special children of God and were simply entitled. This may be similar to the popular belief that the Jews were meant to be rich. They were God’s people; if they were poor how could they not be included in God’s bounty? There was no point in questioning things until I awakened.

Luckily, I grew up with a lot of patrons: aunties, families of playmates, nuns cousins from both my paternal and maternal sides etc. Around three years ago I read a book about a samurai who defied traditions and emerged to be great. The samurai weathered hardship after hardship. He waited for opportunities. At the right time he seized the opportunity. The samurai came into power by using his mind. The book confirmed what I suspected was my gift. The one thing I had always been sure was my gift was my mind.

I have read enough books to warn me against the negative power of the mind. We are all interconnected although by nature I am not excited over interconnections. My preference is to interact only with a selected few. Needless to say, to stay in my comfort zone, I interact only with Emil and our daughter. I often choose to be attuned only to those who can uplift me spiritually because I am highly sensitive. My sensitivity is not related to being hurt emotionally or physically. I refer to being overwhelmed by stimuli. It is as though my nervous antenna is forever picking up vibrations from around me. There is always an urge to respond to stimulus after stimulus ranging from media to personal interactions. Protecting myself can be tiring. I have yet to learn to resonate only to higher frequencies but this can also be tiring. I have yet to learn to be discriminating about when and to which stimulus to respond.