| |
INTRODUCTION
In holistic health
we are looking for a science capable of studying persons
as wholes. To study as a whole is real science, not a
part. No longer is it tenable to think of any body system
as separate. All effect and cause interact and function
as an integrated whole. For this reason we will not
follow existing allopathic research method in this
chapter and the succeeding ones.
Clinical research in holistic healing is needed to test
the effectiveness of different treatment regimes, to
educate the public on different non-drug therapies, and
to develop a method which treats people as wholes.
Holistic approach includes the following principles:
- Research and healee
are equal partners in the research and share all
knowledge; it is a co- operative, experiential
inquiry.
- Reality is a process,
always emerging.
- Knowledge is
subjective-objective and varies widely from
person to person.
- The healee must
accept self-responsibility for healing and work
together with the healer in the process.
- All aspects are
include to study persons as wholes: the
atmosphere, community, work place,family,
culture, and so on.
- Beliefs, attitudes,
expectations, and values play a major role in
healing.
- The spiritual realm
evoked by a variety of interventions is at the
heart of healing.
- Symbols, myths,
metaphors and stories utilize the biology of hope
in the healing process.
In reviewing the
literature, a pattern emerges of the importance in
holistic healing of the following aspects: the
healer/healee relationship; the spiritual realm; symbols,
myths, and metaphors; and the mind/body connection.
As these form the basis for the development of a holistic
research method, we will deal with them first.
THE HEALER/HEALEE RELATIONSHIP
Peter Reason and
John Heron in their Whole Person Medicine, report
on an one year research study of the principles and
practice of holistic medicine. They studied persons as
wholes using a five part model of holistic medicine:
- Concern for the
patient as a being of body, mind, and spirit seen
in historical, social and political contexts.
- The patient as a
potential self-healing agent.
What we include is the more radical principle
that each person as a mental and spiritual being
has the potential capacity consciously and
intentionally to facilitate healing in their body
by a variety of internal and external actions.
- Power sharing between
doctor and patient - shared responsibility for
diagnosis and treatment.
In diagnosis the doctor has the medical view, and
the patient a personal view, and can understand
and give meaning to their illness in terms of
their own unique knowledge of their total life
situation.
- Ability to offer a
wide range of interventions.
This includes competence in alternative therapy
as well as the conventional.
- The doctor as
self-gardening.
This means the principle of personal growth--the
practitioner of holistic medicine needs to be
holistic in their personal development, behaviour
and life-style, and to be consciously involved in
the process of holistic self-developing and
social awareness Holism apires to see things
whole, so Reason and Heron wove these five
principles into three models of how they wanted
to move in their study. .
_________
1. Peter Reason and
John Heron (Eds.). Whole Person
Medicine : A Co-operative Inquiry. British
Postgraduate Medical Federation, University of London,
July 1985.
In this model, both deal
with their own growth and healing process. This creates
the right condition for change; power is shared; the
model is symmetrical; both doctor and patient give and
receive care, understanding, recognition, and acceptance.
A mutual personal relationship develops which is ongoing
and hopefully will develop into the model.
When we move beyond the myth of the all-powerful healer,
an intimate relationship can develop where both sense
their limitations and their strengths.
It is the power of this relationship that heals. It is a
living archetype--a polarity exists within both--the
healer and the healee. There is in everyone something to
be healed. The cure depends ultimately on this
relationship. Here again these polarities in doctor and
patient, the yin and the yang, the dark and the light,
the strengths and weakness, merge as they flow. The
doctor becomes the teacher who is touched by the patient
and vice versa. The power of healing, built on this
intimate relationship, is an ever increasing experience
of Faith, Hope and Love-in a caring and compassionate
manner.
Healing in its most fundamental character has less to do
with `doing -- that is employing physicalistic
techniques -- than in assisting with the `being and
the `knowing of the patient.
Shah and Mankad2 speak of the opposite effect
when the doctor patient relationship is not healthy.
"The negative aspect of the patient-doctor
communication is usually not taken seriously by most of
us. Not that we do not care, but we are often not aware
of the powerful impact our words or pronouncement or even
gestures might have on the patients disturbed and
vulnerable psyche. This very vital aspect in
patient-doctor relationship is hardly ever even hinted at
by our teachers. An unguarded statement or an obvious
look of concern on our face, however fleeting can create
panic and increase the apprehension in the patients
mind. Such a patient, whose morbidity and suffering are
increased because of the doctors behaviour can
undoubtedly be said to be suffering from an
iatrogenic(doctor induced) disease, or an iatrogenic
complication of an already existing disease. Thus
doctor-patient communication assumes greater importance,
perhaps as much as drug treatment, not only in serious or
potentially fatal conditions, but in our day to day
dealing with routine cases .... we talk with the patient,
not to the patient and talk in his own dialect at his own
level of comprehension. The art of communicating with the
patient is not an easy task, for one has to assiduously
cultivate it over a life time.... " Norman Cousins
wrote "I pray that the medical students will never
allow their knowledge to get in the way of their
relationship with their patients......I pray that when
they go into a patients room they will recognize
that the main distance is not from the door to the bed,
but from the patients eyes to their own, and that
the shortest distance between those two points is a
horizontal straight line, the kind of straight line that
means most when the physician bends low, to the patients
loneliness, fear , pain, and the overwhelming sense of
mortality that comes flooding up out of the unknown, and
when the physicians hand on the patients
shoulder or arm is a shelter against darkness....
Ultimately it is the physicians respect for the
human soul that determines the worth of his
science".
__________
1. See for instance in
Larry Dossey. Beyond Illness. New Science Library,
Shambala. Boston and London, 1984. pp. 193-206.
2. Jayant N. Shah and Kishore M. Mankad . "
Iatrogenesis and Doctor-Patient Relationship" in
Gujarat Medical Journal, Special Issue:
: latrogenic Diseases, April 1987, pp. 197-299.
Reason and Heron2,
carry the idea further - from the doctor-patient
relationship can come cooperative experiential inquiry
which is a new paradigm of research methodology. Their
referring us to Indian advocates of participatory
research reinforced our thinking on this aspect of
research and empowerment.3 Awareness and
empowerment are central to participatory research.
Awareness is an understanding of the problems affecting
oneself as well as the underlying cause of problem.
Awareness has both an intellectual and an emotional
aspect. This brings a sensitivity to the problem and
their causes. Empowerment by collective self-confidence
and respect for ones abilities is the aim of
participatory research. Potency is felt. Participatory
research, evaluation and training, empowers people to
take initiatives in their common interests.
_________
1. Norman Cousins. The
Healing Heart. WW Norton & Co., New York,
1983.
2. Peter Reason and John Heron. "Research With
People" in Person-Centered Review Vol. 1, No. 4,
November 1985, pp. 456-476.
3. Rajesh Tandon. Participatory Research. Society for
Participatory Research. Society for Participatory
Research in Asia, New Delhi, 1982
It makes them
self-confident, skilled, aware, and knowledgeable.
In participatory research, the healer and healee are
involved in all the thinking and decision making that
generates, designs, manages, and draws conclusions from
the four phases of participatory research: 1
Phase 1 : A
group of researchers agree on a course of enquiry and
identify some initial research propositions. They also
agree to some set of procedures by which they will
observe and record their own and each others experience.
This phase involves primarily propositional knowing.
Phase 2 : The
group then apples these ideas and procedures and records
the outcome. They need to be particularly alert for the
subtleties and nuances of experience and to ways in which
original ideas do and do not accord with experience. This
phase involves primarily Practical knowing.
Phase 3 : The
co-researchers become fully immersed in this activity and
experience. There will be ups and downs. They may change
their beliefs, and attitudes. This phase is mainly experiential
knowing.
Phase 4 : After
an appropriate period, the co-researchers engaged in
Phase 1 to 3 (several cycles), return to consider their
original research propositions and hypotheses in the
light of experience and modify, reformulate, reject, and
adopt new hypo-theses, etc. They may also amend and
develop their research procedure more fully to record
their experience. This phase is a critical return to propositional
knowing.
In participatory research,
it must be remembered that power sharing must be done
appropriately. The roots of power-leveling and
demystifying strategies include skill-sharing; explaining
and teaching; changing the environment; being less
formal; being warm in relationship; being personal -
telling about personal life; changing seats, role -
playing - to experience the others constraints;
increasing autonomy by access to feedback loops; and
doing all evaluation together. Since co-operative inquiry
is so different from traditional research methodology, we
highlight the nature of involvement which is openly
negotiated. All contribute to the creative thinking :
invention, inward movement, processing and testing;
deciding on what is to be looked at; determining the
methods of the inquiry; making sense out of what is found
out; contributing to the action which is the subject of
the research encounter; and reflecting, analysing and
communicating to others the experience; writing reports,
and case studies, etc. To shift to this new paradigm
research requires three changes:1
__________
1. John Heron.
"Experiential Research Methodology" in Human
Inquiry : A Sourcebook of New Paradigm Research.
John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, 1981. pp. 153-166.
1. Participatory and
holistic knowing : This self-directing ability is at
least latent in all human beings, and includes the
following processes and methods:
Using encounter which is
tacit, intuitive, and holistic rather than surveys,
questionnaires, and observation.
Planning research action together.
Practising and experiencing it.
Reflecting on the experience, revising,
developing,discarding.
Finding the meaning of the data.
Communicating the findings.
Using participatory and holistic knowing in a caring way
with mutual love and concern.
2. Critical
subjectivity : This is a quality of awareness, an
active knowing, where the mind is detached, objective,
analytical and clinical. It goes beyond the split between
subjective and objective. It honours individual
experience and works to enhance that experience towards a
critical subjectivity.
3. Knowledge is action
: Education and social action may become fully
integrated with the research process.
Thus we can see the vital role played in clinical
research by a deep and meaningful healer/healee
relationship. The second important aspect in healing is
the spiritual realm.
THE SPIRITUAL REALM
Spiritual
interventions we use in our Holistic Health Centre
include:
Centering : Intensive Journal Method; Keeping a
Spiritual Journal; Spiritual Direction; Meditation;
Contemplative Prayer; Pain/Suffering; Creation
Spirituality; finding the Meaning of Life; Enhancing
faith and Hope; Healing of Memories; Nonviolent Action
Retreat; Forgiveness and Letting Go; Laying on of Hands;
Physical Fitness Programmes as a means of total
experience; Relaxation and Guide Imagery; Enhancing
awareness, and raising consciousness; Transformation;
Psychosynthesis; Retreats; Finding the Meaning of Dreams;
Support Groups: Death and Dying Yoga.
____________
1. Peter Reason (Ed.). Human
Inquiry in Action. Sage Publications, London,
1988.
Roberto Assagiolis Psychosynthesis1
as a way of incorporating the spiritual dimension has
been a part of our healing methodology from the
1970s. He gives meaning central importance in life.
Values, particularly the ethical, aesthetic, noetic, and
religious are of great importance. The existence of a
spiritual Self is the basis of psychosynthesis.
Psychosynthesis includes psychosomatic medicine, the
psychology of religion, the investigation of the
superconscious, Eastern psychology (especially Indian),
creative understanding, holistic approach,
inter-individual and social psychology and the
anthropological study of man, and active techniques for
the treatment and development of the personality.
Jacquelyn Small2 takes psychosynthesis a step
further by giving a step by step approach to
transformation. She says: "Essence is our soul--the
authentic unifying centre behind our personality. It is
the knowing self residing in a realm beyond concrete
reality, which bases its choices on the essentials about
us-our unique mission and purpose in life. Essence is the
seat of our vision, our hope, creativity, intuition,
spiritual yearnings and purposes, love, wisdom and all
the other qualities that really give our lives meaning.
Essence puts us in touch with the true powers of being
human. This book fills in, what psychology has lacked,
knowledge about Essence. This indwelling spiritual
component of the Self is experienced as the urge toward
wholeness and unites our lower self to our higher self.
It carries on an active dialogue with our personality
self. It speaks to us through symbols in dreams, visions,
altered states of consciousness, and synchronistic
events. These spiritual dispatches reveal spiritual
directions. Establishing contact with it helps us change
blind habits, unhelpful beliefs and addictions which lead
to conflict in our lives. The goal of transformation or
spiritual growth is an integrated completion of the Self
with qualities of religion often attributed only to God;
love, compassion, unity, wisdom, intuition, altruism, and
truth." See also Chapter 4 on Psychosynthesis and
Transformation.
The third important aspect in holistic healing is the use
of symbols, myths, and metaphors.
________
1. Raberto Assagioli.
Psychosynthesis. Penguin Books, England, 1965.
2. Jacquelyn Small. Transformers: The
Therapists of the Future. DeVorss and Co.
California, 1986.
SYMBOLS MYTHS AND METAPHORS: STORIES
All therapeutic
approaches and systems make explicit and implicit use of
metaphors. Metaphors are a way of talking about
experience. Metaphors, in the form of fairytales,
parables, and anecdotes, are consciously and
unconsciously used by therapists in order to assist a
client n making the changes he wants to make. The hope
underlying this story-telling is that the experience of
another in overcoming a problem which is similar to that
of the clients, will suggest to him directly or
indirectly, ways in which he can deal with the situation.
The use of metaphors helps us move beyond a positivist
view of the world toward a world of multiple realities.
All knowledge is metaphorical. Metaphors are the
organizing forms which serve as our perspectives on life.
Mythical, symbolic life still is at the center of our
lives and our sciences. The healing power of metaphors
and cultural systems is the most powerful healing element
in all cultures. Modern medicine
has rediscovered a small fraction of that which is
labelled the mind/body connection. We must go far beyond
into neuroimmunomodulaion and its healing effect which is
triggered by healing metaphors in the social system. This
points to the need to look at the healing potential of
the social system at on all levels physical, spiritual,
psychological, emotional - in the family, the group, the
social system, and culture as a whole, including religion
and medical ideologies.
In studying universal aspects of symbolic healing, James
Dow1 proposes the stages of symbolic healing
in outline :
- A generalised
cultural mythic world is established by
universalising the experiences of healers,
initiates, or prophets, or by otherwise
generalising emotional experience.
- A healer persuades
the client that it is possible to define the
clients relationship to a particularised
part of the mythic world, and makes the
definition.
- The healer attaches
the clients emotions to transactional
symbols in this particularised mythic world.
- The healer
manipulates the transactional symbols to assist
the transaction of emotion.
__________
1. Jame Dow.
"Universal aspects of Symbolic Healing : A
Theoretical Synthesis" in American
Anthropologist, 8 (1986) pp. 56-69.
All symbolic healing
methods involve an ontological shift for the client into
a particularised mythic world. Symbolic healing becomes
possible when a particularised mythic world exists for
both the therapist and the client and when the client
accepts the power of the therapist to define the
clients relationship to it. The therapist then
attaches the clients emotions to transactional
symbols and manipulates these symbols.
Once we have chosen and established a metaphorical
perspective on our world, lived with it and given it some
life, we can begin to establish dialogue, new world-views
may emerge. The use of metaphor encourages us to live
equally with two or more world-views. Thus we can explore
ways of developing high-quality awareness, right action,
and use of metaphor. This is closely linked to the
spiritual realm discussed above- developing mindfulness
through the disciplines of Buddhist meditation, using
psychodrama, a yoga of participation, confronting
distress to heal old hurts and patterns. From this we
learn to act from our center rightly in our lives and in
our world. The forth important aspect in holistic health
is the mind/body connection.
MIND/BODY CONNECTION
"The
labyrinthine puzzle of unconscious-conscious awareness
intercourse that makes our social life so complex is, in
fact," says Barbara Brown1, "the
crucial substructure of all mind and body control. It is
so delicate, so observing, so responsive, that this lacy,
elusive organisation of mind can be shown to respond
subconsciously even to the mistakes of science. After
all, the mind does depend upon information to make its
conclusion and direct its activities, and when the
information is sanctioned by authority, the mind muses
it. This explains why so may volunteers for
psycho-physiological experiments so often produce the
results researchers want; and why placebos can relieve
real physical problems. The ingrained belief in authority
by conscious awareness can indeed overrule the innate
intelligence of the unconscious mind."
The most important and totally unique characteristic of
stress as a cause of illness, according to Brown, is that
it is the "only cause of illness that requires
activation and energising by mental processes. If
unconscious worry can distress mind and body, is it not
possible that the unconscious mind may also function
actively to ensure well being ? This leads us into the
whole realm of beliefs and their effect on illness."
_________
1. Barbara B. Brown. Super-Mind.
harper and Row, New York, 1980. pp. 70-72.
Biofeedback has shown us
the prowess of the mind to move electrochemical
underpinning of the body with such precision that we can
not help but appreciate the extraordinary powers of mind
to control body processes.
In Healing From Within, Jaffe1 observes
that " the medical community does not accept or is
unaware of the impact that psychological processes have
on the self-restorative capacity of the body. Many
doctors assume that spontaneous remissions occur merely
by chance and hence could not be introduced
systematically into the treatment process. But what if
research could prove that these cures are attributable to
specific psychological process? If that were the case,
couldnt physicians incorporate them into their
therapeutic program? Wouldnt beliefs then become an
important aspect of treatment , and make `miracles
routine and explainable?" Much of medicine, both
past and present, consists largely of magic and
suggestion. In most medical research, the power of belief
systems are considered a distraction that interferes with
the study of the actual physical mechanism of drug
action. In our research we take the opposite position, we
see their importance and incorporate them in the research
methodology.
"Physicians have just begun to speculate about what
physical mechanisms in the brain might initiate physical
changes as a result of mental suggestion. The placebo
effect may be activated in part by naturally occurring
substances in the brain called endorphins. These
molecules are the bodys own pain -relieving
materials; they allow the nervous system to turn off pain
when it is appropriate to do so. In essence, the brain
can release its own narcotic. Endorphins were first
identified in 1975, and scientists are still not certain
precisely how they work. But early studies already
indicate that they have a chemical structure identical to
morphine. And when secreted by the brain, they may
maximise the bodys ability to respond to a variety
of healing techniques."2 The connection
between the level of trust of the patient in the doctor
which again hinges on the importance of the
doctor-patient relationship covered above is the basis of
the mind/body connection. But it is necessary to go far
beyond endorphins and hypnosis and extend the placebo
effect into the whole area of neuroimmunomodulation. We
see the effect of beliefs, values, and attitudes on
health and the importance of positive imagery in
strengthening the immune system.
________
1. Dennis T. Jaffe. Healing
From Within. Alfred A. Knopf, New York,
1980.pp. 52-63.
2. Jaffe, op. cit., p. 55.
This is done by examining
the expectations and beliefs, and helping the person to
change those that seem to hinder the treatment process.
Healer and healee must work determinedly to alter
negative mental patterns into positive, health-enhancing
patterns. The person must be guided towards discovering
the healing power that lies within. Accurate information
about the bodys potential can counter their fears
and pessimism. Information is healing. It brings a sense
of hope and the belief that they may be able to effect
change in their condition.
According to Daniel Moerman1, "There are
substantial pathway which link physiological and
cognitive states and these pathways are the stage on
which metaphoric concepts of performance may `be
effective, that is influence biological
processes." He analysis the placebo effect,
traditionally considered to exist on this mind-body
boundary and often used to explain the effectiveness of
the shamans technique. The patients expectant
faith produces what to biomedicine is known as the
placebo effect.
In her Imagery in Healing2 Jeanne Achterberg
says, "when the imagination is considered as the
ultimate healer, aspects of what has become known as
`placebo effect are being addressed....The placebo
effect comes about because of the imagination; but it
isnt synonymous with the imagination itself. Its
tenacious presence in clinical studies of drugs and
surgery provides ample proof for the effect of the mind
on body chemistry ..... Every thought is accompanied by
electrochemical change. So if you take a pill, and you
feel that its going to cure you, the pill is
metabolized in a very different environment than if you
think the pill is Poisson. Thats crude way of
summarising the very exciting research that is now going
on regarding the biochemical aspects of imagination.
Placebos like imagery, hypnosis, and biofeedback, surely
must have direct effect on the immune system, but the
components are yet to be carefully researched. The
imagination can incorporate and translate into wondrous
biochemical changes that are as yet beyond the
comprehension of the finest scientific minds. The wise
doctor within each of us knows how to make pain
disappear, and tumors melt. It knows whether to call
forth T-cells or histamines or endorphins - all in the
proper order and combination. The mind/body connection
only triggers the process . . . . Hopes and fears,
previous experiences, archetypal belief systems, and
especially expectancy, all form the basis for
________
1. Daniel E. Moerman.
"anthropology of symbolic Healing" in Current
Anthropology, Vol. 20,1, March 1979. pp. 59-66.
2. Jeanne achterberg. Imagery in Healing. New
Science Library, Shambhala, Boston and London, 1985. pp.
84-87.
the basis for the quality
and degree of the response. The effectiveness varies
depending on how much the patient expects to
benefit....Even the active properties of drugs can be
overcome by the imagination".
Much is written and recognised throughout recorded
history of the shamans work in the realm of
imagination. Jeanne Achterberg 1 links this same power to
the scientist. The shamans use a primitive form of
medical and psychological aid designed to pacify the
ignorant natives. The shaman is the worlds oldest
professional from whom both the modern doctor and priest
descend. The shaman is characterised by practices of
ecstasy or altered states of consciousness. A shaman has
guardian spirits from whom power and knowledge is gained
to heal others. Shamanism is the oldest and most
widespread method of healing with the imagi-nation. There
is archeological evidence suggesting that the techniques
of the shaman are at least 20,000 years old. Their
practices are consistent throughout the world.
Jerome Frank in his Persuasion and Healing2
concludes that "any effectiveness of shamanic
healing is a function of heightened expectancy on the
part of the sick and injured, and that the true benefit
of the primitive techniques is to provide emotional
relief and a sense of community. Shamanic rituals and
symbols provide one of the more fascinating sagas of how
human being attempt to relate to the supernatural in
order to create a condition of health. shamans of all
genres do not distinguish between body, mind, and spirit,
a person is treated as a total unity. We can trace the
healing use of imagery as the golden thread throughout
the history of medicine from Hippocrates, Aesculapius,
Aristotle, Galen to the present time" The use of
imagery in modern medicine has taken us to the edge of a
new era of healing - neuro-immunomodulation-which bridges
the whole of shaman and science in going ahead with the
golden thread of healing.
Norman Cousins has the last word on mind/body connection
(placebos): "What is most significant about placebos
is not so much the verdict they supply on the efficacy of
new drugs as the clear proof that what passes through the
mind can produce alternations in the bodys
chemistry. These facts also indicate that the same
pathways and connections that come into play through the
use of placebos can be activated without placebos.
________
1. Ibid.
2. Jerome Frank. Persuasion and Healing. John
Hopkins University Press, Baltimore and London, 1974.
The main ingredient is the
human belief system. Confidence in the ability to
mobilise ones resources is a prodigious force in
itself. The text great advance in human evolution may
well be represented by the ability of human, working with
a new understanding of brain chemistry, to preside over
their own beings".1 This is in line with the
thinking and research of the authors. This new era of
healing, incorporating the use of imagery in healing has
been described in Volume 1, Chapter 2 of The Banyan
Tree series, pages 87 to 144.
________
1. Norman Cousins. Human
Options. W.W. Norton and Company, New York,
1981. See also : Norman Cousins. Head First
:The Biology of Hope. E.P. Dutton, New York,
1989.
[index]
|