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Be
Your Own Herbal Expert - Part 7 |
Part
8
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Herbal medicine
is the medicine of the people. It is simple, safe, effective,
and free. Our ancestors used - and our neighbors around the
world still use - plant medicines for healing and health maintenance.
It's easy. You can do it too, and you don't need a degree or
any special training.
Ancient memories arise in you when you begin to use herbal medicine.
These lessons are designed to nourish and activate those memories
and your inner herbalist so you can be your own herbal expert.
In our first session, we learned how to "listen" to
the messages of plant's tastes. In lesson two, about simples
and water-based herbal remedies. In the third, I distinguished
safe (nourishing and tonifying) herbs from more dangerous (stimulating
and sedating) herbs. Our fourth lesson focused on poisons; we
made tinctures and an Herbal Medicine Chest. Our fifth dealt
with herbal vinegars, and the sixth with herbal oils.
In this, our seventh session, we will think about how we think
about healing.
The Three Traditions of Healing
There are many ways to use herbs to improve and maintain health.
Modern medicine uses highly refined herbal products known as
drugs. Many alternative or holistic practitioners recommend
herbs, usually in less-refined (and less dangerous) forms such
as tinctures or homeopathic remedies. And then there are the
yarb women, the wise women, such as myself, who integrate herbs
into their daily diet and claim far-reaching results for simple
remedies.
I call these three different approaches the Scientific, Heroic,
and Wise Woman traditions.
These three traditions are ways of thinking, not ways of acting.
And they are not limited to herbs. Any technique, any substance
can be used by a healer in the Scientific, Heroic, and Wise
Woman traditions. There are, for instance, naturopaths, midwives,
and MDs in each tradition, as well as herbalists, educators,
therapists, even politicians.
Each of these traditions lives within you, too.
As I define the characteristics of each tradition, identify
the part of yourself that thinks that way.
Scientific Tradition
Modern, western medicine is an excellent example of the Scientific
tradition, where healing is fixing. The line is its symbol:
linear thought, linear time. Truth is fixed and measurable.
Truth is that which repeats. Good and bad, health and sickness
are put at opposite ends of the line, where they do battle with
each other. Food and medicine are quite different.
Newton's universal laws and the mechanization of nature are
the foundation of the Scientific tradition. Bodies are understood
to be like machines. When machines run well (stay healthy) they
don't deviate. Anything that deviates from normal needs to be
fixed or repaired. The Scientific tradition is excellent for
fixing broken things. Measurements must be taken to determine
deviation and insure normalcy. Regular diagnostic tests are
critical to maintaining proper functioning and ensuring utmost
longevity in the body/machine.
In the Scientific tradition, plants are valued as repositories
of poisons/alkaloids. They are seen as potential drugs, and
capable of killing you in their unpredictable crude states.
They are helpful and safe only when refined into drugs and used
by highly-trained experts.
In the Scientific tradition the whole is the same as its most
active part, and machines are more trustworthy than people.
Heroic Tradition
There is not one unified Heroic tradition, but many similar
traditions collectively called the Heroic tradition. Alternative
health care practitioners generally represent the Heroic thought
pattern, symbolized by a circle.
This circle defines the rules, which, we are told, must be followed
in order to save ourselves from disease and death. Healing in
the Heroic tradition focuses on cleansing. According to this
tradition, disease arises when toxins (dirt, filth, anger, negativity)
accumulate. When we are bad, when we eat the wrong food, think
the wrong thought, commit a sin, we sicken and the healer is
the savior, offering purification, punishment, and redemption.
In the Heroic traditions, the whole is the sum of its parts.
We are body, mind, and spirit. The spirit is high and worthy;
the body is low and gross; the mind is in between. In the Heroic
traditions, we are personally responsible for everything that
happens to us.
Religious beliefs frequently accompany herb use in the Heroic
tradition. The Heroic healer uses rare substances, exotic herbs,
and complicated formulae. Drug-like herbs in capsules are the
favored in this tradition. Most books on herbal medicine are
written by men whose thought patterns are those of the Heroic
tradition.
Wise Woman Tradition
The Wise Woman tradition is the world's oldest healing tradition.
It envisions good health as openness to change, flexibility,
availability to transformation, and groundedness. Its symbol
is the spiral. In the Wise Woman tradition we do not seek to
cure, but focus instead on integrating and nourishing the unique
individual's wholeness/holiness. The Wise Woman tradition relies
on compassion, simple ritual, and common dooryard herbs and
garden weeds as primary nourishers, but appreciates (and uses)
any treatment appropriate to the specific self-healing in process.
The Wise Woman tradition sees each life as a spiraling, ever-changing
completeness. Disease and injury are seen as doorways of transformation,
and each person is recognized as a self-healer, earth healer:
inherently whole, resonant to the whole, and vital to the whole.
Substance, thought, feeling, and spirit are inseparable in the
Wise Woman tradition. The whole is more than the sum of its
parts.
Spiralic and amazing, the Wise Woman tradition offers self-healing
options as diverse as the human imagination and as complex as
the human psyche. The Wise Woman tradition has no rules, no
texts, no rites; it is constantly changing, constantly being
re-invented. It is mostly invisible, hard to see, but easier
and easier to find. It is a give-away dance of nourishment,
change, and self-love. An invitation to honor yourself and the
earth. An admonishment to trust yourself.
Coming up
In our next sessions we will learn how to make herbal honeys
and syrups, and how to take charge of our own health care with
the six steps of healing.
I also invite you to study with me in the convenience of your
home via correspondence course! Choose from one of my four courses:
Green Allies, Spirit & Practice of the Wise Woman Tradition,
Green Witch, and ABC of Herbalism with Susun Weed. Learn more
at www.susunweed.com or write to me at susunweed@herbshealing.com
Experiment Number One
The next time you start to feel unwell, ask yourself what each
one of the three traditions would advise you to do - e.g. You
feel a headache coming on. The Scientific tradition says take
a pain killer. The Heroic tradition says give yourself an enema.
The Wise Woman tradition says take a nap. (For more information
on the three traditions, see the chart in my book Healing Wise.)
Experiment Number Two
Instead of doing what you usually do for some problem (e.g.
headache), do something different. Choose something from the
same tradition you usually use, or from a different tradition.
Experiment Number Three
Become more aware of the "nourishment of your senses"
as Gurdieff put it. What do you look at? Listen to? Smell? Touch
with your skin? Taste?
Experiment Number Four
Nourish yourself in a new or different way. You might: eat something
- or eat somewhere - that you've wanted to try but never dared.
Go to a museum, or the opera, or the ballet, or a Broadway show.
Visit with a cherished friend. Listen to music that touches
your soul. Sit in meditation and burn subtle incense.
Experiment Number Five
Make a list of ten things that nourish you that are now in your
life.
Make a list of ten things that could nourish you if they were
in your life.
Further study
1. Become more familiar with the Scientific tradition: Read
one or more issues of Scientific American and/or Science News.
2. Become more familiar with the Heroic tradition: Skim through
Back to Eden or any current book on detoxification.
3. Become more familiar with the Wise Woman tradition. Read:
Healing Wise, the Wise Woman Herbal. Susun Weed. 1987, Ash Tree
Publishing.
Herbal Rituals. Judith Berger. 1998, St. Martin's Press.
Healing Magic, A Green Witch Guidebook. Robin Rose Bennett.
2004, Sterling.
The Secret Teachings of Plants. Stephen Buhner. 2004, Inner
Traditions.
The Village Herbalist, Sharing Plant Medicines with Family and
Community. Nancy and Michael Phillips. 2001, Chelsea Green Publishing.
Advanced work
· The three traditions of healing are not restricted
to healing of course. You might have recognized these three
attitudes in your profession. Wonderful articles have been written
on the "Three Traditions of Teaching" (the Scientific
relies on tests, the Heroic on punishment and reward, the Wise
Woman on freedom to experience and express) and the "Three
Traditions of Therapy" (the Scientific refers to manuals
and prescribes drugs, the Heroic blames the unconscious, the
Wise Woman nourishes the spirit and builds wholeness) and even
the "Three Traditions of Cooking" (the Scientific
uses a thermometer and a recipe, the Heroic blackens and heavily
spices everything, and the Wise Woman uses what is in season
where she lives).
· Apply the three traditions to your profession.
· Read about the history of herbal medicine. Suggested
books:
Green Pharmacy, the History and Evolution of Western Herbal
Medicine. Barbara Griggs. 1997, Healing Arts.
The Magical Staff, the Vitalist Tradition in Western Medicine.
Matthew Wood. 1992, North Atlantic Books.
Witches, Midwives, and Nurses, A History of Women Healers. Barbara
Ehrenrich and Deirdre English. 1973, Feminist Press.
I see the wise woman. She carries a blanket of compassion. She
wears robes of wisdom. Around her throat flutters a veil of
shifting shapes. From her shoulders, a mantle of power flows.
A story band encircles her forehead. She stitches a quilt; she
spins fibers into yarn; she knits; she sews; she weaves. She
ties the threads of our lives together. She forms a web of spiraling
threads: our lives invented and shared.
I see the wise woman at her loom: a loom warped with days of
light and nights of dark. White threads, black threads receive
the flying shuttle. A shuttle filled with threads of many colors.
Threads the colors of the earth, the common ground; threads
the colors of the people of the earth. Some threads are short;
some threads are long; each thread is different, each perfect
and splendid. The threads are alive with sound and color. The
threads are mutable; they change at a touch. The threads are
crystal antennae; they respond at a thought.
And intertwined with each thread, a thread blood red, a thread
of such sensitivity, it seems invisible, a thread of such vitality,
it can never be hidden. As our blood flows over and under the
days and nights of our lives and binds each moment to the whole,
so the red thread of the wise woman binds us in the tapestried,
cosmic web, holds us in our variety, spirals lovingly around
us, claims us again at death.
I see the wise woman. And she sees me.
(Excerpt from Healing Wise, c. 1987 Susun S Weed. Available
thru www.AshTreePublishing.com )
* This is part 6 in an 8 part series by Susun S. Weed. Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | *
Legal Disclaimer: This content is not intended to replace conventional medical treatment. Any suggestions made and all herbs listed are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease, condition or symptom. Personal directions and use should be provided by a clinical herbalist or other qualified healthcare practitioner with a specific formula for you. All material on this website/email is provided for general information purposes only and should not be considered medical advice or consultation. Contact a reputable healthcare practitioner if you are in need of medical care. Exercise self-empowerment by seeking a second opinion.
This article is © copyright Susun S. Weed 2006 - Republished here with kind permission.
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