Tuesday 30 June 2015

Wordview & Behavior

"If [one] thinks of the totality as constituted of independent fragments, 
then that is how [one's] mind will tend to operate, 
but if [one] can include everything coherently and harmoniously in an overall whole 
that is undivided, unbroken, and without a border 
then [one's] mind will tend to move in a similar way, 
and from this will flow an orderly action within the whole."

David Bohm, in Wholeness and the Implicate Order, p. xi

"The true state of affairs in the material world is wholeness.
If we are fragmented, we must blame ourselves."

David Bohm, physicist



Ireland

Thursday 25 June 2015

Healing, Healing, Healing ...


There is a cry deeper than all sound
whose serrated edges cut the heart
as we break open to the place inside
which is unbreakable and whole ...

Rashani Rea


Public Gardens, Halifax, NS

Wednesday 24 June 2015

Tree, Forest - Which Do We See?

     Traditional aboriginal cultures live Thich Nhat Hanh's "interbeing" - in profound relationship with everyone and everything ("all our relations"). Whereas industrialized people tend to be lost in a sea of seemingly unrelated, meaningless, arbitrary, random factoids.
     Anthropologist Edward T. Hall's 1976 book "Beyond Culture", contrasts the communication differences between such "high-context" and "low-context" cultures. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-_and_low-context_cultures
     Our education system, up to & including university, is embedded in our culture's communication style. We low-context, "nuclear giants" hotly pursue highly specialized narrow goals, and as "ethical infants," continue to be oblivious of our impact on our shared quality of life.

          "Learn how to see.
          Realize that everything connects to everything else." 

                                                                                              Leonardo de Vinci

     "To Western medicine, understanding an illness means uncovering a distinct entity that is separate from the patient's being; to Chinese medicine, understanding means perceiving the relationships among all the patient's signs and symptoms in the context of his or her life.
     From a biomedical viewpoint, the Chinese physician is assessing the patient's specific and general physiological and psychological response to a disease entity."
       Ted J. Kaptchuk OMD. "The Web That Has No Weaver. Understanding Chinese Medicine." Contemporary Books, Chicago, 2000.

     "In Indian mythology, Indra was a God who attached all phenomena with visible and invisible strands weaving together a universal net. Earth, trees, clouds, mountains, sky, passion, aggression, creativity, women, men, and children, all were connected in Indra's expansive net. At the intersections of these strands, Indra tied dulcimer bells. In that way, as one part of the net was pulled or moved, the bells would ring; when the sound of a bell was heard, awareness of interconnectedness arose becoming another strand of consideration in one's weave. When the bells were ignored, an illusion of separation and independence reigned; the outcome could be destructive, reverberating throughout the net.”
        W. Anne Bruce: "Abiding in Liminal Space(s): Inscribing Mindful Living/Dying With(In) End-of-Life Caring." PhD Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2002, p12


Public Gardens, Halifax, NS

Monday 22 June 2015

Why Does Inconsiderate, Self-centered, Foolish, Uncivilized Behavior Surprise Us?

     "We live in a society that encourages us to think about how to have a great career but leaves many of us inarticulate about how to cultivate the inner life. The competition to succeed and win admiration is so fierce that it becomes all-consuming. The consumer marketplace encourages us to live by a utilitarian calculus, to satisfy our desires and lose sight of the moral stakes involved in everyday decisions. The noise of fast and shallow communications makes it harder to hear the quieter sounds that emanate from the depths. We live in a culture that teaches us to promote and advertise ourselves and to master the skills required for success, but that gives little encouragement to humility, sympathy, and honest self-confrontation, which are necessary for building character."                            David Brooks. "The Road to Character." Random House, NY, 2015.

     "We happen to live in a society that favors ... characteristics that turns you into a shrewd animal that treats life as a game. You become a cold, calculating creature, who slips into a sort of mediocrity."                                        David Brooks, from his TEDtalk below



Friday 19 June 2015

Health, Sickness, and Beyond


            Koans are Zen riddles that you do not solve so much as step through, as through Alice’s looking glass, into Mad Hatterish conundrums designed to stun rational sense and in its place induce wordless insight. Perfect, simply perfect, for driving a professor of philosophy insane. The most famous koan is, What is the sound of one hand clapping? (Don’t try hitting one hand in the air. Do, and you’ll hear the sound of one hand clapping – the roshi’s against the side of hour head.) My koan concerned a monk who asked Joshu (a famous master in Tang-dynasty China), ‘Does a dog have Buddha-nature?’ Joshu’s answer seemed to imply no. The conundrum: since the Buddha said that even the grass has Buddha-nature, how can a dog not have it?
            Every day I came up with another ingenious answer; every day the roshi frowned and shook his head no; every day the bell would ring and I would be told to come back tomorrow. I turned the koan upside down; I pulled it inside out; I unpacked each word and repacked its meaning. Finally I thought, I’ve got it. The key word was have. A dog does not have Buddha-nature, not the way I have a shirt or an ice-cream cone. Rather Buddha-nature has, or is momentarily taking the shape of, that dog. But the roshi did not even hear out my ingenious solution. Halfway through my explanation he roared at me, ‘You have the philosopher’s disease!’ Then he softened a bit: ‘There’s nothing wrong with philosophy. I myself have a master’s degree in it from one of our better universities. Philosophy works only with reason, though, and there’s nothing wrong with reason, either. Your reasoning is fine, but your experience is limited. Enlarge your experience, and your philosophy will be different.’ Ding-a-ling-a-ling sounded the little bell – signal that the interview was over. I had my impossible assignment: to think of how to think the way I do not think.
            If a koan is mentally exhausting, try it on sleep deprivation. It all but pushed me over the edge. At the end of my stay at Myoshinji there was something like a final-exam period, when the monks meditated virtually around the clock. Since I was a novice, I was permitted the sybaritic luxury of three and a half hours’ sleep a night, which was grossly insufficient. That prolonged sleep deprivation was the hardest ordeal I’ve ever endured. After the first night I was simply sleepy. By the third night I was a zombie. From then on it got worse. The koans force the rational mind to the end of its tether, and then sleep deprivation kicks in. Since you are not sleeping and hence not dreaming, you in effect dream or lapse into quasi hallucinations while you are awake, a kind of a temporary psychosis. I was in that altered state during my last days at Myoshinji.
            And in that state I stormed into the roshi’s room. Self-pity had become boring; fury was the order of the day. What a way to treat human beings, I raged to myself. I wouldn’t just throw in the towel, I’d smack it across the roshi’s face. However, a certain decorum prevailed as I entered his audience room. I clasped palms together and bowed reverentially; as I approached him I touched my head to the tatami floor mat and flexed my outstretched fingers upward to symbolize lifting the dust off the Buddha’s feet. Then our eyes met in a mutual glare. For a few moments he said nothing, and then he growled, ‘How’s it going?’ It sounded like a taunt.
            ‘Terrible!’ I shouted.
            ‘You think you are going to get sick, don’t you?’ More taunting sarcasm, so I let him have it.
            ‘Yes, I think I’m going to get sick! Sick because of you!’ For several days my throat had begun to contract and I was having to labor to breathe.
            And then, curiously, his face relaxed. His smirking expression disappeared, and with total matter-of-factness he said, ‘What is sickness? What is health? Put aside both and go forward.’
            I despair of ever conveying the uncanny impact those twelve words had on me. I thought, He’s right. He is right. Sickness and health suddenly seemed beside the point of what it means to be human; compared to that more abiding reality, health and sickness were two sides of the same coin. Buddhism speaks of the ‘Great No’s,’ such as ‘no birth, no death’ and ‘no coming, no going.’ There is something within us that is not born and does not die and that comes from nowhere and goes no place. Somehow after the roshi’s few words I found myself unexpectedly in a state of total peace. I did my prescribed bow to the floor and exited the room, not only determined to complete the two remaining days but confident that I could do so. Since then I have often been sick, but off it goes to the side, and I go forward.

            Quoted from the superb book: Dana Sawyer “Huston Smith: Wisdomkeeper. Living the World’s Religions. The Authorized Biography of a 21st Century Spiritual Giant.” Fons Vitae, Louisville, KY, 2014.


Thursday 18 June 2015

Make Your Whole Life Unceasing Gratitude


     “What is Zen?

     Simple, simple, so simple. 
     Infinite gratitude toward all things past; 
     infinite gratitude toward all things present; 
     infinite responsibility toward all things future.”                Goto Roshi


       Huston Smith, Jeffery Paine. “Tales of Wonder. Adventures Chasing the Divine. An Autobiography.” HarperOne, NY, 2009.




Sunday 14 June 2015

Different Strokes for Different Folks ...


     “For each different type of person, Hinduism prescribes a different path (yoga). Here I will simply refer to four of the principal ones: 
          (1) Jnana yoga tries to achieve holiness through knowledge, by which is meant not factual information but understanding or vision. 
          (2) For bhakti yogis, feelings are more real than thoughts, so they approach the divine through love and devotion. 
          (3) In karma yoga, salvation comes through work, but work done not for gain but for its own (or God’s) sake. And finally there is 
          (4) royal or raja yoga, comprising meditation and inward exploration. 

     Can the four yogas ever meet, be fully combined? Probably not in the same person. Imagine Socrates and Saint Francis and Gandhi and Siddhartha Gautama meeting at some ethereal pub: they might agree on some common goal, but to reach it they would head off in different directions."

     Even members of the same family can have “such fundamentally different perspectives, the words sail past each other. The intimate conversation between husband and wife or brother and sister can be as mutually incomprehensible as different foreign languages. We need the different and complementary perspectives of the various yogas – and, ideally, of all religions – not only to reach God but to reach each other.”

       Smith H, Paine J. “Tales of Wonder - Adventures Chasing the Divine. An autobiography.” HarperOne, NY, 2009.



Thursday 11 June 2015

Wisdom - THE Most Important Attribute in Health Care, in Life

     "You're going to, sooner or later, learn humility. And the earlier you do, the better doctor you're going to be.
     In this, the Internet Age, we are drowning in information, but starving for wisdom. I urge you, as you forge long, successful and prosperous careers, to not just be smart, but be wise.
     In every interaction you have, embrace the ancient wisdom of Hippocrates: 'Whatsoever house I may enter, my visit shall be for the convenience and advantage of the patient.' "

       Andre Picard, convocation speech to the graduating class in medicine, University of Manitoba, May 14, 2015. 
       Globe and Mail, Tuesday, June 9, 2015.

     Wisdom in Health Care: http://healthyhealers.blogspot.ca/2015/04/wisdom-in-health-care.html



Wednesday 10 June 2015

Well-being - a Lifelong Journey towards Wisdom

"Well-being in old age is to a large extent the result of 
psychosocial development and growth 
across the life course, 
conceptualized as wisdom."


Monika Ardelt PhD - speaking at the University of Chicago, Wisdom Research Forum, May 8, 2015


Monday 8 June 2015

Optimism and Hope

      Huston Smith "recalled Czech president Vaclav Havel saying that ‘optimism’ suggests that we think things will turn out well, while ‘hope’ is a force that motivates us toward right action whether we believe things will turn out well or not. 
     And it was out of hope that Huston found motivation to keep working for change. We must, Huston argued, be like the doctors who fight to end disease whether or not they believe they will ever succeed. 
     ‘The fulfillment comes through doing what one can, not in wasting time predicting outcomes.’”

        Dana Sawyer “Huston Smith: Wisdomkeeper. Living the World’s Religions. The Authorized Biography of a 21st Century Spiritual Giant.” Fons Vitae, Louisville, KY, 2014. 


Sunday 7 June 2015

The Big Bang Theory of Health Care

     On the TV series "Big Bang Theory", Sheldon is hilariously inept in all matters outside of theoretical physics, especially his total befuddlement about human relations. Doc Martin, on the British TV series, is Sheldon's medical counterpart.

     “Life’s central issues … are issues of quality, dealing with judgments regarding the value of our thoughts and actions – political, moral and aesthetic. They deal with evaluative choices regarding the nature of existence and our place in it, rather than simply with descriptions of life’s quantitative aspects, like those of distance, size and weight.

     ... science fails in the face of all ultimate questions, and consequently, leaves the problems of life … completely untouched.”
       Dana Sawyer “Huston Smith: Wisdomkeeper. Living the World’s Religions. The Authorized Biography of a 21st Century Spiritual Giant.” Fons Vitae, Louisville, KY, 2014.


     So what proportion of us dentists and physicians have had solid liberal arts educations? 
     Since most of us have almost exclusively been immersed in the sciences, how receptive are our dental and medical students (& faculty) to correct this deficiency?: http://healthyhealers.blogspot.ca/2012/07/soft-skills-undervalued.html



Oingt, France

Friday 5 June 2015

My Story - for Now

     "And that's the spirit in which I write, as a co-explorer, knowing that I'll probably see things differently as time passes and my questions get deeper still. I must be patient and remember the fragility of what I think I know. We have a duty to offer our own stories, however, just in case something we say does touch someone else in a positive way. Stories of struggle can be especially important, because we all struggle. In the same way, stories of how we have overcome our challenges might help inspire others to believe that they too can overcome."

       Rupert Ross. "Indigenous Healing. Exploring Traditional Paths." Penguin, Toronto, 2014.

Randy Charboneau

Tuesday 2 June 2015

Who Makes Us Smile?


     “Only a very few people alive today can make me smile just to think of them: the Dalai Lama is one and Huston Smith is another. And when I reflect on it, I realize that this is partly because both celebrated teachers are voracious in their pursuit of wisdom and able to push back their own assumptions in order to learn from everyone they meet; both radiate a calm and openness that can come only from an inner shrine that is unwavering. More deeply, with both of them the sense of wisdom is infectious because they are light in every way: alive with mischief and sparkle, unimpressed with themselves and ready to see, and bear out in their every action, that delight is as much a part of life’s adventure as is sober rumination.”                                     Pico Iyer

        Dana Sawyer “Huston Smith: Wisdomkeeper. Living the World’s Religions. The Authorized Biography of a 21st Century Spiritual Giant.” Fons Vitae, Louisville, KY, 2014

 

Hermitage, France