The
Battle between the virus and man
The battle between the virus and man has waged over
ten millenniums , yet has still been inconclusive. Sometimes
man has the upper hand, at others the virus. Frequently
the invisible infinitesimal has returned with a vengeance,
after initial defeat, wearing a new pernicious form, outsmarting
the work done in the most sophisticated labs. It mocks at
our intelligence and efforts.
Dhanvantari, the physician of the gods, wondered. Turning
to the great god Visnu, preserver of the world, he asked:
"How is it that an organism so infinitesimally small
and primitive can defeat one so much more complex, strong
and adaptable as man, who stands at the apex of creation?"
Visnu Answered:
" Behind the infinitesimal is the infinite with all
its knowledge and Power. This small organism has ' no sense
of separateness.' So it is unconsciously identified with
my whole power and knowledge".
Man, though a product of Nature , has separated himself
from the power and knowledge of infinite Nature. This 'sense
of separateness' has made him lose his natural balance and
harmony. so he is vulnerable. For even the most powerful
organism cannot exceed the infinit. A wave cut off from
the ocean force cannot rise high and becomes a small pond.
A drop identified with the ocean becomes all-powerful as
it shares the ocean's force!
The virus, an infinitesimal, has not yet lost its connection
to infinity. Man, with finite boundaries, has yet to consciously
discover the Infinite.
By-Dr. Alok Pandey
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Medical fashion
TInjections are all the fashion; for everything
it is "inject, inject and again inject".
Medicine has gone through three stages in modern
times-first (at the beginning in Molière's
days) it was "bleed and douche"-then "drug
and diet"-now it is "serum and injection".
Praise the Lord! not for the illnesses, but for
the doctors. However, each of these formulas has
a part truth behind it-with its advantages and disadvantages.
As all religions and philosophies point to the Supreme
but each in a different direction, so all medical
fashions are ways to health-though they don't always
reach it.
-
Sri Aurobindo
(vol 22-23-24 [SABCL] (Letters on Yoga), Page: 1586)
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Reasons for illness*
The Mother
Can all physical
ailments be traced to some disorder in the mind as their
ultimate source? If so, what kind of mental disorder would
produce such an ailment as, for example, prickly heat or
sore throat?.
There are as many reasons for an illness as there are people
who fall ill; the explanation is different in each case.
If you ask me, "Why have I this ailment or that?"
I can look and tell you the reason, but there is no general
rule.
The ailments of the body are not always the outcome of
a mental disorder, disharmony or wrong movement. The source
of the malady may be something in the mind, it may be something
in the vital; or it may be something more or less purely
physical, as in illnesses that arise from an outer contact.
Again, the disturbance may be the result of a movement in
the Yoga, and in that case too there is a multitude of possible
causes.
Let us take up the illnesses that are due to Yoga; for
our concern is more directly and intimately with them. Here,
although no one reason can be given for any particular illness,
yet we can separate them into various groups according to
the nature of the causes that provoke them.
The force that comes down into one who is doing Yoga and
helps him in his transformation, acts along many different
lines and its results vary according to the nature that
receives it and the work to be done. First of all, it hastens
the transformation of all in the being that is ready to
be transformed. If he is open and receptive in his mind,
the mind, touched by the power of Yoga, begins to change
and progress swiftly. There may be the same rapidity of
change in the vital consciousness if that is ready, or even
in the body. But in the body the transforming power of Yoga
is operative only to a certain degree; for the receptivity
of the body is limited. The most material plane of the universe
is still in a condition in which receptivity is mixed with
a large amount of resistance. But rapid progress in one
part of the being which is not followed by an equivalent
progress in other parts produces a disharmony in the nature,
a dislocation somewhere; and wherever or whenever this dislocation
occurs, it can translate itself into an illness. The nature
of the illness depends upon the nature of the dislocation.
One kind of disharmony affects the mind and the disturbance
it produces may lead even as far as insanity; another kind
affects the body and may show itself as fever or prickly
heat or any other greater or minor disorder.
On one side, the action of the forces of Yoga hastens the
movement of transformation of the being in those parts that
are ready to receive and respond to the power that is at
work upon it. Yoga, in this way, saves time. The whole world
is in a process of progressive transformation; if you take
up the discipline of Yoga, you speed up in yourself this
process. The work that would require years in the ordinary
course, can be done by Yoga in a few days and even in a
few hours. But it is your inner consciousness that obeys
this accelerating impulse; for the higher parts of your
being readily follow the swift and concentrated movement
of Yoga and lend themselves more easily to the continuous
adjustment and adaptation that it necessitates. The body,
on the other hand, is ordinarily dense, inert and apathetic.
And if you have in this part something that is not responsive,
if there is a resistance here, the reason is that the body
is incapable of moving as quickly as the rest of the being.
It must take time, it must walk at its own pace as it does
in ordinary life. What happens is as when grown-up people
walk too fast for children in their company; they have to
stop at times and wait till the child who is lagging behind
comes up and overtakes them. This divergence between the
progress in the inner being and the inertia of the body
often creates a dislocation in the system, and that manifests
itself as an illness. This is why people who take up Yoga
frequently begin by suffering from some physical discomfort
or disorder. That need not happen if they are on their guard
and careful. Or if there is a greater and unusual receptivity
in the body, then too they escape. But an unmixed receptivity
making the physical parts closely follow the pace of the
inner transformation is hardly possible, unless the body
has already been prepared in the past for the processes
of Yoga.
In the ordinary life of man a progressive dislocation is
the rule. The mental and the vital beings of man follow
as best they can the movement of the universal forces, and
the stream of the world's inner transformation and evolution
carries them a certain way; but the body bound to the law
of the most material nature, moves very slowly. After some
years, seventy or eighty, a hundred or two hundred,-- and
that is perhaps the maximum,-- the dislocation is so serious
that the outer being falls to pieces. The divergence between
the demand and the answer, the increasing inability and
irresponsiveness of the body, brings about the phenomenon
of death. By Yoga the inner transformation that is in slow
constant process in the creation is rendered more intense
and rapid, but the pace of the outer transformation remains
almost the same as in ordinary life. As a result, the disharmony
between the inner and the outer being in one who is doing
Yoga tends to be all the greater, unless precautions are
taken and a protection secured that will help the body to
follow the inner march as closely as possible. Even then
it is the very nature of the body to hold you back. It is
for this reason that to many we are obliged to say, "Do
not pull, do not hurry; you must give your body time to
follow." Some have to be kept back even for years and
not allowed to do much or progress far. Sometimes, to avoid
the disequilibrium becomes impossible; and then you have
a disturbance which varies according to the nature of the
resistance and the measure of the care you have taken or
your negligence. This too is the reason why each time that
there is a strong movement of progress, it is almost invariably
followed by a period of immobility, which seems to those
who are not warned a spell of dullness and stagnation and
discouragement in which all progress is stopped, and they
think anxiously, "What is the matter? Am I losing time?
Nothing is being done." But the truth is that it is
the time needed for assimilation; a pause is made for the
body to open itself more and become receptive and approach
nearer to the level attained by the inner consciousness.
The parents have been walking too far ahead; they must halt
so that the child left behind may run up and catch them
by the hand; only then can they start again on the journey
together.
Each spot of the body is symbolical of an inner movement;
there is there a world of subtle correspondences. But this
is a long and complex subject and we cannot enter into its
details just now. The particular place in the body affected
by an illness is an index to the nature of the inner disharmony
that has taken place. It points to the origin, it is a sign
of the cause of the ailment. It reveals too the nature of
the resistance that prevents the whole being from advancing
at the same high speed. It indicates the treatment and the
cure. If one could perfectly understand where the mistake
is, find out what has been unreceptive, open that part and
put the force and the light there, it would be possible
to re-establish in a moment the harmony that has been disturbed
and the illness would immediately go.
The origin of an illness may be in the mind; it may be
in the vital; it may be in any of the parts of the being.
One and the same illness may be due to a variety of causes;
it may spring in different cases from different sources
of disharmony. And there may be too an appearance of illness
where there is no real illness at all. In that case, if
you are sufficiently conscious, you will see that there
is just a friction somewhere, some halting in the movement,
and by setting it right you will be cured at once. This
kind of malady has no truth in it, even when it seems to
have physical effects. It is half made up of imagination
and has not the same grip on matter as a true illness.
In short, the sources of an illness are manifold and intricate;
each can have a multitude of causes, but always it indicates
where is the weak part in the being.
To whatever cause an illness may be due, material or mental,
external or internal, it must, before it can affect the
physical body, touch another layer of the being that surrounds
and protects it. This subtler layer is called in different
teachings by various names,-- the etheric body, the nervous
envelope. It is a subtle body and yet almost visible. In
density something like the vibrations that you see around
a very hot and steaming object, it emanates from the physical
body and closely covers it. All communications with the
exterior world are made through this medium, and it is this
that must be invaded and penetrated first before the body
can be affected. If this envelope is absolutely strong and
intact, you can go into places infested with the worst of
diseases, even plague and cholera, and remain quite immune.
It is a perfect protection against all possible attacks
of illness, so long as it is whole and entire, thoroughly
consistent in its composition, its elements in faultless
balance. This body is built up, on the one side, of a material
basis, but rather of material conditions than of physical
matter, on the other, of the vibrations of our psychological
states. Peace and equanimity and confidence, faith in health,
undisturbed repose and cheerfulness and bright gladness
constitute this element in it and give it strength and substance.
It is a very sensitive medium with facile and quick reactions;
it readily takes in all kinds of suggestions and these can
rapidly change and almost remould its condition. A bad suggestion
acts very strongly upon it; a good suggestion operates in
the contrary sense with the same force. Depression and discouragement
have a very adverse effect; they cut out holes in it, as
it were, in its very stuff, render it weak and unresisting
and open to hostile attacks an easy passage.
It is the action of this medium that partly explains why
people often feel a spontaneous and unreasoning attraction
or repulsion for each other. The first seat of these reactions
is in this protecting envelope. Easily we feel attracted
towards people who bring a reinforcement to our nervous
envelope; we are repelled by those who disturb or hurt it.
Whatever gives it a sense of expansion and comfort and ease,
whatever makes it respond with a feeling of happiness and
pleasure exercises on us at once an attraction; when the
effect is in the contrary sense, it responds with a protecting
repulsion. This movement, when two people meet, is often
mutual. It is not, of course, the only cause of affinities,
but it is one and a very frequent cause.
If the whole being could simultaneously advance in its
progressive transformation, keeping pace with the inner
march of the universe, there would be no illness, there
would be no death. But it would have to be literally the
whole being integrally from the highest planes, where it
is more plastic and yields in the required measure to transforming
forces, down to the most material, which is by nature rigid,
stationary, refractory to any rapid remoulding change.
There are certain regions which offer a much stronger resistance
than others to the action of the Yogic forces, and the illnesses
affecting them are harder to cure. They are those parts
that belong to the most material layers of the being, and
the illnesses that pertain to them, as, for instance, skin
diseases or bad teeth. Sri Aurobindo spoke once of a Yogi
who, still enjoying robust health and a magnificent physique,
had been living for nearly a century on the banks of the
Narmada. Offered by a disciple medicine for a toothache,
he observed, in refusing, that one tooth had given him trouble
for the last two hundred years. This Yogi had secured so
much control over material nature as to live two hundred
years, but in all that time he had not been able to conquer
a toothache.
Some of the diseases which are considered most dangerous
are the easiest to cure; some that are considered as of
very little importance can offer the most obstinate resistance.
The sources of an illness are manifold and intricate; each
can have a multitude of causes, but always it indicates
where is the weak part in the being.
Nine-tenths of the danger in an illness comes from fear.
Fear can give you the apparent symptoms of an illness; and
it can give you the illness too,--its effects can go so
far as that. Not so long ago the wife of one who frequents
the Ashram but is not herself practising Yoga, heard that
there was cholera in the house where her milkman lived;
fear took her and the next moment she began to show symptoms
of the disease. She could however be rapidly cured, because
the apparent symptoms were not allowed to develop into the
real illness.
There are physical movements, effects of the pressure of
the Yoga, which sometimes create ungrounded fears that may
do harm if the fear is not rejected. There is, for instance,
a certain pressure in the head of which there has been question
and which is felt by many, especially in the earlier stages,
when something that is still closed has to open. It is a
discomfort that comes to nothing and can easily be got over,
if you know that it is an effect of the pressure of the
forces to which you are opening, when they work strongly
on the body to produce a result and to hasten the transformation.
Taken quietly, it can turn into a not unpleasurable sensation.
But if you get frightened, you are sure to contract a very
bad headache; it may even go as far as a fever. The discomfort
is due to some resistance in the nature; if you know how
to release the resistance, you are immediately free of the
discomfort. But get frightened and the discomfort may turn
into something much worse. Whatever the character of the
experience you have, you must give no room to fear; you
must keep an unshaken confidence and feel that whatever
happens is the thing that had to happen. Once you have chosen
the path, you must boldly accept all the consequences of
your choice. But if you choose and then draw back and choose
again and again draw back, always wavering, always doubting,
always fearful, you create a disharmony in your being, which
not only retards your progress, but can be the origin of
all kinds of disturbance in the mind and vital being and
discomfort and disease in the body. **
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