Filiz -- I don't know that you read what you quoted in my book, "The Practice 
of Peace," but you could have, 'cause I said it. And Paul -- the fact that 
medicine (and even more so Public Health) does some good, (and it does) I don't 
think changes things that much. Some years ago I was at the National Institutes 
of Health with basic responsibility for patient, public, and professional 
education in the area of heart lung and blood diseases. That in itself does not 
make me a medical expert, for sure -- but it was a generally accepted "fact" at 
the Institutes and in the world of Public Health that just about 95% of all 
disease is self-limiting -- which means you will either get better or die, but 
that in any case medicine won't help that much. In the remaining 5% of the 
cases medical practice and public health does help -- but the way they help is 
instructive, I think. They assist the body until such time as it can take over 
-- and the actual healing process, if healing does occur, is a function of the 
body. The basic issue is that as much as we may know about the body, its 
complex interconnections vastly exceed our feeble understanding. And even when 
we have it right in general, each individual is unique. It is the old problem 
of putting Humpty Dumpty together again -- which as you will remember -- 
neither all the King's Horses nor all the King's men could pull it off. And I 
don't think we are in much better shape. But healing does occur, more often 
than not, and the hero is our old friend self-organization, or so it seems. It 
is a dictum among many physicians that he/she who practices best, practices 
least. Minimal intervention. Do as little as possible, and just enough to get 
the old body kick started. Anything more only invites massive doses of 
unintended consequences which often have lethal consequences. 

In writing what I did, my intent was not to provide information about medical 
and public health practice, which is obviously beyond my competence. My purpose 
was to use the physical body as a metaphor for the body politic -- and make the 
same point: He/she who practices least, practices best. Otherwise known as 
thinking of one more thing not to do. I believe this has been our experience in 
Open Space and I was suggesting that the same approach (minimalism) works well 
in the larger open space of our lives. 

Harrison 

  
Harrison Owen
7808 River Falls Dr.
Potomac, MD  20854
USA
301-365-2093
207-763-3261 (summer)
website www.openspaceworld.com


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, August 15, 2005 1:49 PM
  Subject: Re: Open Space - a minimum?



  In a message dated 8/15/05 9:03:24 AM, [email protected] writes:



    I once read somewhere that body does the most of the healing process 
itself...all those medicine we take has just such a little role to activate 
certain actions, chemicals, interactions to happen in the body. but eventually 
the body heals itself...what a fascinating thought!



  Filiz:

  Well, you haven't lived when there were none of those drugs and the body 
didn't heal itself.  You never had to not go swimming in the summer because of 
the wild polio virus living in the water could make you sick or kill you or 
paralyze you for life.  An iron lung is no place to live.  Leg braces are no 
fun.  Joelle experienced that.  

  You never saw a child die from coughing (Whooping cough) or from a staph or 
strep infection that ran wild in the body which wasn't healing itself.  Before 
simple forms of cleanliness, ONE THIRD of all women who delivered babies in the 
hospitals of the time died of "childbirth fever".  Think about that FACT.  

  People forget really fast that we are healthy because of those drugs and 
practices that have saved millions of lives and allowed people to remain 
healthy.  

  That's one of my 'hot buttons', the idea that modern medicine doesn't prevent 
disease, that the body does all the healing, etc.  It's all baloney.  Life is 
immeasureably better now because of vaccinations, immunizations, drugs, etc.  
Immeasureably better here where we are safe from the malarial mosquito but we 
refuse to allow the rest of the impoverished world to use a marvelous mosquito 
killer called DDT.  We think it is better for people to die, or be horribly 
sick, than to use, effectively and carefully, a chemical that has been proven 
to work very, very well.  It has side issues, but compared to human life, they 
are side issues.  Silent Spring was a cannon blasting a brush covered machine 
gun nest, total overkill that has negatively affected the lives of tens of 
millions of people.

  Now, I'm almost off my soap box.

  Be well and be thankful for medical science.

  Paul * * ========================================================== 
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