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Of Union and Disunion
Taken from the Chapter entitled: A Personal
Perspective of Integrative Medicine
Integrative Nutritional Medicine: Volume 5 of the
Principles and Practice of Integrative Medicine
I have been a student of medicine for forty-six years. In 1958, I joined King
Edward Medical College, Lahore, Pakistan. In 1963, I began my training in
surgery at Mayo Hospital, Lahore. In 1965, I traveled to England for further
training in orthopedics and general surgery. In 1966, I came to the United
States to continue my surgical training. In 1968, I passed the examination given
by the Royal College of Surgeons of England and was awarded the diploma of FRCS.
Later that year I began residency training in pathology. In 1972, I received
certification from the American Boards of Anatomic and Clinical Pathology. From
1974 to 1996, I served as chairman of the Department of Pathology and
Laboratories, Holy Name Hospital, Teaneck, New Jersey. From 1972 to 1997, I also
served on the faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia
University, New York.
In 1996, I accepted the presidency of Capital University of Integrative
Medicine, in Washington, D.C., and proposed that integrative medicine be defined
as a philosophy of medicine that requires physicians to offer their patients all
that is safe and effective without subservience to one or more schools of
medical thought. The Capital 'tribe' gave me a treasured gift of close links
with many of the most intuitive and incisive minds in medicine in the United
States and other countries.
Unlearning is harder than learning. That is easy to understand. Learning, at its
core, is forming unions with one's beliefs and thoughts about the meaning of
what is 'learned.' Unlearning is rupturing that union — a "disunion" that is as
traumatic to the person as it is to a plant uprooted from the soil it is
embedded in. At one level, that is the struggle that physicians face during for
their life time. In this personal perspective on integrative medicine, I include
some reflections on the subject of unions and disunions.
We physicians do not remain aloof to unions and disunions of the persons we
attend to for long, nor to our own unions and disunions. The past imprints the
present. The clinical consequences of that imprinting are often profound, as
significant for physicians as those are for their patients. My main point in The
Cortical Monkey and Healing was this: The Monkey in the Man forever recycles
past misery and, when that is not sufficient, precycles feared future misery.
And that Monkey cannot be banished with clever thinking. The past cannot be
returned, but there is choice in how it may be revisited.
Here, I briefly recount my personal struggle with unions and disunions. As a
child, unions came easy to me and in profusion. Disunions also came in equal
profusion, but each was difficult in its own way. Early in my childhood, that
profusion created a secret place to which I escaped with regularity, though then
I did not know what it meant to escape to one's own secret place of life. Nor
that it was a place of private unions and disunions. With time, the place grew
into an enormous space of happenings that fascinated me. There were also
happenings that were not good. I did not know then what happiness was, nor what
the absence of happiness might be. More years passed and my private place grew
and teemed with things, people, and events. I began to have a sense of things —
of why I liked some happenings but not others. I had not yet learned that
grown-ups had a word for it: daydreaming. (The word daydreaming—it seems to me —
is not quite the right word for all those happenings.)
Also in my early years, I did not know about the problem of thinking too much,
nor about how not to think. (It would be decades before I understood the
problems caused by too much thinking and began to wonder how to "unthink.") Some
more years passed. I learned that grown-ups had a name for the happenings which
I did not like: unhappy. My moments of not being happy turned into something
more unwanted, deeper, troublesome. Another word was added to my vocabulary:
sad. Vague notions of unexplained sadness began to evolve in my developing mind.
I did not share that notion with anyone. How could I? I did not even know what
any of that meant. I went to high school, then to college, then to medical
school. My teachers always lost me within minutes of beginning instruction — or,
I lost them, transported back to my place, which had grown much larger and
richer by then. Sometimes during those years the voice I heard became louder and
I began to put words together just to cope. But the periods of heaviness
persisted and the notion of ugliness that made no sense took hold in my mind.
Later, I recognized that as unexplained sadness. It would be many years before I
learned that psychologists had a name for all those happenings: ADHD (attention
deficit and hyperactivity disorder)
My earliest unions—memories, I suppose, might be a better word—were of tracking
with my mother. Those unions started when I began to tag along with her. Those
unions were the simplest and purest of all I would ever experience, though I did
not know that then. Tracking in the market occurred when I was big enough to
accompany my with mother when she went out for shopping. That was a wide world
of new unions — a bustling world of women in burqas and men in broken sandals,
of open sewage ditches running through narrow alleys, of rotting vegetables
tossed away from vendor's carts. There was many things there for a boy to
observe — accidental palpations of women's bodies by bearded holy men when they
took measurements for sewing dresses, and the like. There were with g ls (loudly
delivered obscenities), brown ghuur (sugarcane candy) blackened by flies, and
khotaas (donkeys) with fungus-eaten hides who seemed ever so ready to relieve
themselves in public with loud noises. Whatever I saw in the market inhabited my
space. The place blossomed.
Then one day I suddenly found my mother wrapped in a white shroud overlaid with
bright red flowers. I was eight years old then. There was much crying in the
house. (Many years later, looking at my mother's only photograph in the family
album, I realized that the eyes of my father and all of my siblings were swollen
from crying. Mine were not. The picture showed me staring into the space before
me.) Then, my mother simply faded away. She would return many years later to
inhabit my private world again.
Then followed unions from tracking to and within the mosque — a blessed place,
so I was told. That was a colorful world of shait n (Satan) and farishates
(angels) —of people burning in enormous fires of hell, and of hooris bathing in
riverlets of honey and milk in heaven, ready to receive holy men of Islam. What
is a virgin? I wondered. Later I learned who a virgin was. Why would any man
want so many virgins?, the thought crossed my mind sometimes. I thought of shait
n much more often than of farishates, who seemed to flutter around, aimlessly,
doing nothing. It was obvious to me that shait n was always busy and successful.
Farishates, in contrast, seemed useless. They never seemed eager to stop bad
people from doing bad things. The mosque was also where my earliest unions with
the evils of Hindus, Jews, Christians — even Sunni and Shia Muslims — formed.
How could all of them remain blind to the only truth of Ahmadiyyat in Islam? In
India and in Europe? And in America? And for centuries?, I often wondered. But
there was something reassuring there. I was a follower of the true Promised
Messiah. My very dear father was an Ahmadi Muslim, and so were others in the
family. After all, wasn't being an Ahmadi the only thing that mattered? The
Hindus had their own hells to pay for. The Christians and the Jews, they were
going to be held accountable for their transgressions. Of that, there could not
be any doubt.
More unions came my way while tracking in medical wards in Lahore. That was a
world of great men in white coats. There were scalpels and sutures, and, of
course, much blood. There was high drama of suffering and even higher drama of
arrogance. The professors were always right, even when they contradicted
themselves. The seeds of union with the medical dogma were sown deep into the
mind of the young medical student. Everything was made out to be either black or
white. There are educated doctors and there are quacks, I was told. And the
educated doctors were not to have nothing to do with the charlatans who called
themselves hakims (naturopaths) and homeopaths in Pakistan then. I was told to
shun all those imposters. Of course, we students ate that up. We were also told
that real doctors never let their patients influence their judgment. We took
that as gospel truth. (It would be decades before I realized how stupid that
advice was. Whose life were we talking about anyway?) Those medical school years
gave me deep convictions — or so it seemed then. Those unions grew deep roots
into my private space as well. Medical students are too busy cramming to think
about "uncramming." One has only so many functioning neurons. The idea of
disunion was years away in the future.
Then came tracking in deeper recesses of the mind. New alleys formed in my
space. A dark world of
doubt and uncertainty opened up. What is real? What is true? Who knows the
truth? Who may be trusted? The awkward questions came from nowhere. In England
and later in the United States, I met Christians and Jews, and they seemed no
less decent — or more evil — than the holy men in the mosque of my unions. I
moonlighted with Hindu interns and residents. They were gentle, kind, and caring
young women and men. Cracks began to appear in the armour of my Islamic
convictions. Yet more ugly questions appeared. We doctors are supposed to heal
the sick. Instead, I saw the sick getting sicker. During pathology residency,
every week I processed so many uterus specimens that I began to look at women in
shopping malls and wonder which ones had been hysterectomized. Who gained? Who
lost? More ugly questions. Men making money by mutilating women? Oh God! No. Not
in my chosen profession. No, it couldn't be, my mind would recoil. Well, yes! It
is so! Why deny? The questions were endless. Others also raised those questions.
In the end we merely gave each other knowing smiles. Antibiotics and other drugs
saved many lives. Those drugs also hurt many people. I began to wonder if those
hurt by drugs outnumbered those helped by them. I heard some friends ask that
question as well. We physycians saw that happening but kept quiet. Speaking
against drugs, we all knew, was bad for our business. Yes, medical practice was
enriching, but it was also depleting. Toeing the party line of organized
medicine became irksome. Conflicts — beginnings of disunions — multiplied.
Then came tracking in mines of toxicities— of the body tissues, of emotions, of
intellect, of environment. The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) pronounced
dioxin to be the most potent known carcinogen in rats. It then reassured its
readers that a large study in New Jersey had found no evidence of toxicity in
people exposed to the chemical. The U.S. Department of Defense declared that its
soldiers who claimed to have been made sick by dioxin — and other chemicals used
for defoliation — had been delusional. JAMA reassured mothers that there was no
evidence sugar was bad for their children. NEJM claimed that ear tubes were good
for little children. One of the participants of that study cried foul, insisting
that the reported data was fudged. NEJM refused to publish that letter. We would
not have known that except that JAMA published that letter four years later.
Many prestigious journals published editorials under the names of esteemed
professors. Later, it became known that those editorials were actually written
by drug companies. (See RDA: Rats,
Drugs and Assumptions for specific citations of those and many other
deliberate statistical deceptions in medical literature.)
Blatant lies in medical literature accumulated at a much faster rate than I
could cope with.
The editors of prestigious medical journals began to appear as villains,
brazenly safeguarding the interests of their paymasters at drug companies,
relentlessly insulting holistic physicians, forever declaring natural therapies
— of which they knew nothing — dangerous. Conflict and distrust grew. Old unions
of ideology ruptured. Disunions became larger, deeper.
Many patients related the circumstances of their healing that defied the
prevailing medical dogma. It would have been easier to simply dismiss their
accounts as apocryphal. But I could not. Instead I began trafficking in the
mysteries of healing — of belief in the possibilities of injured tissues
recovering, following some internal cues. Of healing by helping others to heal.
Of healing with giving and love. That brought me newer unions. I recognized that
what is given, stays; what is received, well, that lasts for moments. And that
love that is given, sustains; love that is demanded, depletes. A physician's
true work, I realized, is not about curing. It is about giving and love. In
that, a physician's life is, in reality, climbing a mountain, knowing full well
that the top shall not be reached, nor that the climb may be discontinued. He
does have the option: He can see the sick as wild flowers on the climb, or as
thorns on his sides. In the corrupted world of healing arts, a physician has to
make some attempts at decency, no matter how feeble however ineffectual. A
notion of a civilized medicine arose. I began to see that there were no
controversies in medicine, only levels of understanding and enlightenment.
From my simple rural Islamic roots I had wandered into the dizzyingly fabulous
worlds of merchants of medicine and of dealers of religion in New York and
Washington. I recognized a new medicine — Star Wars medicine, I thought, was an
appropriate name for it — which saw sick women and men merely as substrates for
it machines. I saw the high priests of that Star Wars medicine sitting on their
lofty perches, doling out wisdom about the sick whom they never saw.
They happily sacrificed caring and compassion for
the sick on the alter of the 'science' of medicine. Those high priests had
little patience for the words of the ill, which they dismissed as 'soft and
subjective' trivia. They had nothing but disdain for holistic physicians who
offered nutrient, herbal, and self-regulatory therapies. High priests of
religion were no different. Their "cyber-spirituality' had enriched them beyond
their wildest dreams. They knew their cyber-spirituality did not mix well with
anguish of the suffering humans. But they 'healed' millions through their
telecasts.
Finally, it occurred to me that I had come full circle. All my unions had turned
into disunions, except those I had formed with my mother — and later with my
father and some others. I recognized then what was common among all the lasting
unions — those immune to disunions — was kidness, giving, and love. My unions of
the market, of the mosque, of the medical ward, of dogmas of medicine, of the
high priests on editorial boards, and of my own sense of my intellect had been
tricks played on me by my cortical monkey. There had been no giving in them, nor
love. I also saw clearly for the first time that for any union to be true, it
had to be immune to disunion. It had to be a union of giving and love. And that
is the true nature of knowledge.
One Can Know Only as Much Divinity as Exists Within Oneself
The mystery of the healing phenomena has deepened for me over the decades. The
longer I work with my patients, the more aware I become of the fundamentality of
the spiritual in health and disease. How does one define the spiritual? In 1994,
in
The Canary and Chronic Fatigue I could not resist walking that definitional
tightrope with the following words:
The spiritual to the early Man was unknowable. So we sort through our
intellectual assertions and return to where we started from: The spiritual is
being outside the capacity of our bodily senses and the reach of the mind.
Spirituality lies outside the needs of the body or the demands of the mind. Good
teachers of spirituality may take us to the limits of our bodily and mental
experiences—to the gates of spirituality—but they cannot lead us into it. No one
can show anyone else what is the spiritual, no one can make anyone else
spiritual. This is what the early Man must have known—through some spiritual
journey—when he conceived the mind-body-spirit dimensions.
In 2003, in Integrative Cardiology, the fourth volume
of The Principles and Practice of Integrative Medicine, I made a second feeble
attempt to put my notion of the spiritual in words as quoted below:
My working definition of the spiritual, which I have used for several years, is
this: It is a state of surrender to the larger unknowable Presence that one
recognizes only by the way one changes through the light and love of that
Presence.
One can know only as much divinity — it seems to me — as exists within one's
self. One sees that vividly only when in throes of pain and suffering. We
physicians, by and large, insist on the 'hard' evidence of blinded studies. We
are uncomfortable with notions of healing with spirituality and one's own
divinity. I once read somewhere that it is better to keep quiet and be
considered a fool than to speak out and prove that. That has never kept me from
speaking out about my personal quarrel with the mysteries of healing. I seldom
have had difficulty seeing the fool in me. But the fools do have wonderful
insights sometimes. So I persist.
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