
Many years ago, while still a publisher, I developed a condition called M.E.. In those days (the mid 1980's), little was known about it--to the layman it was labelled 'yuppie flu', and seen, somehow, as a non-illness acquired by lazy skivers who fancied a few weeks or months off lying on a sofa. This was about as far from the truth as you can get--but it was very hard to fight the perception, especially when, for me, crawling up and down stairs was about as much as I could manage in the day. I was lucky. I was not in a wheelchair, and I had a sympathetic and knowledgeable doctor--one of the few M.E. experts who existed in those days. He gave me two choices. The 'conventional'--in those days a course of heavy anti-depressants. Or the 'alternative'--the two 'H's' of Homeopathy and Healing, together with clinical ecology and VEGA testing . By such choices are our lives shaped. I took the latter option, and it led me on a path I had never expected to take, although, given some of my family history (viz Uncle Jacky who was big in the Theosophical Society and wore a long white robe), perhaps it was not so surprising after all.
Do I believe that Fate had a hand in all this? Perhaps. Certainly, if I had not become ill and then lost my job, I might not have sat on a river bank in the rain and penned the picture book text which set me on the writer's road for good. If I had not experienced incredible (in the truest sense) and inexplicable benefits from the healing hands of another person, I might not have taken the step of researching and exploring ancient shamanic healing practices, nor become a member of OBOD and discovered the bardic path which has shaped the poetry workshops I run in schools. My conscious (though often serendipitous) journey towards transforming my Self can be seen as the well-worn metaphor of peeling the onion. Once I had decided to remove the outer brown and papery layers, and progress to the next tough inner layer, the wish to discover more was unstoppable--even unthinkable, despite the tears it caused. In the words of the Sages, γνῶθι σεαυτόν. Nosce te ipsum. Know Thyself.
To be Continued....
3 comments:
'Ogres have layers...parfait has layers. Everybody loves parfait.'
Sorry, couldn't resist. But there's a serious point, too - don't discard any layers: the parfait/onion/ogre needs all of them.
Why didn't I talk to you about bardic medicine when I was writing my Story of Medicine, oh wise one? damn.
Ah, but Anne, removal of layers doesn't necessarily mean discarding them! Love the Shrek quote--had forgotten that one--and you can talk to me about Bardic medicine for the Story of Medicine Part 2, perhaps.
Hi Lucy. Your post sent me to Wikipedia to learn more. Always a good thing!
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