Monday, November 24, 2008
Healthy Perspectives
He then had us list topics we were interested in and threw out some ideas of ways that we could pursue that area that were maybe non-traditional. I mentioned patient education and he mentioned that you could create a program, with a manual and maybe some CDs and then take it to a hospital and propose it to the hospital administration. Me... little old me... teaching other people something that I don't really have any "experience" in, but have heard lots about. And yet, why not?
If I know something about anything, shouldn't I try and share it with others, shouldn't I try and help people out? I can't profess that I know everything or that I have some amazing proliferation of knowledge, but I can help set up a program for patients on their way to recovery so that they can make habit changes and instead of having to come back for subsequent surgeries can enjoy their lives and their changed lifestyle.
It was interesting, as Daren was leaving, because he mentioned that we are the only ones going through our experience, we are the only ones that know what we are feeling, so even though we can get advice from doctors, herbaligists, mother-in-laws, etc. it is always up to us to ask ourselves what we need and to reconnect. So in the end, the health professional is not just the guy who went to school for eight years, but it's you and it's me.
And that is what I would call a healthy perspective.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Feeling the vibrations
Someone once told me that in our smallest particles we are made up of energy. Everything we are, everything we do, is a vibration of particles of energy inside and outside of us, whether we are doing back flips or if we are stuck on our back. I think this explains to some degree why we resonate, like guitar strings when things seem to be true. According to Webster something is true if it is “consistent with fact or reality; not false.” We can feel truth because it is part of us, it is something we have known, we do know and we will know.
I think this carries into music, not necessarily the truthfulness part of it, but the way that we can relate to music can be much more than on a “like” or “dislike” basis. In fact, we can listen to something until it begins to cause our whole bodies to vibrate, until we not only grow accustom to listening to it, but until it becomes part of our beings. Is it possible that we can listen to music, to sounds and vibrations until they have changed the way we resonate and the basic structure of our beings?