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Mind and Spirit: An Intimate Connection
By Dr. Rudy Scarfalloto |
Body, mind and spirit: they
compose the great trinity of self. Of the three, the body is relatively
simple to care for. On the other hand, caring for the mind and
the spirit can be a bit like trying to find your way home as you
drive through busy traffic in a strange city—on a rainy
and foggy night.
Yes, caring for the body is simple: you just feed it, exercise
it, and rest it. Typically, most of the challenges we face in
caring for the body stem from those tricky (and often hidden)
psychological or spiritual issues. When those issues are not addressed,
we tend to eat improperly, exercise too little or too much, and
we don’t get enough rest.
Caring for the Mind and Spirit • Actually, caring for the
mind and spirit doesn’t have to be that complicated, provided
that we observe a few simple guidelines. Here is the first one:
Whether we are interested in developing our spiritual life or
cultivating harmony on the psychological level, the key is to
remember that the two are inseparable. When one is properly addressed,
the other also finds its proper place. Likewise, if we cling to
one and neglect the other, both sides tend to break down.
The close connection between psychological and spiritual health
is recognized in twelve-step programs. The typical twelve-step
program is a blend of psychological and spiritual work. Members
are encouraged honestly to address their psychological issues,
as well as developing a relationship with the God of his or her
understanding. To understand the other guidelines that assist
us in harmonizing the mind and spirit, we should first explain
the terms “mind” and “spirit.” Basically,
a person’s mind consists of thoughts and emotions. To be
healthy on the psychological level is to have a measure of mental
clarity and emotional serenity. Mental clarity translates into
the ability to focus one’s attention and organize information.
It also includes creativity: the ability to think outside the
box. Emotional serenity translates into peace with oneself and
others. It also includes a certain feeling that has no words,
but if it could speak, it might say, “Life is good.”
Mental clarity and emotional serenity are the two sides of sanity.
A rule of thumb for maintaining sanity is to question our thoughts
and accept our emotions. Questioning and examining one’s
perceptions and beliefs promotes mental clarity, while accepting
emotions promotes emotional serenity.
A person’s spirit refers to the deepest genuine self. Spiritual
awareness can also include the awareness of self beyond everyday
thoughts and emotions. It’s a silent feeling that seems
to say, “There is more to me than my thoughts and emotions.”
That awareness often includes a wordless sense of the unity of
all life.
For many individuals, spiritual health includes communion with
the perceived source of life: God, Higher Power, Higher Self,
etc. Regardless of the name, we must relate to that Presence in
a manner that feels right to us. If we feel moved to develop a
relationship with the God of our understanding, we must make sure
that it is God of our understanding, not someone else’s.
Spiritual health expresses most tangibly as mental clarity and
emotional serenity. In other words, when we make contact with
that presence or awareness that is beyond our everyday thoughts
and emotions, the result is that we think clearly and feel happy
and peaceful. And, naturally, when we have harmony on the inside,
we tend to create harmonious relationships. That is why true spiritual
contact shows up as genuine respect for someone else’s spiritual
path.
Just as a healthy spiritual life supports a healthy mind, a healthy
mind supports a healthy spiritual life. It works either way. The
question of which one is more important is best reworded as, “Which
one do I need to tend to right now.”
In one sense, psychological health is about being at peace with
one’s humanity, while spiritual awareness is about remembering
one’s divinity. The two are inseparable. When we embrace
our humanity, we remember our divinity. Likewise, when we take
the time to remember our divinity, we bring harmony to the human
side of the equation.
The Three Great Healers • Although each individual goes
through his or her personal dance for cultivating psychological
and spiritual health, there are three important commonalities:
truthfulness, stillness, and loving touch.
Truthfulness • When we practice truthfulness, we tend to
naturally and organically question our thoughts and accept our
emotions, thus promoting clear thinking and emotional serenity.
Speaking the truth is particularly important for bringing harmony
to our emotional world. Of the many emotions and desires that
stir within us, not one of them demands to be indulged, provided
that each one is recognized, understood, and respected. It is
only when we chronically ignore, belittle, or reject our emotions
and desires that they become monstrous. On the other hand, when
we listen deeply to our emotions, and desires allow them to speak,
we realize they are all saying the same thing: “Please let
me be. I’ll be okay if you just let me be.”
Truthfulness also promotes intimacy with others. Without intimate
emotional contact with others, our thoughts become tangled, our
emotions unstable, and our spiritual practice becomes shallow
and meaningless.
Stillness • Stillness is particularly important for organizing
our various thoughts, perceptions, and beliefs. The rational mind’s
activity of analyzing data must be followed by a period of mental
rest, during which all the pieces are silently integrated. Creative
inspiration often comes after prolonged stillness. Ideas and solutions
to problems often make themselves known in the stillness of early
morning, after several hours of sleep.
Truthfulness and stillness are synergistic. Speaking the truth
promotes emotional serenity, which allows us to tolerate and even
appreciate solitude and stillness. Likewise, stillness puts us
in touch with deeper truths, as well as giving us a keen intuitive
sense of when and how to express that truth. Also, truthfulness
and stillness allow our thoughts and emotions to harmoniously
blend, thus opening the door to spiritual awareness: the awareness
of self beyond everyday thoughts and emotions.
Loving Touch • Regardless of how much we practice truthfulness
and stillness, inner harmony breaks down if we don’t utilize
the third great healer: loving touch. Why? Because we are mammals.
For mammals (dogs, cats, goats, etc), one of the major ways of
stimulating the brain is through touching the skin. This is particularly
important for big-brained mammals like ourselves. Yet, one of
the major bi-products of civilization is a drastic reduction in
loving touch. Not surprisingly, massage therapy is the fastest
growing health care modality in the world. One way or another,
we must have loving touch. If we don’t, that big mammalian
brain of ours starts to malfunction. Some individuals are baffled
because inner peace and happiness eludes them no matter how much
they exercise, eat well, and practice truthfulness, prayer, meditation,
etc. The answer might be very simple. Maybe they aren’t
being touched enough.
Deeply Personal and Intimate • In summary, the outer mind
and the inner spirit are healthy when they are "in communion”
with each other. Truthfulness, stillness, and loving touch are
three ways of harmonizing the outer mind, so it can commune with
the inner spirit. However, every mind is unique. Each mind’s
communion with the inner spirit is deeply personal and intimate.
It is deeply personal because it happens differently in each individual.
It is intimate because it occurs best in a state of profound honesty
with oneself. The communion between the outer mind and the inner
spirit is silent and organic. It is tender and delicate; its magic
is lost when it is intruded upon or used for exhibition. We cannot
share it with anyone. What we do share is the fruit of that communion.
We bring forth new life, which we share freely with the rest of
life.
Dr Scarfalloto is a chiropractor practicing
in Atlanta, Georgia, where he conducts classes based on his book,
The Dance of Opposites. He also teaches anatomy and physiology
and nutrition at ASHA Massage school. He may be reached at 404-315-0394,
Drrudy@innerintegration.com or visit www.innerintegration.com.
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