Healing Life, Healing the Environment
Whatever happened to the basic values that our ancestors taught from generation to generation? In fishing communities they got a shellfish out of a shell, or gathered tulle reed and caught waterfowl while still preserving the marshland, or fished without out fishing the streams; they passed this on to the new generation or neither that home nor its inhabitants was going to survive. Even now it’s a necessity but we don’t do it.
It is similar in the logging industry, the farming industry; just look around. A lot of children have never seen a farm, a forest or even a large green field.
By trying to fix the environment we could compare it to shoveling in a snow storm. It is not getting to the root of the problem. The nature of the illness here is in the minds of people. The healing process requires us to make changes that are vitally healing for the family, the community and the society; Healing from the inside out.
Why is it that some people can even heal themselves of disease that are supposedly incurable? Because they have learned that mind, body and spirit are interconnected. Breathing in means life; sharing life with your family, friends, the birds and the skies. The breath is the only thing we have and even that is only temporary. Breathing out, means expelling what we don’t need but helping the plants grow. This may sound far fetched but that is really the way it is.
Changing our minds means letting go of our perceptions of securities, relationships, health and values, being open and accepting whatever discoveries and insights present themselves no matter how disruptive or what belief system you may now have.
Hats off to David Suzuki and his team for trying to make society realize how disconnected we are from our natural world, how this has made us and the planet ill. The way to health is recognizing and appreciating consciously that we are already home.
For more information of nutrition and a healthy lifestyle contact us at: CJM LeBlanc HealthWorks, Centreville Mall, 342 Main St., Shediac, N.B. Tel: 506 533-8885 or at nutrition@nb.aibn.com






0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home