![]() What powers the body is a very slow fire. We take in oxygen and release carbon dioxide just like the flames you sit around camping out at night. Though "antioxidants" and "free radicals" have given it something of a bad name these days--combustion still powers our cells. But if that's true, if we are fueled by internalized oxidation, perhaps we can learn something from the life-path of that simple campfire. What if what's healthy for fire, always, but especially in its late stages, is also what's healthy for us? I've been sitting with small fires recently on Sunday afternoons. It tunes me in to the accelerating Earth Changes. So I've been thinking about this. Especially as it relates to chronic suffering, and mainstream health care's current fetish for extreme specialization. ![]() Nurturing the Flame-Child The tiniest flames, like you as an infant, need special care. They need lots to learn and grow on, but also shelter. Too much oxygen, as in a strong draft, will cool them below ignition temperature and—blow them out. Dampness also cools them, because water evaporating steals lots of heat in order to become a vapor. Dampness, we might say, is like trauma in the young family. Areas of learning and growth get shut down as parts of the tinder cannot ignite. So you start a good fire by creating a cone or teepee-like structure with three layers. The inner core is tinder. It consists of flammable materials that are dry, lightweight, and present lots of surface area. Crumpled paper, bits of cardboard, and brittle twigs up to the size of pencils work well. You make a small pile with the twigs leaning against, and above the paper. ![]() What a Good Firestart Looks Like The next layer of the cone has no name in English—but I call it "bonewood." It's dry sticks about the thickness of the bones in your arms or legs just long enough to lean up against the core of tinder and touch at the top. As you surround it with these, you begin to see the form of the teepee more clearly. The final layer is branches or split logs more like the thickness of your whole arm. Let's compare creating this foundation to the perinatal period in human life. Do it well and your child is off towards a good firestart. Now what? ![]() The Fire in its Prime Reach a long match in and in minutes you will have a crackling blaze that draws in its own air and shoots heat out of the top. The parts are ready to burn and the conical structure is perfectly organized so that they support one another. This is like the strength and resilience of healthy adults in their prime. All the parts are generally at their best, and their combined, well centralized heat can easily stand up to a big wind or even some rain. It's easy, in our youth, to ignore flaws in our developmental structure. There's so much energy and efficiency in all the parts. Even if trauma has left them disconnected and unable to cooperate in certain ways, still, it's easier to burn brightly. But it's at this point that our analogy to lifelong health starts to get most interesting. What happens to a fire, and us, as we pass our prime? ![]() When Individual Parts Get Weaker, And Cooperation Fades What happens, for instance, if you do nothing else in the way of tending this fire? Well, the center starts to burn out. The bone and arm wood, growing shorter from that center outward, begins to fall in haphazard ways. Some outer casing pieces tend to roll off. And, in general, fuel for the blaze empties out in the middle, leaving at times a kind of ring of half burnt logs around the edge. Or just a muddle. Of course, you can just throw more wood across that middle, but the same thing will always happen. It will always eventually burn out and log-ends near the edges will sit alone, smoldering and smoking until they go out. There's still plenty of unused fuel. It's just that it's not organized to share the heat anymore. The real remedy is very simple. Whether you add more wood or not, simply reverse the logs so that the unburnt ends are together again in the middle. Re-organize them. ![]() But Mainstream Medicine Wants to "Fix" the Edges So let's think of this later stage fire now as your body, your overall health, as you get on past your prime. The problem is most often not lack of fuel to feed your passions in life, but rather that your various component parts are less resilient and more easily disorganized. But that's not how our medical system sees it. It isolates each lonely log end, makes up diagnoses for what's "wrong" with it, and tries to "fix" just that log end. One specialist treats "Oak Log Low Ignition Syndrome" by chiseling it into smaller pieces, so that it can hopefully make its own little blaze. "That log suffers from malignant OLLIS syndrome." Another prescribes pouring lighter fluid on "White Pine Cooling Disease." There's a different doctor for each kind of wood, you see. :-) Big pharma gets rich devising specialized flammable liquids. Do you see how this leads down rabbit holes that entirely miss the point? So much better to get the log ends cooperating again. I Can Help You
"Reverse Your Log Ends" In fact, unlike a fire, your body is always trying to reorganize itself around aging and life changes. Isolating this or that organ and forcing it to conform to average public health statistics often does not help it do this job. With intelligent, holistic support, however, the fire of your passions can burn hot for a very long time. What might "reversing your log ends" mean for you? How might you "re-organize" your spiritual emotional body-mind? What I'm good at is helping you see this clearly and do it.
4 Comments
Nancy Doyle
9/20/2017 02:02:15 pm
You are sparkling right on!!!!! You got my full support and listening. I believe first what is needed is the ability to look outside the box of how we are pre-conditioned. Us older folks were brought up to think. To feel what is right for our highest good. We have an intuition that speaks to us when something don't feel right. Take nothing for granted. Reading this, if we honor our abilities to reversing the log ends and feel what can be done from our heart center is choose our own course. I learned our heart never lies. Well spoken.
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Thanks for this Nancy. I saw these little baskets in the supermarket yesterday. They are small and red and have a large pole attached to them. They are for little kids to push. At the top of the pole is a large white sign that says "Customer in Training."
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Greta Kreider
11/23/2017 10:07:07 am
I completely agree with the sentiments you all have expressed and the wisdom behind it! Young people do face training in consumerism in ways we cannot possibly keep up with. But I'll offer a bright note about the carts at the grocery store. Young people also don't have many ways to contribute meaningfully and do real work in our modern life. It's a small way, but something. As a mom it also made me feel like others were including kids in the world, not just seeing them as a bother - many people act this way! Maybe the ideal would be to get kids to contribute and be included when it doesn't involve consumerism!
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11/23/2017 11:47:57 am
Greta, what you say makes sense also. it IS a way of including kids actively, and not just trundled around in something that looks like a plastic toy car. And yes to this:
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