![]() |
|
by Michael Bauce Please visit Michael's Web Site The most
important relationship
you will ever have in
your lifetime is with
yourself. Before we can
take care of others, we
must first attend to our
self. However, this is
the task that is so hard
to accomplish; to look
deeply in the mirror and
see the person you have
created through your life
choices. What we see is
often not what we want
to see. If we see a stranger,
we have failed to develop
an understanding of self.
Today's society, in which
we live, does not honor
and cherish your relationship
with yourself. Careers,
material possessions and
the like have not only
become more important
than self, but have become
regarded, in today's convoluted
world, as the ultimate
measure of self-worth
in which all are judged.
In macrobiotics, we have
found a tool to understanding
one's inner being; that
being the age old practice
of the ginger compress.
By shifting the focus
of our lives, from hectic
work schedules to a more
simple life, cooking macrobiotically,
and doing ginger compresses,
we are forced to look
at that being in the mirror.
This is truly the most
difficult part of practicing
macrobiotics; getting
to know yourself. I have
most recently found a
most amazing teacher in
my life and that is death
of a very close family
member. Like a ginger
compress, death of a loved
one forces one to look
deeply at the inner core.
Although this is not always
a pleasant experience,
it is not one which you
are free to choose (as
ginger compress). To look
death in the eyes and
face that which all of
us must, at some point,
is a healing experience
(and a humbling one).
It also can be terrifying.
Everything you thought
you knew gets reevaluated,
relearned, redone. The
life you were living becomes
a thing of the past as
you enter this brave new
world. In this way, death
becomes the great healer.
(Published in Macrobiotic Times April, 1999)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|