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We certainly could do with some color in therapy. But
color therapy? That's right. And it is really about healing with something as
simple as color.
There is more
to color than meets the eye. From time immemorial, colors have been credited with
miraculous healing powers. Sages of ancient India discovered how the unique vibration
of each color could help heal ailments, and this knowledge was later codified
in the Atharva Veda, ancient Indian scripture, as Surya KiranChikitsahealing
with the sun's rays. In the Egypt of yore, temples had special healing rooms where
the sun dispersed the seven colors of the rainbow. Today, this ancient healing
technique is making a popular comeback under the quasi-scientific label of chromotherapy.
But how do colors work their healing power? "The seven colors of the
rainbow are associated with the seven chakras (energy centers) of our body,"
explains Dr M.C. Verma, a chromotherapist. "The muladhara chakra (root
center) is related to the color red, and the swadisthana chakra (cross
center) to orange. As we travel upward to the manipura (navel center),
anahata (heart center), vishuddhi (throat center), agya (third
eye center) and finally the sahasrara (crown center) chakras, the
colors follow the sequence of yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet respectively.
Each chakra, in its turn, is related to a specific gland. So, a proper
use of color helps heal the body ailment concerned." For instance, red is used
to treat liver disorders, blue affects the pineal gland and green helps treat
pituitary problems.
According to Gita Ramesh, director of Kairali Ayurvedic Health Club based
in New Delhi, India, ayurveda links certain colors with the three basic
doshas
(humors): Vata (colic) is associated with blue, pitta (bile)
with fiery red and kapha (phlegm) with light and luminous shades
of yellow. Ayurveda also recognizes the close relation that the five elements
of the bodyether, fire, air, water and earthhave with the
world of colors: ether is associated with light blue, water with deep
blue, air with green, fire with red and earth with yellow. Any disturbance
in these elements leads to an imbalance in the physical, mental and spiritual
body that can be corrected by boosting the color concerned.
To do this, naturopaths
harness the five elements in colored bottles. "We fill a colored glass
bottle three-fourth with water or oil and keep it in the sunlight, exposing
it to ether," says Dr Verma. "Air fills up the little space left in the
bottle. Thus, all the elements are collected in the bottle."
According to reiki
master Damini Singh, this singular technique works wonders. Damini begins
her day by drinking water charged in a green bottle and claims that it
"harmonizes the nervous system and keeps me active the whole day". Says
Damini: "If I don't drink green-charged water for a few days, I feel irritable
and disoriented."
SPIRIT
OF SHADES
Red
Increases blood circulation, alertness and self-confidence; decreases lethargy
and depression.
Orange Increases confidence and joy; decreases
loneliness and fatigue.
Yellow Increases memory, persuasive
abilities and charm; decreases desire to be critical.
Green
Strengthens finance, luck and energy; reduces claustrophobia, indecisiveness and
anxiety.
Blue Heightens tranquility and patience; lowers
negativity and stress.
Indigo Increases stability and rational
thought and actions; decreases blood pressure and impulsiveness.
Violet
Increases psychic ability and spirituality; decreases aggression and insomnia.
You
can not only drink but also breathe color. Just put the required colored
bottle out in the sun for a couple of hours and then inhale the air within
the bottle. If this sounds tame, try sitting inside a thermolium, a wooden
cabin with colored glass panes. To keep your vital energy flowing smoothly
all day long, you could even wear clothes of naturally soothing colors.
If nature is here, can
technology be far behind? Gone are the days when color therapy required the sun.
The modern therapist makes use of colored bulbs to give out radiation on infected
areas. In fact, Italy has also invented a chromotherapy machine called Chromogei
that uses colored gel filters. In Delhi, this machine is used by Joto, a company
specializing in alternative healing equipment. "Chromogei," says Neelam Khurana,
director of Joto, "is more effective than cellophane-wrapped bulbs as cellophane
tends to fade with time."
Colors have as much to do with the physical as with the metaphysical. In his book
Ayurveda and the Mind, David Frawley notes that many mantras (Hindu
couplets invoking deities) give out vibrations that are similar to the vibrations
of some colors. For instance, the mantra 'Ram' should be meditated upon
a red triangle.
In Magic and Mystery in Tibet, Alexandra David-Neel
writes that the six syllables of the basic Tibetan Buddhist mantra, Aum
mani padme hum, are closely connected with the six mystical colors: white,
blue, yellow, green, red and black.
In his book Surya Chikitsa,
Dr M.L. Kathotia notes that colors can resolve your past karma. The seven
chakras of our body are centers of different karma, and the negative
karma can be taken care of by proper color visualization.
Color,
in fact, has always been an integral part of our lives. Centuries ago, when color
was not mass manufactured, buildings and other objects were painted with natural
pigments. The Indians of New Mexico trimmed their earthen houses with blue pigments.
In India, you have the festival of Holi, where a vibrant splash of color
welcomesand invokesthe fecund power of nature in all its spring splendor.
Colors also trigger varying responses from different cultures. Christian
brides, for instance, wear white on their wedding day, signifying purity. In Japan,
a bride wears white to signify her 'death' to her family. The same white becomes
a color of mourning in India. For weddings, Indian brides prefer the passionate
redsymbolizing the awakening of their sexuality.
The rarer the
color, the greater its significance. Gold symbolizes opulence and divinity. Purple,
on the other hand, signifies high orderso much so that at one time purple
clothing was only worn by priests and kings. In Greece, thousands of murex shells
used to be crushed in order to get a small quantity of this dye.
Colors, however, do more than look attractive. In fact, it might not take
a psychiatrist long to figure out your basic personality from the colors
you have done up your room in. Nicholas Humphrey, a British zoologist,
links the visual concept of colors to the evolution
of colors in nature.
According to him, we respond to bright colors, for instance red, with
the emotional part of our brain. First, our muscles get tense, then we
lean towards the color. Our respiration and heart rate goes up and the
blood pressure starts rising. The opposite reactions occur when we see
light colors such as blue. Our muscles relax, the heart and respiration
rate drops and the blood pressure lowers.
Since bold colors stimulate conversation, they are normally accentuated in living
areas and restaurants. Light, relaxing colors are best suited to bedrooms. This
link with the psyche also forms the core of chromotherapy.
Notes Dr
K.K. Aggarwal, senior consultant in medicine and cardiology at Indraprastha Apollo
hospital, New Delhi: "The so-called therapeutic effect of colors is largely psychological.
It can't be proven empirically. But then, perhaps this system needs no proof."
Unconventional words indeed from a man of medicine, but the kernel of
truth in such a statement cannot be avoided. For, at the end of the day, some
questions may not have a so-called rational answer.
What would life
be without colors? Where do the sunbeams disappear?
COLOR
CHARGED
Take
a clean colored glass bottle or wrap a colored cellophane on a transparent bottle.
Keep the bottle in sunlight.
Fill three quarters of the bottle
with water.
Put a cork to stop dust from getting in. Clean the bottle
at least once in a day.
Don't let the cellophane fade.
Water
takes six to eight hours to get charged. For emergency, you can charge water for
about two hours, but only in the morning sun.