What are the parameters by which you can gauge if you have grown spiritually? Are there common milestones on the path that indicate your rate of evolution? More>>
Tibetan medicine believes the seed of sickness is formed at conception.
Having accepted this, its practitioners do all they can to alleviate suffering
In his book Health Through Balance, DR Yeshi Donden, chief
physician to the Dalai Lama, writes: "The root of disease is beginningless ignorance.
Due to its force we are caught in cyclic existence… From obscuration, which is
heavy, dull and cloudy, phlegm disorders arise. From desire, which has the nature
of captivation of the mind, all types of wind disorders arise-wind being light
and moving. Hatred is like fire; from it, bile and blood-bile disorders arise."
These words underscore the deeply spiritual base of Tibetan medicine,
one of the most misunderstood branches of alternative medicine. Tibetan medicine
is an intricate balancing act of the body, mind and spirit to maintain equilibrium.
Eating, drinking, bathing, working, sleeping, copulating and even religion work
best in moderation.
According to Shakyamuni Buddha, propounder of the
four basic tantras or treatises of Tibetan medicine, there are 84,000 afflictive
emotions, such as desire, hatred, ignorance and obscuration. These emotions impel
karma (action) and create potencies in the mind that may ripen later as specific
diseases.
Going by this doctrine, Tibetan medicine lists 404 basic disorders, divided
into groups of four. The first group comprises 101 disorders that result
from the karma of previous lifetimes. These are usually fatal unless treated
immediately through medication, confession of past sins and virtuous practice.
In Tibet, for example, people afflicted with such disorders would renounce
all worldly activities and engage themselves in spiritual practices.
The second group is of 101 disorders of this lifetime that have their
causes in the early period of your life and manifest later in the same
lifetime.
The third group has 101 disorders resulting from spirit activities. Tibetan
medicine is based on the Buddhist belief that there are numerous unseen
forces that can affect and even harm a person. These forces or spirits
are suspected when there is no visible cause for a disorder. To cure such
ailments, the spirit needs to be exorcised or, if it has gone out of the
body, cajoled into coming back. "All this may sound like mumbo-jumbo to
many people," states Tsewang Dolkar Khangkar, a Tibetan medicine practitioner
in New Delhi, India, "but Tibetan medicine and Buddhist faith are based
on believing without seeing."
The final group comprises 101 superficial disorders, so called because
they can be removed by simply following proper diet and behavior patterns.
These are lifestyle disorders and are usually self-curing, if diet and
behavior patterns are controlled.
The
study of this 2,500-year-old science is an arduous task. A student of
Tibetan medicine has to first memorize at least three of the four basic
tantras. In the first year, the student memorizes the Root Tantra,
which outlines the basic philosophy of Tibetan medicine with visual aids,
called the Illustrated Trees of Medicine, which describe physiology, cause,
diagnosis and treatment.
Next comes the Explanatory Tantra, which covers everything-from
embryology to causes of various disorders. In the third year, the Last
Tantra is studied which deals with diagnosis and the two most important
precepts of Tibetan medicinepulse reading and urine analysis. During
the fourth year, or even much after that, the student spends time observing
doctors treat patients and learns various medical commentaries including
the Oral Tradition Tantra.
Tibetan medicine utilizes three
levels of potency: the actual medicinal ingredients, the power of mantra and the
power of stabilization. First, the physician gathers medicinal ingredients, puts
them in a begging bowl or imagines they are in one, takes refuge in the Buddha,
the Doctrine and the Spiritual Community and then generates an intention to become
enlightened.
Every medicine is prepared after the completion of specific
rituals. In these rituals, the lama or a physician imagines him or the medicine
to be a deity and thus activates it.
In Tibetan medicine, physicians also double as pharmacologists. In summer,
students accompany physicians to the mountains to study herbs and plants.
In winter, they learn how to manufacture medicine. Despite, or because
of its evolved status, surgery is not a popular choice among practitioners
of Tibetan medicine. Although legend has it that an eighth-century Tibetan
king prohibited surgery, practitioners cite a more spiritual argument
against it. According to them, it is better to undergo illness and take
medicine to cure it, rather than avoid the illness and be operated upon.
They believe that if the disease is caused by your past karma,
it is better for you to endure it now rather than carry it over to your
next birth.
PULSE
DIAGNOSIS
Like
ayurveda,
pulse diagnosis plays a key role in Tibetan medicine. Referring
to this system, Dr Yeshi Donden describes pulse reading as "supreme
among methods of diagnosis".
According to the Last Tantra of Tibetan medicine, the first chapter
of which expounds on pulse diagnosis, there are three kinds of pulses: male, female,
and neuter or bodhisattva. These three kinds of constitutional pulses have characteristics
similar to the three humors of wind, bile and phlegm. The male pulse beat is bulky
and coarse, the female rapid and subtle and the bodhisattva long and smooth.
Apart from the constitutional pulse, Tibetan medicine diagnoses on the
basis of seasonal pulses also. Seasonal pulses are described as a conjunction
of the four seasons-spring, summer, autumn and winter-and the five elements of
the human body: wood, fire, earth, iron, and water. Reading the pulse is a long
drawn affair. The physician reads the pulse of both the hands of the patient,
using the first three fingers. In women, the doctor reads the right arm pulse
first with his left hand. For men, the left arm takes precedence.
In
a healthy person, pulses can be used as a means of divination. There are seven
types of pulse in this category-family, guest, enemy, friend, evil spirit, substitutional
and pregnancy pulse. The guest pulse, for example, determines the location of
a guest who is about to visit the family. If the liver pulse is strong, the guest
is still home, if the lung pulse is strong then he is on his way.
Although Tibetan medicine practitioners are not averse to the use of alternative
therapies such as acupuncture, blood letting and letting of lymph from
the joints, golden needle therapy or hammer therapy, they do not prescribe
organ transplants, except for the eye. "If a person gives the gift of
an eye or a portion of the eye with the wish that all sentient beings
could attain the eye of wisdom, that person will attain great merit with
great fruits," says Dr Yeshi Donden. Blood donation is also considered
good for the body.
Ancient though it may be, Tibetan medicine encompasses all the trappings
of modern medicine like vaccination, contraception and even bone setting.
"It is easier to set a broken bone than a cracked one, although not many
patients come to us for emergency treatment, preferring to go to surgeons
instead," says DR Sonam Lhamo.
Indeed, most patients who visit the Tibetan Medical and Astro Institute
in New Delhi seek cure from chronic diseases. DR Geber Bittar, a doctor
from the UAE who attended a 10-day course in Tibetan medicine recently,
says: "This medicine, which deals with both body and mind and works with
bodily energy, is very beneficial for such diseases."
Precious pills or rinchen rilbu are also in great demand for treating
chronic diseases. Made from herbs and precious minerals sourced from Sikkim,
Nepal and Tibet, these pills are given at auspicious occasions according
to the Tibetan calendar, such as Buddha Purnima.
In keeping with the changing times, Tibetan medicine is gradually joining
hands with mainstream medical institutions. An example is DR Tenzin Namdul,
a graduate from the medical college in Dharamsala, the northern Indian
hill-town that hosts the Tibetan government-in-exile. DR Namdul has recently
started a research center for diabetes in collaboration with the All India
Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi. "This is a six-month course
of medicine for patients who have not been taking any western treatment
and in whom the disease is in an early stage," states DR Namdul.
At a time when alternative therapies are increasingly gaining respect,
Tibetan medicine may finally come out of the folds of obscurity and achieve
a long-due recognition as a panacea for body, mind and spirit. The process
has already begun.