Causes of Diseases
The psychological nature of diseases can be explained in
a few words as being the lack of life, either because of insufficient
matter in the body, or because of excess of matter which leaves
no scope for the spirit; it is also the impression of pain which
the mind holds. Pain is not always physical. There are physical
causes; but as soon as the mind knows of discomfort, out of
fear it holds it; and this is called pain.
Disease is often caused by lack of rhythm, be it in thought
or feeling, in the breath, in action, or in one's everyday life.
For instance, to stay up in the night when one is accustomed
to sleep, to change the dinner-hour, to take a nap when one
is not accustomed to, to do anything that one is not accustomed
to do, puts one out of rhythm. People who are accustomed to
be angry or to quarrel would become ill if they were not allowed
to do that. There is a story told in India that a person who
could not keep any secret was compelled to keep quiet. In the
end he became ill, and the doctor had to cure him by permitting
him to let it out. All this signifies rhythm. Every habit forms
a rhythm.
The fear of catching a disease is also a cause of illness.
There are people who wonder if they are ill, and try to find
out if there is something wrong with them. There are some, who
enjoy self-pity or the sympathy of others; these invite disease.
Some entertain disease when they are to a certain extent unwell.
They wish to be treated like a patient, or try to take to a
lazy life. By so doing the mind naturally holds the disease
longer, since it is allowed to do so.
There are many other causes of illness. Among them the most
unfortunate is the impression: 'I have got an illness that can
never be cured', for this impression is worse than a disease.
In reality the soul of every individual, healthy or ill, is
pure from any pain or disease, and it constantly heals mind
and body, and if it were not for the mind and body, which create
illness a person would always be well. It is natural to be healthy;
and all illness, pain, and discomfort are unnatural.
Magnetic Power
The health of both mind and body depends upon a magnetic
power, which may be called in metaphysical terms the power of
affinity in elements and in atoms. It may be pictured as scattered
grains of rice united by being attracted to one another; and
it is this power which attracted them and shaped them into a
certain form. Both mind and body are made of atoms. The former
of mental atoms, the latter of physical atoms and the power
that gathered them and made them into one body or one mind is
the magnetic power.
Lack of this power causes all pain, discomfort, and disease,
while development of this power secures health of body and mind.
By physical practices this power is developed in the body, and
by mental exercises the same power is improved in the mind.
It is generally found that the ill lose their magnetism to a
certain extent. A healthy person often seeks to escape from
the presence of the sick. It is natural because it is magnetism
in a person to which mankind is attracted, and it is its lack
which causes repulsion. This also explains the reason for the
attraction of youth and childhood, although in childhood this
magnetism is not fully developed. The lack of this is felt in
age for the same reason.
In Sufi terms this magnetism is call Quwwat-i Maknatis;
and it springs from every atom, physical or mental. It may be
called strength or energy. It is wealth; and just as one person
can enjoy wealth for a longer time if he is careful with it,
and another may spend it thoughtlessly following his fancies,
so does a man do with this magnetism. Either he attracts others
or he is attracted to others. In one case he is better off,
in the other case he loses. Man, of whatever evolution, whatever
disposition, in whatever condition of life, needs this magnetism
more than anything else; for health, which is the greatest of
all gifts in life, depends greatly on magnetism.
Breathing
In Sanskrit breath is called Prana, which means life. This
prana, not only gives life to oneself, but it gives life to
another person too. Sometimes the presence of someone fills
you with life, and sometimes the presence of another so to speak
takes away your life from you. One feels tired and depressed
and eaten up by the presence of one person, and another person's
presence gives added strength, life, and vigor. This is all
accounted for by the breath. The one who has more life gives
life, while the one who has less life takes it from the one
who has more. But there is a contrary process too. Sometimes
the stronger one takes away what little life is left in the
weaker one, and sometimes the weaker one gives out his life
to the stronger one. A person who takes away life in fact absorbs
the life from another. In the presence of that person even flowers
fade sooner and plants die.
Many deaths occur and many lives are retained by the phenomena
of the breath. Therefore for the healer there is no greater
source of healing. He can throw his breath upon the affected
part of the patient as easily as he can cast his glance upon
a painful part. Even eatables and objects that a healer's breath
has magnetized carry with them the power of healing. If touch
makes certain finger-marks through perspiration upon a thing,
why should not the breath, the very essence of life, live in
an object and give the object some greater part of life, producing
in it an effect which may be a greater cure than medicine?
When the breath is developed and purified, it is not necessary
for the healer even to make an effort to throw his breath upon
the patient. But the atmosphere that his breath creates, the
very presence of the healer brings about a cure, for the whole
atmosphere becomes charged with magnetism.
Insanity
There are no doubt many physical causes of various aspects
of insanity, but a keen study of the subject will prove that
insanity is mostly due to mental causes. Some lack of balance
caused by the intensity or excess of a certain thought and feeling
is found to be at the root of every cause of insanity. The physician
fails to cure such cases, especially he who traces the cause
of insanity in its outer manifestations and in the physical
body. Every cause has an external effect, and yet it is a mistake
to take the effect for the cause. It is not generally medicine
or even surgical operations or any external application that
can be of great use. It is more the work of a healer than of
a physician to cure insanity.
Like every disease, insanity could easily be cured in its
earlier stage. And it is again the work of the healer to recognize
the signs of insanity in their primary state; for mostly such
signs are not noticed in a person, or they are passed over as
'something funny' or 'queer'. The first step towards healing
insanity is to get at the root of the complaint by association
with the subject; and as soon as the root of the complaint is
touched a great relief is brought, even before healing. Naturally,
insanity being a mental disease; thought-power alone is the
remedy for it.
Loss of memory, confusion, puzzlement, instantaneous temper
and passion, all these are signs of the beginning of insanity.
Insanity is inherited from the family, but it can also be traced
in several weaknesses and vices, among which drink and fondness
for drugs, unnatural habits, too much worry, anxiety, and allowing
melancholy thoughts to develop in the nature. These are all
things that cause insanity.
The work of the healer is first to detect the primary indication
of insanity, and that is loss of memory. It is caused by weakness
of the mind. The mind has not sufficient power to bring forward
the thought entrusted to it at the command of the will. It is
this, which may be called loss of memory, and it must be healed
and cured in its very beginning. The primary stage is marked
by an extreme activity of mind, which results in extreme thoughtless
anger or passion. Then when its spell is passed repentance comes.
This should be avoided at its beginning. A guilty conscience,
fear of consequences, doubting tendencies. All such things are
like fuel to the fire of insanity. A pure, thankful, useful
life, a constant thought of appreciating things and avoiding
blaming things and people and conditions, all these help to
keep away the germ of insanity.
Spirit
There is a part of one's life, which can only be called life.
There is no other name appropriate for it, and the English phrase,
'to pull oneself together', means to set that part of life to
work. It might be called spirit, as this part in itself is both
intelligence and power. It is intelligence because any part
of the body and mind or every part of both in which it dwells,
it makes sensitive; and it is powerful because whatever part
of the body and mind it touches, it strengthens that part.
In games and sports, when people jump down from a great height,
what is it that protects them from hurt? It is this spirit,
and they have made it their habit to call this spirit to their
aid. When people throw balls to each other, and even in boxing,
the receiver of the blow awakens this spirit in that part on
which he receives the blow. The sportsman does not know what
this spirit is, though he takes refuge in it. The mystic understands
it by his meditation, also by research into metaphysics. When
a person awakes from a deep sleep, the first thing that rises
through his mind to his body, when the tendency of stretching
and contracting comes and of twisting and turning, and of gradually
opening the eyes, is this spirit; it rises, so to speak, and
spreads.
By the mastery of this spirit diseases are cured, age is
mastered, even death is conquered. When this spirit is lacking,
energy is lacking, intelligence, joy, and rest are lacking,
and when there is this spirit there is hope, there is joy, there
is rest; because the nature of this spirit is to hold intact
the body of atoms and vibrations. Comfort lies in its being
held, discomfort when that spirit is not sufficient to hold
the body intact. Thus it is the lack of this spirit that is
the cause of a great many diseases. By the development of this
spirit in himself the healer can give a part of his spirit to
another, and that becomes the best source of healing.
The Origin of Diseases
Almost every disease originates in the mind, even when one
catches infectious diseases. It does not mean that it must always
be wickedness of the mind. If it were so good people would never
be ill; and yet it cannot be overlooked that it is a weakness
of the mind, in some way or other, that allows the disease to
enter. Besides this, negligence, oversight, irregularity, mental
and physical, also cause diseases. Life and death are two forces,
constructive and destructive, and there is continual fighting
between these two forces. There are times when one power wins,
and the success of that power means either better health or
disease and death. The body must be ready and fit to fight this
battle; but the mind has a still greater part to perform, and
when the mind fails to perform its part the body with all its
fitness is incapable of retaining health. But if the mind is
capable of keeping health, the body to a great extent obeys
it. Still, harmony of both mind and body is needed to fight
the battle of life.
The Effects of Food
It is the secret of nature that life lives upon life, as
all carnivorous animals live on the flesh of other animals,
and sometimes on their own kind. This shows that life sustains
its body by the same element of which it is made. Man's body
is made of the food he eats, and it is according to the life
in the food he eats that his life develops. Little insects,
which live on flowers, create the beauty of the flower in their
body. Insects that are fed on leaves sometimes become green
and beautiful like a leaf, but insects living in the earth and
in dirt have a similar body. This teaches that man's body depends
upon the food he eats. Any decay in the vegetables he eats and
any disease in the animal whose flesh he uses, all have their
effect on man's health.
Brahmins, who have been the most scientific and philosophical
people in the world, have always considered this subject; and
one always finds in the race of Brahmins intelligent and superior
minds. In the West, although there is continual scientific discovery
and discussion on hygienic life, important things in regard
to food are overlooked, and this can be explained in a few words
as due to the lack of home-life. Many have to take their food
in public places where it is impossible for special consideration
to be given in this way. There are, moreover, differences in
the animal foods one eats. Some animals are clean, others unclean,
and their flesh differs accordingly. This has a great influence
on the health and the mind of a person.
The question as to what the mind has to do with bodily food
may be answered thus, that as an alcoholic drink has an effect
on the mind, so every atom of food even has a particular effect.
There are foods of three kinds: Sattva which gives nourishment
with calm and peace; Rajas which gives stimulus to work and
move about; and Tamas which gives sleep, laziness, and confusion.
A healer must become aware of all kinds of foods and their
effects so as to prescribe for the patient, and to see whether
the food is the cause of the illness, which is so in many cases,
and to keep himself in such a condition that he may be able
to heal successfully.
Self-control
There are many people who may be said to be of nervous temperament.
They have a tendency if they walk to walk quickly, if they work
to work hurriedly, if they talk to talk fast, so fast that they
may drop words and make the hearer confused; whose temper may
rise suddenly and who are inclined to laugh or to cry easily.
This condition in a way gives a kind of joy, but it weakens
a person and takes away his self-control, and in the end this
results in nervous diseases. It begins as indulgence in activity
and ends in weakness. Many mental diseases are caused by this
negative state of mind and body. From childhood there is an
inclination to this, especially among children of nervous temperament;
and if it can be checked at that time there is a sure result.
No disease can be worse than an increasing weakness of the nerves,
which is lack of self-control; for life is not worth living
when control over the self is lost.
Man's Being
Man is not only constituted of matter in his being but also
of spirit. However well built a body he may have with its mechanism
in good working order, there is still something that is wanting
in him. For the physical body is sustained by material food
and drink, breath by the air, mind by thoughts and imaginations
and impressions,; but that is not all, there is something besides
mind and body that man possesses in his being, and that is his
spirit which is light, a divine light. It is for this reason
that sunshine makes one feel bright; but it is not only sunshine
that is needed for the spirit. Man's soul is like a planet.
And as the planet is illuminated by the sun, so man's spirit
is illuminated by the light of God. In the absence of this,
however healthy and joyful a man may look, he is not really
healthy. He must have some spiritual touch, some opening in
his heart which will let the light come in, the light of God.
checked 18-Oct-2005