by Charles Eisenstein
July 07,
2023
from
CharlesEisenstein Website
My wife Stella, who is an amazing healer, is facing the contention
that bodywork and alternative medicines are elitist.
"Only those with
disposable income can afford them, and predominantly white
privileged women indulge in them."
I'll respond to this
concern as a specific illustration of the point of my recent piece,
Notes on Privilege.
It is certainly true that our current system puts most
non-mainstream healthcare options
beyond the reach of the underprivileged.
However, this is not
the fault of the alternative therapies themselves.
It is the fault of a
system that makes them "alternative" in the first place.
Natural, alternative, and holistic therapies are intrinsically
cheaper and more accessible than high-tech medicine.
But are they as
effective?
For some acute
conditions, they are not.
But for the chronic
conditions that afflict most Americans, they are more effective.
That's why people pay for
them out-of-pocket, even when they can barely afford them.
"Show me your
evidence!"
"Prove they are more
effective!"...
I could cite research,
but would the skeptic read it...?
Research is systemically
biased toward profitable therapies, but even so, a vast literature
is available affording a glimpse into an alternative universe where
our most intractable diseases are easily cured.
One compelling book comes
to mind right now,
Ancient Secrets of a Master Healer,
by Clint Rogers, about the legendary Vedic lineage-holder Dr.
Naram.
Even after thirty years
in the alternative health universe, I was deeply affected by this
book. Some people argue that if alternatives really were so
effective, they would be incorporated more fully into our healthcare
system.
Ironically, this argument
affirms crucial assumptions of the edifice of privilege.
It assumes that
the system of pharma-funded
research, regulatory agencies, and for-profit medical
institutions is sound.
It assumes that the
authorities are trustworthy guardians of the public interest. It
assumes that those practitioners and therapies that are left on
the margins are there because they have less merit.
Think about all the
races, cultures, and people who have been left on the margins.
Is that because a
merit-based system has justly found them to be less worthy of
inclusion?
Well, the same mechanisms
that exclude whatever doesn't serve power and profit operate in the
world of health alternatives too.
Taking for granted the soundness of the existing system, health
equity is simply a matter of improving access to that system. If,
however, the existing system serves power and profit better than it
serves people, we have to look sympathetically at what it excludes.
The realm of the alternative, natural, and holistic has the
potential to return medicine to the people.
It can re-empower people
to take charge of their own health, aided by practitioners who don't
need an expensive high-tech infrastructure behind them, or expensive
patented drugs.
Such a system would be
far more egalitarian than the current one, and the general level of
well-being far higher.
Stella offers the following comment:
In my decades of
treating thousands of clients and teaching hundreds of students,
I have learned that you don't actually need highly specialized
knowledge to access miracle-level healing.
Anyone can learn it.
This is why I began teaching
Resonant Attention - to
remind people how powerful their own hands and minds really are.
What I teach is just one of many easily accessible modalities of
energy medicine and healing touch.
These new-and-ancient
technologies are in reach for almost everybody and should be
common knowledge, taught in grade schools.
The fact that they've
been marginalized and undervalued mirrors the treatment of the
people for whom they are currently inaccessible.
In other words, far from
being accessories of privilege, these practices have the potential
to erase an important aspect of privilege.
Certainly, someone working two jobs at minimum wage to support a
family isn't going to have time or money for hour-long healing
sessions in a quiet room somewhere at $150 a pop.
But why are people so
economically desperate to begin with?
One reason is healthcare
costs, which consume one-fifth of US GDP (it was about one-twentieth
in 1960.)
These costs present a
huge economic burden to individuals,
organizations, and government...
One hundred million
Americans are saddled with medical debt, which is involved in over
half of all bankruptcies.
We could, and should, distribute these costs more fairly, but much
of the cost is inherent in the high-tech modalities that dominate
today.
It doesn't help anyone,
privileged or not, to offer false medicines, to uphold disempowering
paradigms, or to apply expensive and complicated technologies when
simple ones would do.
The transformation of our healthcare culture won't happen by leaving
it to the very institutions that profit from our
chronic disease and disparity.
Real equity comes from
reclaiming our bodies, reskilling medicine, and returning medicine
to the people.
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