An aranyaka is an ancient Vedic text that was composed
in, and meant to be studied in, a forest. Though the
texts of classical Ayurveda were written with urbanites
in mind, they are verily aranyakas in spirit, for they
carry to city dwellers an urgent "back to Nature" message.
To better access that message let us for a moment remove
ourselves from the metropolis, and imagine that we are
seated under a spreading banyan tree that shades an Ayurvedic
guru's ashram.
The guru sits, dispensing teachings and healings, inspired
by the tree's prana, guided by its intelligence, permitting
the natural curative energy of the universe to flow through
into student and patient, resisting the blandishments of the
ego that yearns to claim doership. Ayurveda herself is a
living entity - we can call her the Ayur Vidya - who, being
an innate property of the cosmos, exists mainly in the
non-physical world. The Ayur Vidya, who develops and spreads
in our world solely by finding suitable hosts here, sends
her shakti into the substances used in healing and the healers
alike, facilitating healthy relationships between those
roots and fruits that are administered and the hands that
administer them. The wise practitioner of Ayurveda seeks
only to serve as a fit vessel for her wisdom, rather to
pretend any personal capacity to accomplish anything.
The Ayur Vidya also projects herself into the consensus
realities of cultures and communities, where she embodies
herself in medical systems and traditions. Like a tree,
the Ayur Vidya seeks to establish herself wherever she can;
and in those locations where conditions are favorable for
her growth, she puts down roots, gathers momentum for
development, and slowly, surely builds for herself a canopy
of principle and practice.
Urged by compassion for living beings, the Ayur Vidya
long ago extended herself out from the Indian subcontinent
into other Asian regions. Now, at long last, she has begun
to seed herself into lands yet more distant. In some locations
her seed has fallen on barren ground; in others it has
sprouted, then failed to thrive. In a few places, such as
along the banks of the Rio Grande in New Mexico, Ayurvedic
groves have established themselves.
We may find, on peering into a wood, that individual trees
so fixate our attention that it enfeebles our vision of
the forest as a whole. Similarly, evaluations of individual
Ayurvedic institutions can obscure our attempts to evaluate,
accurately and objectively, the condition and direction
of "modern" Ayurveda, and how well or poorly it is developing
overall. At the risk of going out on our analogy's limb,
and keeping a wary eye on our conceptual bough to prevent
it from breaking, let us glance over the expanse of
the Ayurvedic garden that stretches out before us, to
see how it is evolving.
Any wise gardener looks to the soil to know which plants
will be most welcome therein; and when we look to the soil
in which knowledge crops are sown we find that, throughout
the West but particularly in the USA, a predominance of
weeds. Weeds grow hurriedly, crowd out competition, reproduce
hastily, and swiftly die. Weeds may be propagation machines,
specializing in extension into every nook and cranny, but
in return they offer nothing in the way of shade, and little
in the way of sustenance.
One unfortunate Western tendency is to take sophisticated,
subtle bodies of knowledge and "weed-ify" them. The procedure,
which Americans have honed to perfection, selects from the
teachings to be "streamlined" a few salient points that meet
the test of immediate applicability, blends these items into a
simplified, "rationalized" protocol, then broadcasts it to the
widest possible audience. Yoga has already been extensively
subjected to this process; Ayurveda's turn has now arrived.
Open any "New Age" publication and you will find within a
plethora of advertisements for Ayurvedic practitioners,
counselors, body workers, and detoxification specialists.
New "Ayurvedic" supplements appear daily, and spas of every
ilk are rushing to add "panchakarma" treatments to their
product lines. Sadly, the majority of these resources are
Ayurvedic in name alone.
There was a time when thinking of this blatant misbranding
would render me apoplectic; but advancing maturity has
increased my reluctance to waste energy, and I have learned
that the best response to such deception is to ignore it,
while sticking resolutely to the high road of teaching
Ayurveda in as pure and detailed a manner as possible.
The Ayurvedic Institute, which remains one of the few
centers of serious Ayurvedic study in the West, shares
this determination with me, and it has been my pleasure,
during the past two decades of my association with the
Institute, to watch the quality of student there
progressively improve. Graduates of the Institute have
to my mind a certain responsibility to the Ayur Vidya
to assist other students of Ayurveda to send their
roots deeper into the system's soil. Deep roots protect
a plant from damage when the inevitable storms
(regulatory, economic, socio-cultural) sweep through;
plants with shallow root systems may get easily
uprooted and upended, but the deeply rooted, even if
broken off at ground level, survive to sprout again.
Concerned by the seeming tenuousness of Ayurveda's
hold here, some people believe earnestly that working
to regularize the profession, by establishing
registration and licensing procedures in key states,
is the best use of our currently limited resources.
But no state will license a profession that contains
but a few competent members, and what will Ayurveda
gain if its practitioner rolls are padded by
"grandfathering in" ill-trained, incompetent therapists?
I believe rather that the Ayur Vidya knows well what
she is doing, and that we humans need to be careful
not to let our current ambient climate of fear spur
us into taking actions that, by diluting the depth
and breadth of her knowledge, will be to her
ultimate detriment.
Rather than rush to licensing, let us focus instead
on using what energies and funds we possess to
establish and build up standards, slowly and scrupulously,
in a progressive, time-bound fashion, that we as a
profession may be well prepared for registration
when licensing finally comes to call. One possible
approach: establish an accreditation committee that
would encourage schools of Ayurveda to accept
voluntarily a set of basic standards that the
committee would recommend, standards that could
become progressively more stringent over a reasonable
timeline. This method could allow improvements to
occur "organically," under the direction of the
Ayur Vidya, rather than artificially, by legislation.
A perpetual gardening temptation is to try somehow
to "improve" upon Nature; with the rise of chemical
farming, this "progressiveness" has introduced herbicides,
pesticides, fertilizers, genetic engineering, and
similar poisons into our external environment. In
the internal environment the desire to "develop" tends
to embody as the drive to "modernize." Some aver that
Ayurveda's advanced age has led to decrepitude, for
which the remedy is an injection of contemporary
techniques; others suggest that Ayurveda should be
stripped of its "unscientific" concern for mind and
spirit. A substantial cohort maintains that patients
should be provided whatever they demand, and since a
majority demands "modern" medicine, they should have
it. These and similar arguments were raging in India
thirty years ago when I entered the Tilak Ayurveda
Mahavidyalaya in Pune; they continue to rage
there even now.
Hybrids can be beautiful, and sometimes tasty,
like the tangelo; all too often, though, they are
ornery and barren, like the mule. In the course of
its long history Ayurveda has more than once succeeded
in integrating new techniques into its canon without
ever needing to jettison its principles in the process.
It has been able to do so because its aficionados
have devoted themselves to the Ayur Vidya, making
her study into a sadhana, permitting her to determine
how and when to augment her own armamentarium. Left
to its own devices, provided with ample time and space,
and supported with judicious quantities of food,
water, sunshine, and love, even a plant from far away
can be naturalized locally; this could well become
the Ayur Vidya's Western destiny.
Ayurveda in the West has made immense strides since
that day in early 1973 when I strode into the corporate
offices of the American Medical Association in downtown
Chicago to ask what they knew about it. After half an
hour's wait the receptionist returned with a quizzically
weary facial expression to report that could tell me no
more than that Ayurveda was "some kind of tribal medicine."
After three decades a tree is but a stripling, a teenager,
bursting with enthusiasm but still requiring judicious
guidance to keep pointed in the proper developmental
direction. Let us temper our innate impatience for
"progress" with an awareness of the magnitude of the
task that we have undertaken, and return often to the
banyan's shade, to tap into the Ayur Vidya's limitless
font of wisdom. Thus refreshed we can proceed calmly,
implacably forward, inspired and directed by that very
Ayur Vidya that we seek sincerely to serve.
Copyright © 2004
Robert Edwin Svoboda
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