the commodification of everything has had me running like the last man alive in an apocalypse over a dissolving bridge between two towering mountains. i don't know. i've been struggling with
deciding as to how to go about advancing my studies on the path of a
medicine man in this commodicological frequency we r living in.
in the absence of any direct connection to villages and any living family (r.i.p to my dada and foofaa, both of whom were traditional village medicine men) connected to the traditions of ayurveda/unanani/yoga, i have been defaulting on going through the route most westerners do in getting their traditional on. part of me feels like i'm cheating, like this is privy knowledge and there must be paths to cross before i can arrive at being granted the teachings and training. part of me feels that there has to be more than a money exchange that should give me access to learning and growing on this path. i would rather have gone through the traditional channels, like dude from autobiography of a yogi or bruce lee or other disciples who sought out teachers and teachers who either accepted or didn't their students, and when they accepted determined what that education was going to look like for the individual they were dealing with. teachings that were layered with meaning, that for one student might involve cleaning floors and windows to learn the value of discipline, and tucked in there, hidden techniques that the teacher decided you needed to learn.
in the absence of any direct connection to villages and any living family (r.i.p to my dada and foofaa, both of whom were traditional village medicine men) connected to the traditions of ayurveda/unanani/yoga, i have been defaulting on going through the route most westerners do in getting their traditional on. part of me feels like i'm cheating, like this is privy knowledge and there must be paths to cross before i can arrive at being granted the teachings and training. part of me feels that there has to be more than a money exchange that should give me access to learning and growing on this path. i would rather have gone through the traditional channels, like dude from autobiography of a yogi or bruce lee or other disciples who sought out teachers and teachers who either accepted or didn't their students, and when they accepted determined what that education was going to look like for the individual they were dealing with. teachings that were layered with meaning, that for one student might involve cleaning floors and windows to learn the value of discipline, and tucked in there, hidden techniques that the teacher decided you needed to learn.
part of me, the soul part of me, the
ancient part of me is moved by the stories of workers-artists i've
met along the way. jewelery makers like the women i met on my way out
of the grand canyon and into the navajo reservation. i asked each of
them how they learned to bead, make jewelery. every one of them told
me the same thing - their mother or aunty or some family member. and
when i asked who their teachers learned from, they said some other
family member, and they went on in this way till we were centuries
back. i was moved by the stories of some indain artisans i met a few
years back - the rajastani sculptor, the bengali miniatures
illustrator, the gujerati shawl-maker. when i asked each of them how
they learned their craft, they told me the same thing – from my
father/mother/uncle/aunty and they learned from their
father/mother/uncle/aunty. for the shawl-maker the lineage went back
atleast 2000 years, “that's as far as i could trace back,” he
said. this is the gurukul style of education, a rich ayurvedic
business man in kerala told me four years ago, when i first arrived
on these shores to seek the sacred teachings. sacred has a hefty
pricetag these days. the businessman, who was extremely knowledgeable
on ayurveda, explained that even if it's not family or a family
lineage, the gurukul style of education is one between a disiciple
(student) and guru (teacher) and that both must accept each other and
the guru is fully entrusted with the guidance s/he thinks the
disciple needs.
so now in my 3rd month of an
ayurveda panchakarma program, i am certain that i'd like to go
deeper, much deeper in my training. i appreciate learning/education, but
would rather not reinforce the system where nothing is sacred, where everything is for sale, and where the learners aren't necessarily those who
thirst the most for this knowledge and path, but those who could
afford it. in this contemporary paradigm the sellers sing the hymns of ancient texts to pander
to the spiritual impressions of the buyers, just as levis and diesel
jeans play the songs of cold play and common. the marketing is
enticing, but something feels off about the shopping. a keralan yogi
brother, who i met earlier on the beach today, said that they (the sellers)
cheapen ayurveda and yoga by making it so expensive, by making it a
business.
so in moving forward, degree or not
degree feels like the question of real or not real – which for me
comes from the ashes of the concrete-jungle generation of eighties ny
that i was hemmed by. “keep it real,” was a common expression in
early nineties new york. keeping it real was defined by what wasn't
keeping it real. turning to the cops for resolve or the authorities
of any sort - from the criminal justice system to the medical system,
to the education system. before the deeply philosophical street
culture of new york became a packaged hip hop item for sale
('sometimes the rap game reminds me of the crack game” - nas),
there was a healthy distrust of the system. there was a sense that
placing faith in any portion of this apparatus (that coalesced into a
cohesively anti-life masonic system) - with the principle
underpinnings malcolm x (r.i.p) referred to as tricknology - was
inherently injurious to the soul. selling out was giving into the
profit-system, going commercial with what was priceless and in turn
not keeping it real.
so how do you keep it real in the
babylon system of traiditonal medicine? do you get a degree from this
same system, which makes it illegal to practice traditional medicine
in the traditional way? do you pay a bunch of money in exchange for
an education and reinforce the pillars of the for-profit ideology? is
their training even enough? are there other ways to get a traditional
medicine education that doesn't require phd programs or wads of
money? what do u think young?
asif its unique. did u get my text???
ReplyDeleteYo bro! Very good writing. I think you did good by going to India to your roots. That's the special place of your people. Keep it real.
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