As to the tantra, I understand that Waverly has some videotapes, at a reasonable price, that might change your wife's mind.
[ 07-09-2001: Message edited by: thantor3 ]
Originally posted by thantor3:
<STRONG>@ Mr. Sleep: You have an elegant way with words. A practioner of the art yourself, no doubt.![]()
</STRONG>
I'm in loveOriginally posted by Yshania:
<STRONG>Name: Still Yshania (!)
Sex: female
Current global positioning: London, UK
Appearance: 5'4, 8 stone 13lbs (about 50 summat kilos) long naturally curly (pain in the bum!) reddish/blondish/ok mousy hair, grey/blue eyes
Age: 32
Alignment: According to the test - neutral good, according to tendencies - chaotic evil...
Astrological sign: Taurus, with moon in Scorpio and rising sign is cusp Scorpio/Saggitarius.
Relationship status: Married, two little angels (!), pets = a tank full of carp that take your hand of at feeding time, and two HUGE tom cats (19lb each in weight) that lurk at fish feeding time!
Occupation: Accounts manager (aaarrrggghhh numbers and balancing stuff!) and mum/houswife
Likes: In no particular order, the sound of my kids laughing, RPG games, motorbikes, football (soccer), reading, beer, live music, spending time with friends and family, spending time alone...
Dislikes: My kids crying/whining, UK pub closing times and petrol prices![]()
[ 07-08-2001: Message edited by: Yshania ]</STRONG>
Yes--don't see why I wouldn't be!Thantor3 writes:
Now, aren't you glad you asked?
In accordance with non-invasive naturopathic principles I prescribe, "more play, less work."Really. How long after that did they wake him from his dream? Gee, nowadays I'm happy when a session goes for an hour or so. Sigh.
Thantor, with all respect to all your knowledge in the are of alternative medicine, I don't think you give a nuanced and updated picture of traditional medicine here. I you care to discuss this with me, I would very much like you to explain what you mean by "reductionistic" and "dualistic". I am well versed in both philosophy and science theory, and I don't think the terms you use are apt for academic medicine of today. It sound to me like you are describing the medicine of the 1950's.Originally posted by thantor3:
<STRONG>Conventional western medicine, coming out of the Solidist tradition of the early 1800's, is based on the reductionistic, dualistic, and mechanistic explanatory strategy advanced by Descartes and Newton. </STRONG>
Why are you viewing non linear, interactive and multifactorial theory constructs as connected to alternative medicine and not to traditional/academic medicine? Of course the views are different, but I certainly don't agree they are opposites in all aspects. You sound hostile towards academic medicine?<STRONG>This position was recently given philosophical structure, and is in accord with, the interactionalistic, indeterministic, and nonlinear explanatory strategy advanced by Bohr, Heisenberg, Bohm, and, to a lesser degree, Einstein. Pragmatically, naturopathic physicians work to restore health in a life-style intensive, low-level invasive fashion, using botanicals, diet, physical medicine, counseling, homeopathy, etc. So yes, we do prefer natural (defined as being an accordance with the body's ecological/genetic heritage) to petrochemicals and removing body parts
</STRONG>
It's an old joke involving Waverly, ask him about it, he will remember it better than I.Originally posted by Yshania:
<STRONG>LOL Mr Sleep (who said that?)</STRONG>
...and I've heard people say that psuedoscience, even if incorrect, harms no one... Well done figuring out the truth yourself, Yshania.Originally posted by Yshania:
<STRONG>I realised that my Kung Fu instructor may have been wrong about asthma being a psychosematic (sp) disease and that I really should use my inhalers as prescribed. Needless to say, I did, I stopped training with him, and not one more attack (in six years...)</STRONG>
As a layperson, not educated in medicine, I understand there is alternative medicine and complimentary medicine. To give a basic example of my understanding of alternative medicine, Chinese treatment of eczema. Not suitable for all but highly effective in some. Complimentary medicine for me would include chiropractice. (Twisted spine!Posted by Fable - What I'd suggest is that naturopathic medicine isn't necessarily antipathetic to conventional medicine. It doesn't represent a distinctly different approach as much as a way of viewing the patient and the healing process--if I understand it rightly. (After he discussed it, I went out on the internet and started dipping into naturopathic websites.) It reminds me, in a way, of so-called "alternative" medical therapies like therapeutic touch and aromatherapy, or acupuncture. They were jokes twenty years ago, much as chiropractics was about seventy years ago. The first two are now part of standard regimen in major hospitals throughout the US, and administered by physicians and nurses. (Acupuncture is being added, at least in some hospitals.) Both are seen as useful adjuncts to conventional medicine, and not substitutes
The problem's that asthma is a disease caused by any one of several possible conditions. It can be psychosomatic, but usually isn't, as physicians have finally realized in the last couple of decades. What occurs physically is that the body senses through what are called "beta receptors" what it believes is a massive invasion, and provides an over-compensating response.Yshania writes:
When I finally ended up in Charing Cross hospital following yet another bi-weekly asthma attack, I realised that my Kung Fu instructor may have been wrong about asthma being a psychosematic (sp) disease and that I really should use my inhalers as prescribed. Needless to say, I did, I stopped training with him, and not one more attack (in six years...)