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Writer's pictureMikhala McCann

Your Body and Nature

Updated: Apr 23, 2024

Oxygen – its a life force. As we breath, we feel our lungs expand, we draw in the oxygen that the plants expel. Our river systems traverse the landscape providing life and nourishment to the earth, just as blood traverses through our veins. Our skeletal structure creates firmament of movement allowing us to move freely through the world. The electrical signals in our break spark psychological processes and send messages throughout our being just like the mycelial networks communicate throughout our forest systems. The more we look deeply into this, the more we see that our body is just a mirror to the natural world. The elemental and energetic cornerstones form a direct relationship between our overall health and balance within the body. By being an eternal student to nature, nature will in return forever be your teacher.


Perspective


Our bodies are of nature, and the plants that we work with are of nature too. Although it may seem obvious, this perspective serves as a critically important foundation when working with plants and using them to provide healing for people. It may sound simplistic, but the degree to which our bodies mirror nature expands far beyond what you might consider initially. Our whole body, organs, organ systems, tissues, and entire composite being including, the mind, body, and soul, form a mirror image that reflects the natural world. This wisdom is encapsulated in the ancient alchemical axiom “as above, so below,” and the concept that we are a microcosm of the greater pattern of the macrocosm. That in fact, they are one and the same.


When we allow this to sink in, it can profoundly influence the way in which you approach working with a client, how you select and use an herbal remedy, and how you view the healing process that ensues after administering a remedy.





Ecosystem Vs Machine


The body can be understood as an ecosystem or as a machine.

In the traditional approach to healing, we see the body as a lush ecosystem, dynamic, changing and fluctuating like the tides. The body is in no way fixed, or stagnant. Change is constant and moves like the seasons, we are cyclical beings just as plants are. From this viewpoint, the body is simply a microcosm of nature that surrounds us, reflecting cycles and possessing the elements of nature within it; earth, fire, water and air. We require a holistic approach to care, rather than a reductive one.


With the traditional ecosystem perspective in mind, you would look for patterns of disharmony to assist you in ascertaining which tissue state is out of balance. Once identified, you would select remedies that ameliorate symptoms while working to absolve the root cause contributing to the imbalance. It is this ecological understanding of the body that is at the foundation of many traditional systems of medicine prior to the advent of the scientific and biochemical understanding of the body.

The other approach to healing views the body as a machine. Favored by practitioners of conventional medicine, the body is broken down into parts that are treated individually rather than as a whole to restore optimal functionality.


In this paradigm, the organs and organ systems are viewed as parts of a machine that require repair or replacement when they are not working well. Although miracles are achieved through the development of modern science and medicine, this overall approach can be reductive at times, as it often fails to factor in the larger picture at hand.

Folks who practice herbalism through the mechanical lens might focus on selecting herbs based on their constituents and biochemical actions alone. While this approach is valid and can provide healing, it does not account for energetics or tissue states, which can lead to constitutional aggravations over time. This approach also tends to focus more on what herbs are remedial for certain diseases, rather than looking at the whole person who has a unique expression of imbalance.


The Basics Of Energetics


The word “energetics” may make you think of esoteric ideologies, this is not what we are talking about here. Energetic states allow herbalists to work within a methodical and grounded system referring to the qualitative state of any given tissue or organ within the body. With three pairs of opposites, the six tissue states include hot, cold, damp, dry, tense, and lax.


The roots of energetics date back to ancient Egypt, Tibet, India, Greece, and more, the system of energetics is present in numerous medical traditions and serves as a foundation of healing in a manner that is perceptive and precise. This system still operates today as an exceptionally accurate working model that can help you determine herbal remedies that will provide optimal healing for the people you care for. This system is based on simple dynamics that we experience in nature, such as differences in temperature, moisture, and how the changing seasons and weather affect our bodies, hearts, and minds. Understanding energetics is elementary to providing holistic healing. It’s elementary in the literal sense that it’s composed of the elements that sustain all life; earth, water, fire, and air.

One way you can deepen your understanding of how the energetics of temperature and moisture reflect in the body is by studying the pattern of heat.


The energetic pattern of heat is clear during the hot summer months, after eating pungent and hot stimulating herbs (such as Cayenne [Capsicum annuum]) and after completing a vigorous exercise. In all cases, your physiological response will be similar: your body temperature increases, heart rate goes up, skin flushes red, and perspiration may occur.

These are all classic patterns of heat observable in the body. The heat shifts your entire physiological being. If it’s a blisteringly hot day and you find no respite from the heat, you may notice your typically mellow disposition turn to irritability and agitation. The way in which the hot external environment shifts your internal one illustrates one of the ways in which temperature affects physiology.


By paying attention to how temperature and moisture affect how you feel physically, mentally, and emotionally, you glean insight into how the elemental qualities impact you on a constitutional level.


There’s a distinct difference in how you feel in the winter compared to summer. This isn’t random. The more you connect with how you feel in response to the changing nature around you, the more you understand how the internal and external environments weave together to produce an environment that yields balance or imbalance.




The Eternal Students Of Nature

I always like to say that as herbalists, we are first, foremost, and forever eternal students of nature. Constantly watching, witnessing and assimilating all that we know based on the principals of nature.


By recognizing that we are nature, just as plants are nature, the more you see that the two are inextricably connected. The deeper your connection to the natural world, the more you see its rhythms, cycles, and patterns reflected in your own body, heart, and mind, as well as the patterns and properties within the plants.

The more you connect with nature in this way, the deeper your understanding of plant medicine becomes. By studying nature, you can see that everything in the natural world is imprinted in our own bodies and the properties of the plants, this inherently makes you a better herbalist. Rivers that flow across the earth flow throughout our vasculature. The ocean is like a mirror of our lymphatic system and its cleansing properties. The mountains and stones relate to the fixed elements of our bones. We see our organ systems directly in the natural world, even on a pathological level. For example, if a creek is flowing, the water is pure and clean. However, if that water slows down, stands still, and begins to stagnate, the water can transform into a marshy and swampy bog that acts as the perfect grounds for bacteria to breed and mosquitoes to swarm. This occurrence in nature reflects the pathological pattern that the physiomedicalist physicians would refer to as “damp stagnation.”


In the case of damp stagnation, the fluids in the body, such as the lymphatic fluid or extracellular fluids, cease to flow well, slowing down and becoming stagnant. As this occurs, toxicity accumulates and it becomes much more prone to infection. In an attempt to purify and cleanse stagnation, the body will activate an immunological and inflammatory response. Some examples of conditions related to damp stagnation include weeping eczema, a puffy and swollen arthritic joint, or a respiratory infection resulting in a mucousy cough.

By observing the environment that a plant grows in, you can often ascertain the healing properties of the plant. For example, plants often embody the energetics of the ecosystem they grow in, or they contain the opposing remedy for that environment. For example, Aloe Vera (Aloe vera) is a cooling, demulcent, and moistening plant that soothes and cools heat, inflammation, and dryness in the body. Interestingly enough, it grows in the desert, where it is arid, hot, and dry! This plant provides the remedy for the ecosystem it grows in.

Another plant illustrating this is Marshmallow (Althaea officinalis). As the name indicates, this herb grows in marshes and other damp, moist environments. Matching the ecosystem it grows in, Marshmallow possesses soothing, cooling, and moistening properties with its medicinal mucilage.


By understanding the different ecological environments we have on Earth and how they reflect internally, we can start to understand how to incorporate and administer herbs in a way that will help bring someone’s inner ecosystem back into balance.


Marshmallow (Althaea officinalis)



Nature Surrounds Us


If you live in the concrete jungle (also known as a city), you may feel like you have less accessibility to nature and connecting to the plants that would otherwise surround you.

Although it’s understandable why you’d feel this way, with the tall building reaching towards the sun and the sound of buses going by drowning out the falling rain, nature is always around you. You don’t need to run to a forest to connect with it.


No matter where you are, you are technically still in nature. You are still exposed to the wind that blows past your face, the sun that shines down on you, and the rain that saturates your clothing when you forgot your umbrella at home. It might not be the picturesque field you had in mind, but there are usually parks or nature sanctuaries in which you can sit and connect to nature. If you have access to a Botanical Garden or Arboretum, sitting with the plants or making a point to visit often can help you connect with nature in a way that might feel difficult to obtain in a city.


If this isn’t an option, simply feeling the elements around you and noticing how the changing of the seasons impact the way you move, eat, and dress is enough. Nature is everywhere. By attuning yourself to the endless way it touches your life, you are never truly far from it.


Mirroring


We are intrinsically a part of nature. More so, we are nature. As inextricably connected as the sun is to the sky and the ripples that dance across the surface of the sea, every process that exists in nature shares an equivalent mirrored in the body. And if you learn to look at the plants in the right way, you’ll see those same processes in the properties of your herbs and how they work within our bodies.


The more you identify the ways in which your human experience intertwines with nature, the more you see that caring for Earth is an extension of caring for yourself. To care for your body is to care for our precious Earth, and to care for the Earth is to care for your body.

By looking deeply and paying attention to the mirror image we share between ourselves, the lush field, open pastures, rich forests, and even the lone tree in the square of Earth in the sidewalk, the more we understand the attributes of the plants reflected within our own mind, body, and soul.


This is the deepest way we can understand our bodies, the plants that heal them, and the symbiotic relationship that exists between the two.

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jdibella83
May 11, 2023

This is so beautifully written Mikhala, my favourite part is 'Rivers that flow across the earth flow throughout our vasculature. The ocean is like a mirror of our lymphatic system and its cleansing properties. The mountains and stones relate to the fixed elements of our bones. We see our organ systems directly in the natural world, even on a pathological level'. You are and will continue to be an amazing herbalist.

Janine 🌿

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