It's all about Pleasure

You do not have to be good/ You do not have to walkover on your knees /For a hundred miles through the desert, repenting/ You only have to let the soft animal of your body / love what it loves…
— “Wild Geese” by Mary Oliver

Recently I’ve been talking to my patients about pleasure. The word pleasure triggers a delightful smile…but unfortunately one that fades into embarrassment and discomfort. Pleasure is a complicated topic. It evokes feelings of guilt and resistance and fear of gluttony and hedonism. My patients react with surprise when I suggest that pleasure is a kind of wisdom. The wisdom of the body. If pain is our body’s way of telling us to pay more attention, then pleasure is also an important communication. Pain urges us to interrupt business as usual, slow down, care for and be mindful of our bodies. Pleasure invites us to continue to engage and connect with the wonders of our bodies, to lovingly give our body what it is asking for.  

Pleasure is the enjoyment of the senses: sight, hearing, taste, touch, smell. In Chinese Medicine, our senses are all related to our internal organs and our health. Frequently, when a Chinese herbal formula tastes good to you, it is because it is the medicine (which includes the flavors) that your body needs to regain health. We continue as a species because procreation is pleasurable and having a good sex drive is an indication of robust health. Pleasurable scents, color, and beautiful music are all known to affect our chemistry, stimulating healing.

Sadly, our innate ability to feel pleasure and to trust it as a guiding force is diminishing. As we modernize, we retreat more and more into our minds and inhabit less of our bodies and senses. Much of our day is experienced through a screen where the wisdom of our senses becomes irrelevant. The result is that we become increasingly disconnected from the innate wisdom and the sensual language of our bodies. If we consider ourselves healthy, we use our intellect to prescribe what we think are health promoting diet, exercise and regimens that we superimpose onto our daily living. Pleasure has nothing to do with these prescriptions.If we do not consider ourselves healthy, we feel unable to control our habits, we feel disorderly, undisciplined, out of control and in this scenario if there is any pleasure felt, it is accompanied by guilt. We may even think that our indulgence with pleasure is the problem. In either case, the central and indispensable role of pleasure in guiding us towards a healthier and fuller experience of life is considered off topic or even dangerous.

To experience pleasure fully, we must be willing to be present. We must be willing to embody the wild, irrational landscape of sensations and emotions. We must trust ourselves and find that we are worthy of enjoyment. Pleasure is good. It is aliveness. It is healthy. It is life affirming and self affirming. It is a spontaneous unspoken expression of appreciation, a taking in of our human experience. Pleasure in eating encourages food absorption, pleasure in movement activates endorphins, pleasure in touch releases oxytocin, pleasure in music and beauty soothes our nervous system and stimulates our creative impulses. Pleasure tells a story of who we are and where we come from. Particular tastes in food, beauty, partners, style, music, fragrances celebrates our individualism. When we allow for the full experience of pleasure we are practicing self-love. And health naturally flowers from that.
 
With Pleasure, 

Thuy

Thuy

 

April Practitioner Spotlight: Catie Lowder

 
 
I was looking for something with a larger perspective, that acknowledges the cycles of nature and the interconnectedness of our minds and bodies and everything else! Somehow I found my way to Chinese Medicine.

I grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. I came to Chinese medicine as a way of bringing many threads of interest and exploration together–medicine,psychology, spirit, cycles of nature, and the wisdom of the body. Before pursuing Chinese Medicine, I studied psychology at Harvard University and then worked with small children as an intervention specialist in autism classrooms in the bay area. While I loved playing and interacting with the kids, I left the work because after 5 years in the field, I was hungry for some higher education, but didn't feel called to pursue a teaching career. I started looking for other types of work that would nourish my interests.

Health has always been in the background for me since both my parents are doctors. My father was an oncologist and my mother is an eye doctor, but I wasn’t so interested in such a specialized view of medicine. I was looking for something with a larger perspective, that acknowledges the cycles of nature and the interconnectedness of our minds and bodies and everything else! Somehow I found my way to Chinese Medicine. And it isn’t such a fluke--my great grandmother was the president of the Hong Kong Acupuncture Society, so it's in my lineage.

To continue to deepen my practice of Chinese medicine I just started a doctorate program in Oakland. We are studying classic texts from something like 1800 years ago. They are so juicy and still totally relevant to treating people today--I love that kind of continuity and depth. I'm especially excited to study herbology through the lens of the classics...and hopefully over time see how it all collides with studying plants in person out in the woods!

catie with bee

I love being in nature.  On my recent trip to Anza-Borrego, it was amazing to be in the vastness and quiet of the landscape there. There’s a half hour window right before dawn when everything in the desert is even more beautiful than it already is. I got up early every morning to go hunting flowers in the magical dawn light and later in the day watched the pollen-covered bees reveling in the flower feast too! It was delicious!

 

 

 

Announcing: Sanctuary Sundays at BCA

At BCA, we say, “Heal Yourself, Heal Your Community”. In an effort to provide more opportunities for healing ourselves and our fellow humans, we’ve created our newest community event, Sanctuary Sundays.

Each Sanctuary Sunday event will feature a special wellness treatment. All proceeds will benefit local community organization.

Read on to learn more about our upcoming Sanctuary Sunday event.

What does sanctuary mean to you?
Do you have a community organization that you would like to suggest to us?

Here at BCA, community is at the heart of what we do. Join us in conversation here on the blog. We invite you to share your thoughts, inspiration, or feedback in the comments below.