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Health & Fitness

Dr. Weil Hints at Link Between Health and Holiness

There is plenty of evidence to suggest a connection between the morally uplifted thought and body.

The disappointment on the woman’s face was unmistakable.

After explaining in some detail how her efforts to abide by a strictly raw food diet had failed to have any real impact on her health, the response she received from the evening’s keynote speaker was anything but encouraging.

β€œI’m sorry to say this,” replied renowned health expert, Dr. Andrew Weil, to a packed auditorium at San Francisco’s Hyatt Regency hotel, β€œbut a raw food diet is not something I would recommend as a way to improve your health.”

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Of course, he had plenty of other things to recommend – everything from fewer prescription drugs to brisk walks to increased fish oil. But it was Weil’s almost too-brief mention of what we can and should be ingesting mentally that provided the audience with the most practical advice of all.

β€œOn the mental level, I think there are a whole lot of interventions that we can do that are very useful,” he said. β€œ[For instance,] there is a significant body of scientific research on the power of gratitude that boosts emotional well-being…. There is also a great body of literature on the power of forgiveness.”

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What Weil didn’t mention – although he is undoubtedly aware – is that there is plenty of evidence to suggest a similar connection with our physical well-being.

For some, such moral pursuits may seem like a quaint if not extraneous addition to a strategy geared more toward an immediate physical need. But the advice given by a health expert with an impressive track record and from a much earlier time turns this notion on its head.

β€œDon’t worry about these things, saying, β€˜What will we eat? What will we drink? What will we wear?’” said Jesus a good two thousand years before anyone had even heard of things like antioxidants or Omega-3 fatty acids. β€œSeek the Kingdom of God above all else, and live righteously, and he will give you everything you need.”

Hardly a green-light for having Twinkies and Coke at every meal, these instructions lay out a clear and concise plan for mustering both the inspiration and the ability to β€œlive righteously” and, in so doing, enjoying better health.

As far as we know, Jesus never made any specific recommendations in terms of diet – no mention of vegan this or vegetarian that; high protein, low carb or Mediterranean. He does make it clear, however, as to where any game plan needs to begin.

That said, getting religion and β€œseek[ing] the kingdom of God” may not appeal to everyone. But somewhere within the thought that wants to get a second opinion when confronted with disheartening diagnoses, there must be a willingness to see things from a different, if not divine, perspective. Jesus was simply suggesting that’s where to start.

If such a course of action leads to a grateful mentality, more forgiving, we have every reason to expect to see both emotional and physical improvement – even if all we ate for lunch was raw food.

Eric Nelson’s columns on the link between consciousness and health appear weekly in a number of local and national online publications. He also serves as the media and legislative spokesperson for Christian Science in Northern California. Follow him on Twitter @norcalcs.

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